Radiation Epidemiology Branch, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD, USA.
Clinical Department, Southern Urals Biophysics Institute, Ozyorsk, Ozyorsk Chelyabinsk Region, Russia.
Int J Radiat Biol. 2021;97(6):782-803. doi: 10.1080/09553002.2021.1876955. Epub 2021 Feb 26.
There are well-known correlations between high and moderate doses (>0.5 Gy) of ionizing radiation exposure and circulatory system damage, also between radiation and posterior subcapsular cataract. At lower dose correlations with circulatory disease are emerging in the Japanese atomic bomb survivors and in some occupationally exposed groups, and are still to some extent controversial. Heterogeneity in excess relative risks per unit dose in epidemiological studies at low (<0.1 Gy) and at low-moderate (>0.1 Gy, <0.5 Gy) doses may result from confounding and other types of bias, and effect modification by established risk factors. There is also accumulating evidence of excess cataract risks at lower dose and low dose rate in various cohorts. Other ocular endpoints, specifically glaucoma and macular degeneration have been little studied. In this paper, we review recent epidemiological findings, and also discuss some of the underlying radiobiology of these conditions. We briefly review some other types of mainly neurological nonmalignant disease in relation to radiation exposure.
We document statistically significant excess risk of the major types of circulatory disease, specifically ischemic heart disease and stroke, in moderate- or low-dose exposed groups, with some not altogether consistent evidence suggesting dose-response non-linearity, particularly for stroke. However, the patterns of risk reported are not straightforward. We also document evidence of excess risks at lower doses/dose-rates of posterior subcapsular and cortical cataract in the Chernobyl liquidators, US Radiologic Technologists and Russian Mayak nuclear workers, with fundamentally linear dose-response. Nuclear cataracts are less radiogenic. For other ocular endpoints, specifically glaucoma and macular degeneration there is very little evidence of effects at low doses; radiation-associated glaucoma has been documented only for doses >5 Gy, and so has the characteristics of a tissue reaction. There is some evidence of neurological detriment following low-moderate dose (∼0.1-0.2 Gy) radiation exposure or in early childhood.
众所周知,高剂量(>0.5Gy)和中剂量(>0.5Gy)电离辐射暴露与循环系统损伤之间存在相关性,也与后囊下白内障之间存在相关性。在较低剂量下,日本原子弹幸存者和一些职业暴露人群中出现了与心血管疾病相关的相关性,但仍存在一定争议。在低剂量(<0.1Gy)和低-中剂量(>0.1Gy,<0.5Gy)下,流行病学研究中单位剂量过量相对风险的异质性可能是由混杂和其他类型的偏倚以及已确定的危险因素的效应修饰引起的。在不同队列中也有越来越多的证据表明较低剂量和低剂量率会导致白内障风险增加。其他眼部终点,特别是青光眼和黄斑变性,研究较少。在本文中,我们回顾了最近的流行病学发现,并讨论了这些疾病的一些潜在放射生物学。我们简要回顾了与辐射暴露有关的其他一些主要类型的神经非恶性疾病。
我们记录了在中剂量或低剂量暴露组中,主要循环系统疾病(特别是缺血性心脏病和中风)的风险显著增加,有一些证据表明剂量反应非线性,特别是中风。然而,报告的风险模式并不简单。我们还记录了切尔诺贝利液体处理人员、美国放射技师和俄罗斯马雅克核工作者在后囊下和皮质白内障方面的低剂量/低剂量率的风险增加,具有基本线性剂量反应。核白内障的放射性较低。对于其他眼部终点,特别是青光眼和黄斑变性,在低剂量下几乎没有证据表明存在影响;仅在剂量>5Gy 时才记录到与辐射相关的青光眼,且具有组织反应的特征。在低-中剂量(约 0.1-0.2Gy)辐射暴露或儿童早期,有一些证据表明存在神经损伤。