Radiation hormesis is the hypothesis that low doses of ionizing radiation (within the region of and just above natural background levels) are beneficial, stimulating the activation of repair mechanisms that protect against disease,
that are not activated in absence of ionizing radiation (similar to
vaccinations). The reserve repair mechanisms are hypothesized to be
sufficiently effective when stimulated as to not only cancel the
detrimental effects of ionizing radiation but also inhibit disease not
related to radiation exposure. This hypothesis has captured the attention of scientists and public alike in recent years.
While the effects of high and acute doses of ionizing radiation are easily observed and understood in humans (e.g.
Japanese Atomic Bomb survivors), the effects of low-level radiation are
very difficult to observe and highly controversial. This is because the
baseline cancer rate is already very high and the risk of developing
cancer fluctuates 40% because of individual life style and environmental
effects, obscuring the subtle effects of low-level radiation. An acute effective dose of 100 millisieverts
may increase cancer risk by ~0.8%. However, children are particularly
sensitive to radioactivity, with childhood leukemias and other cancers
increasing even within natural and man-made background radiation levels
(under 4 mSv cumulative with 1 mSv being an average annual dose from
terrestrial and cosmic radiation excluding radon which primarily doses
the lung).
There is also indication that exposures around this dose level will
cause negative sub-clinical health impacts to neural development.
Students born in regions of Sweden with higher Chernobyl fallout
performed worse in secondary school, particularly in mathematics.
“Damage is accentuated within families (i.e., siblings comparison) and
among children born to parents with low education..." who often don't
have the resources to overcome this additional health challenge.
Hormesis remains largely unknown to the public. Government and
regulatory bodies disagree on the existence of radiation hormesis and
research points to the "severe problems and limitations" with the use of
hormesis in general as the "principal dose-response default assumption
in a risk assessment process charged with
ensuring public health protection."
Quoting results from a literature database research, the Académie des Sciences – Académie nationale de Médecine (French Academy of Sciences – National Academy of Medicine)
stated in their 2005 report concerning the effects of low-level
radiation that many laboratory studies have observed radiation hormesis. However, they cautioned that it is not yet known if radiation hormesis occurs outside the laboratory, or in humans.
Reports by the United States National Research Council and the National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements and the United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation (UNSCEAR) argue
that there is no evidence for hormesis in humans and in the case of the
National Research Council hormesis is outright rejected as a
possibility. Therefore, estimating Linear no-threshold model (LNT) continues to be the model generally used by regulatory agencies for human radiation exposure.
Proposed mechanism and ongoing debate
Radiation hormesis proposes that radiation exposure comparable to and just above the natural background level of radiation
is not harmful but beneficial, while accepting that much higher levels
of radiation are hazardous. Proponents of radiation hormesis typically
claim that radio-protective responses in cells and the immune system not
only counter the harmful effects of radiation but additionally act to
inhibit spontaneous cancer not related to radiation exposure. Radiation
hormesis stands in stark contrast to the more generally accepted linear no-threshold
model (LNT), which states that the radiation dose-risk relationship is
linear across all doses, so that small doses are still damaging, albeit
less so than higher ones. Opinion pieces on chemical and radiobiological
hormesis appeared in the journals Nature and Science in 2003.
Assessing the risk of radiation at low doses (l.t. 100 mSv) and low dose rates (l.t. 0.1 mSv.min−1) is highly problematic and controversial. While epidemiological studies on populations of people exposed to an acute dose of high level radiation such as Japanese Atomic Bomb Survivors (hibakusha (被爆者)) have robustly upheld the LNT (mean dose ~210 mSv), studies involving low doses and low dose rates have failed to detect any increased cancer rate.
This is because the baseline cancer rate is already very high (~42 of
100 people will be diagnosed in their lifetime) and it fluctuates ~40%
because of lifestyle and environmental effects,
obscuring the subtle effects of low level radiation. Epidemiological
studies may be capable of detecting elevated cancer rates as low as 1.2
to 1.3 i.e. 20% to 30% increase. But for low doses (1–100 mSv)
the predicted elevated risks are only 1.001 to 1.04 and excess cancer
cases, if present, cannot be detected due to confounding factors, errors
and biases.
