Calabrese Edward J
Environmental Health Sciences Division, Department of Public Health, University of Massachusetts, Morrill I, N344, Amherst, MA 01003, USA.
Arch Toxicol. 2009 Mar;83(3):203-25. doi: 10.1007/s00204-009-0412-4. Epub 2009 Feb 27.
This article assesses the historical foundations of how linearity at low dose became accepted by the scientific/regulatory communities. While the threshold model was used in the 1920s/1930s in establishing radiation health standards, its foundations were challenged by the genetics community who argued that radiation induced mutations in reproductive cells followed a linear response, were cumulative and deleterious. Scientific foundations of linearity for gonadal mutations were based on non-conclusive evidence as well as not being conducted at low doses. Following years of debate, leaders in the genetics community participated in the U.S. National Academy of Sciences (NAS) (1956) Biological Effects of Atomic Radiation (BEAR) BEAR I Committee, getting their perspectives accepted, incorporating linearity for radiation-induced mutational effects in risk assessment. Overtime the concept of linearity was generalized to include somatic effects induced by radiation based on a protectionist philosophy. This affected the course of radiation-induced and later chemically-induced carcinogen risk assessment. Acceptance of linearity at low dose from chemical carcinogens was strongly influenced by the NAS Safe Drinking Water Committee report of 1977 which provided the critical guidance to the U.S. EPA to adopt linear at low dose modeling for risk assessment for chemical carcinogens with little supportive data, much of which has been either discredited or seriously weakened over the past 3 decades. Nonetheless, there has been little practical change of regulatory policy concerning carcinogen risk assessment. These observations suggest that while scientific disciplines are self correcting, that regulatory 'science' fails to display the same self-correcting mechanism despite contradictory data.
本文评估了低剂量线性关系如何被科学/监管界所接受的历史基础。虽然在20世纪20年代/30年代建立辐射健康标准时使用了阈值模型,但其基础受到了遗传学领域的挑战,该领域认为辐射诱导生殖细胞中的突变遵循线性反应,具有累积性且有害。性腺突变线性关系的科学基础基于非确凿证据,且并非在低剂量下进行。经过多年的辩论,遗传学领域的领导者参与了美国国家科学院(NAS)(1956年)的《原子辐射的生物效应》(BEAR)BEAR I委员会,他们的观点被接受,在风险评估中纳入了辐射诱导突变效应的线性关系。随着时间的推移,基于保护主义理念,线性关系的概念被推广到包括辐射诱导的体细胞效应。这影响了辐射诱导以及后来化学诱导致癌物风险评估的进程。1977年NAS安全饮用水委员会的报告对低剂量化学致癌物线性关系的接受产生了强烈影响,该报告为美国环境保护局(EPA)提供了关键指导,使其在几乎没有支持性数据的情况下采用低剂量线性模型进行化学致癌物的风险评估,而在过去30年中,其中许多数据已被质疑或严重削弱。尽管如此,致癌物风险评估的监管政策几乎没有实际变化。这些观察结果表明,虽然科学学科能够自我修正,但监管“科学”尽管存在矛盾数据,却未能展现出同样的自我修正机制。