Hall E J
Columbia University Center for Radiological Research 630 West 168th Street, P&S 11-230 New York NY 10032 USA.
Int J Radiat Biol. 2004 May;80(5):327-37. doi: 10.1080/09553000410001695895.
Estimates of radiation-induced malignancies come principally from the atomic (A)-bomb survivors and show an excess incidence of carcinomas that is linearly related to dose from about 5 cGy to 2.5 Gy. Above and below this dose range there is considerable uncertainty about the shape of the dose-response relationship. Both the International Commission of Radiation Protected (ICRP) and the National Council of Radiation Protection (NCRP) suggest that cancer risks at doses lower than those at which direct epidemiological observations are possible should be obtained by a linear extrapolation from higher doses. The demonstrated bystander effect for irradiation exaggerates the consequences of small doses of radiation and implies that a linear extrapolation from high doses would underestimate low dose risks. It is possible to make estimates of the cancer risk of diagnostic radiological procedures. Helical computed tomography in children is of particular interest since it is rapidly increasing in use and the doses involved are close to the lower limit of significance in the A-bomb survivors. For example, an abdominal computed tomographic scan in a 1-year-old child can be estimated to result in a lifetime cancer risk of about 1:1000. In the context of radiotherapy, some normal tissues receive 70 Gy, while a larger volume receives a lower dose, but still far higher than the range for which data are available from the A-bomb survivors. Data are available for the risk of radiation-induced malignancies for patients who received radiotherapy, e.g. for prostate or cervical cancer. New technologies such as intensity modulated radiation therapy could result in a doubling of radiation-induced second cancers since the technique involves a larger total-body dose due to leakage radiation and the dose distribution obtained involves a larger volume of normal tissue exposed to lower radiation doses.
辐射诱发恶性肿瘤的估计主要来自原子弹爆炸幸存者,结果显示,从约5厘戈瑞至2.5戈瑞,癌发病率的增加与剂量呈线性关系。在此剂量范围之上和之下,剂量-反应关系的形状存在很大不确定性。国际辐射防护委员会(ICRP)和美国国家辐射防护委员会(NCRP)均建议,对于低于可进行直接流行病学观察剂量的癌症风险,应通过从较高剂量进行线性外推来获得。辐射的旁观者效应表明小剂量辐射的后果被夸大,这意味着从高剂量进行线性外推会低估低剂量风险。有可能对诊断性放射程序的癌症风险进行估计。儿童螺旋计算机断层扫描尤其值得关注,因为其使用正在迅速增加,且所涉及的剂量接近原子弹爆炸幸存者中有统计学意义的剂量下限。例如,估计一名1岁儿童进行腹部计算机断层扫描会导致终生患癌风险约为1:1000。在放射治疗方面,一些正常组织会接受70戈瑞的剂量,而更大体积的组织接受较低剂量,但仍远高于原子弹爆炸幸存者可获得数据的剂量范围。对于接受放射治疗(如前列腺癌或宫颈癌放疗)的患者,辐射诱发恶性肿瘤的风险数据是可用的。诸如调强放射治疗等新技术可能会使辐射诱发的二次癌症风险加倍,因为该技术因泄漏辐射而涉及更大的全身剂量,且所获得的剂量分布涉及更大体积的正常组织接受较低辐射剂量。