In particular, variations in smoking prevalence or even accuracy
in reporting smoking cause wide variation in excess cancer and
measurement error bias. Thus, even a large study of many thousands of
subjects with imperfect smoking prevalence information will fail to
detect the effects of low level radiation than a smaller study that
properly compensates for smoking prevalence.
Given the absence of direct epidemiological evidence, there is
considerable debate as to whether the dose-response relationship l.t. 100
mSv is supralinear, linear (LNT), has a threshold, is sub-linear, or whether the coefficient is negative with a sign change, i.e. a hormetic response.
The radiation adaptive response
seems to be a main origin of the potential hormetic effect. The
theoretical studies indicate that the adaptive response is responsible
for the shape of dose-response curve and can transform the linear
relationship (LNT) into the hormetic one.
While most major consensus reports and government bodies currently adhere to LNT, the 2005 French Academy of Sciences-National Academy of Medicine's report concerning the effects of low-level radiation rejected LNT as a scientific model of carcinogenic risk at low doses.
Using LNT to estimate the carcinogenic effect at doses of less than 20 mSv is not justified in the light of current radiobiologic knowledge.
They consider there to be several dose-effect relationships rather
than only one, and that these relationships have many variables such as
target tissue, radiation dose, dose rate and individual sensitivity
factors. They request that further study is required on low doses (less
than 100 mSv) and very low doses (less than 10 mSv)
as well as the impact of tissue type and age. The Academy considers the
LNT model is only useful for regulatory purposes as it simplifies the
administrative task. Quoting results from literature research,
they furthermore claim that approximately 40% of laboratory studies on
cell cultures and animals indicate some degree of chemical or
radiobiological hormesis, and state:
...its existence in the laboratory is beyond question and its mechanism of action appears well understood.
They go on to outline a growing body of research that illustrates that the human body is not a passive accumulator of radiation damage but it actively repairs the damage caused via a number of different processes, including:
- Mechanisms that mitigate reactive oxygen species generated by ionizing radiation and oxidative stress.
- Apoptosis of radiation damaged cells that may undergo tumorigenesis is initiated at only few mSv.
- Cell death during meiosis of radiation damaged cells that were unsuccessfully repaired.
- The existence of a cellular signaling system that alerts neighboring cells of cellular damage.
- The activation of enzymatic DNA repair mechanisms around 10 mSv.
- Modern DNA microarray studies which show that numerous genes are activated at radiation doses well below the level that mutagenesis is detected.
- Radiation-induced tumorigenesis may have a threshold related to damage density, as revealed by experiments that employ blocking grids to thinly distribute radiation.
- A large increase in tumours in immunosuppressed individuals illustrates that the immune system efficiently destroys aberrant cells and nascent tumors.
Furthermore, increased sensitivity to radiation induced cancer in the inherited condition Ataxia-telangiectasia like disorder, illustrates the damaging effects of loss of the repair gene Mre11h resulting in the inability to fix DNA double-strand breaks.
The BEIR-VII report argued that, "the presence of a true dose
threshold demands totally error-free DNA damage response and repair."
The specific damage they worry about is double strand breaks (DSBs) and
they continue, "error-prone nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ) repair in
postirradiation cellular response, argues strongly against a DNA
repair-mediated low-dose threshold for cancer initiation". Recent research observed that DSBs caused by CAT scans
are repaired within 24-hours and DSBs maybe more efficiently repaired
at low doses, suggesting the risk ionizing radiation at low doses may
not by directly proportional to the dose. However, it is not known if low dose ionizing radiation stimulates the repair of DSBs not caused by ionizing radiation i.e. a hormetic response.
Radon gas in homes is the largest source of radiation dose for
most individuals and it is generally advised that the concentration be
kept below 150 Bq/m³ (4 pCi/L).
