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Atomic-bomb survivors, certain groups of patients exposed to radiation for medical purposes, and some groups of radiation workers have shown dose-dependent increases in the incidence of certain types of cancer. The induced cancers have not appeared until years after exposure, however, and they have shown no distinguishing features by which they can be identified individually as having resulted from radiation, as opposed to some other cause. With few exceptions, moreover, the incidence of cancer has not been increased detectably by doses of less than 0.01 Sv.

Because the carcinogenic effects of radiation have not been documented over a wide enough range of doses and dose rates to define the shape of the dose-incidence curve precisely, the risk of radiation-induced cancer at low levels of exposure can be estimated only by extrapolation from observations at higher dose levels, based on assumptions about the relation between cancer incidence and dose. For most types of cancer, information about the dose-incidence relationship is rather meagre. The most extensive data available are for leukemia and cancer of the female breast.

The overall incidence of all forms of leukemia other than the chronic lymphatic type has been observed to increase roughly in proportion to dose during the first 25 years after irradiation. Different types of leukemia, however, vary in the magnitude of the radiation-induced increase for a given dose, the age at which irradiation occurs, and the time after exposure. The total excess of all types besides chronic lymphatic leukemia, averaged over all ages, amounts to approximately one to three additional cases of leukemia per year per 10,000 persons at risk per sievert to the bone marrow.

Cancer of the female breast also appears to increase in incidence in proportion to the radiation dose. Furthermore, the magnitude of the increase for a given dose appears to be essentially the same in women whose breasts were irradiated in a single, brief exposure (e.g., atomic-bomb survivors), as in those who were irradiated over a period of years (e.g., patients subjected to multiple fluoroscopic examinations of the chest or workers assigned to coating watch and clock dials with paint containing radium), implying that even small exposures widely separated in time exert carcinogenic effects on the breast that are fully additive and cumulative. Although susceptibility decreases sharply with age at the time of irradiation, the excess of breast cancer averaged over all ages amounts to three to six cases per 10,000 women per sievert each year.

Additional evidence that carcinogenic effects can be produced by a relatively small dose of radiation is provided by the increase in the incidence of thyroid tumours that has been observed to result from a dose of 0.06–2.0 Gy of X rays delivered to the thyroid gland during infancy or childhood, and by the association between prenatal diagnostic X irradiation and childhood leukemia. The latter association implies that exposure to as little as 10–50 mGy of X radiation during intrauterine development may increase the subsequent risk of leukemia in the exposed child by as much as 40–50 percent.

Although some, but not all, other types of cancer have been observed to occur with greater frequency in irradiated populations (Table 12), the data do not suffice to indicate whether the risks extend to low doses. It is apparent, however, that the dose-incidence relationship varies from one type of cancer to another. From the existing evidence, the overall excess of all types of cancer combined may be inferred to approximate 0.6–1.8 cases per 1,000 persons per sievert per year when the whole body is exposed to radiation, beginning two to 10 years after irradiation. This increase corresponds to a cumulative lifetime excess of roughly 20–100 additional cases of cancer per 1,000 persons per sievert, or to an 8–40 percent per sievert increase in the natural lifetime risk of cancer.

Estimated lifetime cancer risks attributed to low-level irradiation
*The unit person-Sv represents the product of the average dose per person times the number of people exposed (1 sievert to each of 10,000 persons = 10,000 person-Sv); all values provided here are rounded.
Source: National Academy of Sciences Advisory Committee on the Biological Effects of Ionizing Radiation, The Effects on Populations of Exposure to Low Levels of Ionizing Radiation (1972, 1980); United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation, Sources and Effects of Ionizing Radiation (1977 report to the General Assembly, with annexes).
site irradiated cancers per 10,000 person-Sv*
bone marrow (leukemia) 15–20
thyroid 25–120
breast (women only) 40–200
lung 25–140
stomach
liver 5–60 (each)
colon
bone
esophagus
small intestine 5–30 (each)
urinary bladder
pancreas
lymphatic tissue
skin 10–20
total (both sexes) 125–1,000

The above-cited risk estimates imply that no more than 1–3 percent of all cancers in the general population result from natural background ionizing radiation. At the same time, however, the data suggest that up to 20 percent of lung cancers in nonsmokers may be attributable to inhalation of radon and other naturally occurring radionuclides present in air.

Shortening of the life span

Laboratory animals whose entire bodies are exposed to radiation in the first half of life suffer a reduction in longevity that increases in magnitude with increasing dose. This effect was mistakenly interpreted by early investigators as a manifestation of accelerated or premature aging. The shortening of life in irradiated animals, however, has since been observed to be attributable largely, if not entirely, to the induction of benign and malignant growths. In keeping with this observation is the finding that mortality from diseases other than cancer has not been increased detectably by irradiation among atomic-bomb survivors.

Protection against external radiation

A growing number of substances have been found to provide some protection against radiation injury when administered prior to irradiation (Table 13). Many of them apparently act by producing anoxia or by competing for oxygen with normal cell constituents and radiation-produced radicals. All of the protective compounds tried thus far, however, are toxic, and anoxia itself is hazardous. As a consequence, their administration to humans is not yet practical.

Some chemicals that exert radioprotective effects in laboratory animals
*Aminoethylisothiuronium bromide hydrobromide.
class specific chemical effective dose
(in milligrams
per kilogram
of tissue)
sulfur compounds glutathione
cysteine
cysteamine
AET*
1,000
1,000
150
350
hormones estradiolbenzoate
ACTH
12
25 for 7 days
enzyme inhibitors sodium cyanide
carbon monoxide
mercaptoethylamine (MEA)
para-aminopropiophenone (PAPP)
5
by inhalation
235
30
metabolites formic acid 90
vasoconstrictors serotonin 50
nervous system drugs amphetamine
chlorpromazine
1
20

Diurnal changes in the radiosensitivity of rodents indicate that the factors responsible for daily biologic rhythms may also alter the responses of tissues to radiation. Such factors include the hormone thyroxine, a normal secretion of the thyroid gland. Other sensitizers at the cellular level include nucleic-acid analogues (e.g., 5-fluorouracil) as well as certain compounds that selectively radiosensitize hypoxic cells such as metronidazole.

Radiosensitivity is also under genetic control to some degree, susceptibility varying among different inbred mouse strains and increasing in the presence of inherited deficiencies in capacity for repairing radiation-induced damage to DNA. Germ-free mice, which spend their entire lives in a sterile environment, also exhibit greater resistance to radiation than do animals in a normal microbial environment owing to elimination of the risk of infection.

For many years it was thought that radiation disease was irreversible once a lethal dose had been received. It has since been found that bone-marrow cells administered soon after irradiation may enable an individual to survive an otherwise lethal dose of X rays, because these cells migrate to the marrow of the irradiated recipient, where they proliferate and repopulate the blood-forming tissues. Under these conditions bone-marrow transplantation is feasible even between histo-incompatible individuals, because the irradiated recipient has lost the ability to develop antibodies against the injected “foreign” cells. After a period of some months, however, the transplanted tissue may eventually be rejected, or it may develop an immune reaction against the irradiated host, which also can be fatal. The transplantation of bone-marrow cells has been helpful in preventing radiation deaths among the victims of reactor accidents, as, for example, those injured in 1986 at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant in Ukraine, then in the Soviet Union. It should be noted, however, that cultured or stored marrow cells cannot yet be used for this purpose.