A recent retrospective case-control study of lung cancer risk showed
substantial cancer rate reduction between 50 and 123 Bq per cubic meter
relative to a group at zero to 25 Bq per cubic meter.
This study is cited as evidence for hormesis, but a single study all by
itself cannot be regarded as definitive. Other studies into the effects
of domestic radon
exposure have not reported a hormetic effect; including for example the
respected "Iowa Radon Lung Cancer Study" of Field et al. (2000), which
also used sophisticated radon exposure dosimetry.
In addition, Darby et al. (2005) argue that radon exposure is
negatively correlated with the tendency to smoke and environmental
studies need to accurately control for this; people living in urban
areas where smoking rates are higher usually have lower levels of radon
exposure due the increased prevalence of multi-story dwellings.
When doing so, they found a significant increase in lung cancer
among smokers exposed to radon at doses as low as 100 to 199 Bq m−3 and warned that smoking greatly increases the risk posed by radon exposure i.e. reducing the prevalence of smoking would decrease deaths caused by radon. However, the discussion about the opposite experimental results is still going on, especially the popular US and German studies have found some hormetic effects.
Furthermore, particle microbeam studies show that passage of even
a single alpha particle (e.g. from radon and its progeny) through cell
nuclei is highly mutagenic,
and that alpha radiation may have a higher mutagenic effect at low
doses (even if a small fraction of cells are hit by alpha particles)
than predicted by linear no-threshold model, a phenomenon attributed to bystander effect. However, there is currently insufficient evidence at hand to suggest that the bystander effect promotes carcinogenesis in humans at low doses.
Statements by leading nuclear bodies
Radiation hormesis has not been accepted by either the United States National Research Council, or the National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements (NCRP).
In May 2018, the NCRP published the report of an interdisciplinary
group of radiation experts who critically reviewed 29 high-quality
epidemiologic studies of populations exposed to radiation in the low
dose and low dose-rate range, mostly published within the last 10 years. The group of experts concluded:
The recent epidemiologic studies support the continued use of the LNT model for radiation protection. This is in accord with judgments by other national and international scientific committees, based on somewhat older data, that no alternative dose-response relationship appears more pragmatic or prudent for radiation protection purposes than the LNT model.
In addition, the United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation (UNSCEAR) wrote in its most recent report:
Until the [...] uncertainties on low-dose response are resolved, the Committee believes that an increase in the risk of tumor induction proportionate to the radiation dose is consistent with developing knowledge and that it remains, accordingly, the most scientifically defensible approximation of low-dose response. However, a strictly linear dose response should not be expected in all circumstances.
This is a reference to the fact that very low doses of radiation have
only marginal impacts on individual health outcomes. It is therefore
difficult to detect the 'signal' of decreased or increased morbidity and
mortality due to low-level radiation exposure in the 'noise' of other
effects. The notion of radiation hormesis has been rejected by the
National Research Council's (part of the National Academy of Sciences)
16-year-long study on the Biological Effects of Ionizing Radiation. "The
scientific research base shows that there is no threshold of exposure
below which low levels of ionizing radiation can be demonstrated to be
harmless or beneficial. The health risks – particularly the development
of solid cancers in organs – rise proportionally with exposure" says
Richard R. Monson, associate dean for professional education and
professor of epidemiology, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston.
The possibility that low doses of radiation may have beneficial effects (a phenomenon often referred to as “hormesis”) has been the subject of considerable debate. Evidence for hormetic effects was reviewed, with emphasis on material published since the 1990 BEIR V study on the health effects of exposure to low levels of ionizing radiation. Although examples of apparent stimulatory or protective effects can be found in cellular and animal biology, the preponderance of available experimental information does not support the contention that low levels of ionizing radiation have a beneficial effect. The mechanism of any such possible effect remains obscure. At this time, the assumption that any stimulatory hormetic effects from low doses of ionizing radiation will have a significant health benefit to humans that exceeds potential detrimental effects from radiation exposure at the same dose is unwarranted.
Studies of low level radiation
Very high natural background gamma radiation cancer rates at Kerala, India
Kerala's monazite sand (containing a third of the world's economically recoverable reserves of radioactive thorium)
emits about 8 micro Sieverts per hour of gamma radiation, 80 times the
dose rate equivalent in London, but a decade long study of 69,985
residents published in Health Physics in 2009: "showed no excess cancer
risk from exposure to terrestrial gamma radiation. The excess relative
risk of cancer excluding leukemia was estimated to be -0.13 Gy_1 (95%
CI: -0.58, 0.46)", indicating no statistically significant positive or
negative relationship between background radiation levels and cancer
risk in this sample.
Cultures
Studies
in cell cultures can be useful for finding mechanisms for biological
processes, but they also can be criticized for not effectively capturing
the whole of the living organism.
A study by E.I. Azzam suggested that pre-exposure to radiation causes cells to turn on protection mechanisms.
A different study by de Toledo and collaborators, has shown that
irradiation with gamma rays increases the concentration of glutathione,
an antioxidant found in cells.
In 2011, an in vitro study led by S.V. Costes showed in
time-lapse images a strongly non-linear response of certain cellular
repair mechanisms called radiation-induced foci (RIF). The study found
that low doses of radiation prompted higher rates of RIF formation than
high doses, and that after low-dose exposure RIF continued to form after
the radiation had ended. Measured rates of RIF formation were 15 RIF/Gy
at 2 Gy, and 64 RIF/Gy at .1 Gy. These results suggest that low dose levels of ionizing radiation may not increase cancer risk directly proportional to dose and thus contradict the linear-no-threshold standard model. Mina Bissell,
a world-renowned breast cancer researcher and collaborator in this
study stated “Our data show that at lower doses of ionizing radiation,
DNA repair mechanisms work much better than at higher doses. This
non-linear DNA damage response casts doubt on the general assumption
that any amount of ionizing radiation is harmful and additive.”
Animals
An early study on mice exposed to low dose of radiation daily (0.11 R per day) suggest that they may outlive control animals. A study by Otsuka and collaborators found hormesis in animals.
Miyachi conducted a study on mice and found that a 200 mGy X-ray dose
protects mice against both further X-ray exposure and ozone gas.
In another rodent study, Sakai and collaborators found that (1 mGy/hr)
gamma irradiation prevents the development of cancer (induced by
chemical means, injection of methylcholanthrene).
In a 2006 paper,
a dose of 1 Gy was delivered to the cells (at constant rate from a
radioactive source) over a series of lengths of time. These were between
8.77 and 87.7 hours, the abstract states for a dose delivered over 35
hours or more (low dose rate) no transformation of the cells occurred.
Also for the 1 Gy dose delivered over 8.77 to 18.3 hours that the
biological effect (neoplastic transformation) was about "1.5 times less
than that measured at high dose rate in previous studies with a similar
quality of [X-ray] radiation." Likewise it has been reported that
fractionation of gamma irradiation reduces the likelihood of a
neoplastic transformation.
Pre-exposure to fast neutrons and gamma rays from Cs-137 is reported to
increase the ability of a second dose to induce a neoplastic
transformation.
Caution must be used in interpreting these results, as it noted
in the BEIR VII report, these pre-doses can also increase cancer risk:
In chronic low-dose experiments with dogs (75 mGy/d for the duration of life), vital hematopoietic progenitors showed increased radioresistance along with renewed proliferative capacity (Seed and Kaspar 1992). Under the same conditions, a subset of animals showed an increased repair capacity as judged by the unscheduled DNA synthesis assay (Seed and Meyers 1993). Although one might interpret these observations as an adaptive effect at the cellular level, the exposed animal population experienced a high incidence of myeloid leukemia and related myeloproliferative disorders. The authors concluded that “the acquisition of radioresistance and associated repair functions under the strong selective and mutagenic pressure of chronic radiation is tied temporally and causally to leukemogenic transformation by the radiation exposure” (Seed and Kaspar 1992).
However, 75 mGy/d cannot be accurately described as a low dose rate –
it is equivalent to over 27 sieverts per year. The same study on dogs
showed no increase in cancer nor reduction in life expectancy for dogs
irradiated at 3 mGy/d.
Humans
Effects of sunlight exposure
In an Australian study which analyzed the association between solar UV exposure and DNA damage, the results indicated that although the frequency of cells with chromosome breakage increased with increasing sun exposure, the misrepair of DNA strand breaks decreased as sun exposure was heightened.
Effects of cobalt-60 exposure
The health of the inhabitants of radioactive apartment buildings in Taiwan
has received prominent attention in popular treatments of radiation
hormesis. In 1982, more than 20,000 tons of steel was accidentally
contaminated with cobalt-60,
and much of this radioactive steel was used to build apartments and
exposed thousands of Taiwanese to gamma radiation levels of up to 1000+ times background (average 47.7 mSv, maximum 2360 mSv excess
cumulative dose) – it was not until 1992 that the radioactive
contamination was discovered. A medical study published in 2004 claimed
the cancer mortality rates in the exposed population were much lower
than expected.
However, this initial study failed to control for age, comparing a much
younger exposed population (mean age 17.2 years at initial exposure)
with the much older general population of Taiwan (mean age approx. 34
years in 2004), a serious flaw. Older people have much higher cancer rates even in the absence of excess radiation exposure.
A subsequent study by Hwang et al. (2006) found the
incidence of "all cancers" in the irradiated population was 40% lower
than expected (95 vs. 160.3 cases expected), except for leukemia in men
(6 vs. 1.8 cases expected) and thyroid cancer in women (6 vs. 2.8 cases
expected), an increase only detected among those exposed before the
age of 30. Hwang et al. proposed that the lower rate of "all cancers" might be due to the exposed populations higher socioeconomic status and thus overall healthier lifestyle, but this was difficult to prove. Additionally, they cautioned that leukaemia
was the first cancer type found to be elevated among the survivors of
the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings, so it may be decades before any
increase in more common cancer types is seen.
Besides the excess risks of leukemia and thyroid cancer, a later
publication notes various DNA anomalies and other health effects among
the exposed population:
There have been several reports concerning the radiation effects on the exposed population, including cytogenetic analysis that showed increased micronucleus frequencies in peripheral lymphocytes in the exposed population, increases in acentromeric and single or multiple centromeric cytogenetic damages, and higher frequencies of chromosomal translocations, rings and dicentrics. Other analyses have shown persistent depression of peripheral leucocytes and neutrophils, increased eosinophils, altered distributions of lymphocyte subpopulations, increased frequencies of lens opacities, delays in physical development among exposed children, increased risk of thyroid abnormalities, and late consequences in hematopoietic adaptation in children.
Effects of no radiation
Given
the uncertain effects of low-level and very-low-level radiation, there
is a pressing need for quality research in this area. An expert panel
convened at the 2006 Ultra-Low-Level Radiation Effects Summit at
Carlsbad, New Mexico, proposed the construction of an Ultra-Low-Level
Radiation laboratory. The laboratory, if built, will investigate the effects of almost no radiation on laboratory animals and cell cultures, and it will compare these groups to control groups exposed to natural radiation levels. Precautions would be made, for example, to remove potassium-40 from the food of laboratory animals. The expert panel believes that the Ultra-Low-Level Radiation laboratory is the only experiment
that can explore with authority and confidence the effects of low-level
radiation; that it can confirm or discard the various radiobiological
effects proposed at low radiation levels e.g. LNT, threshold and radiation hormesis.
The first preliminary results of the effects of almost
no-radiation on cell cultures was reported by two research groups in
2011 and 2012; researchers in the US studied cell cultures protected
from radiation in a steel chamber 650 meters underground at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant in Carlsbad, New Mexico
and researchers in Europe reported the effects of almost no-radiation
on mouse cells (pKZ1 transgenic chromosomal inversion assay).