| Literature DB >> 22540409 |
Eugenio Picano1, Eliseo Vano, Luciano Domenici, Matteo Bottai, Isabelle Thierry-Chef.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: According to a fundamental law of radiobiology ("Law of Bergonié and Tribondeau", 1906), the brain is a paradigm of a highly differentiated organ with low mitotic activity, and is thus radio-resistant. This assumption has been challenged by recent evidence discussed in the present review.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22540409 PMCID: PMC3495891 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2407-12-157
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Figure 1 (a)The range of radiation exposure of interventional cardiologists per single procedure: diagnostic coronary angiography, percutaneous coronary angioplasty, cardiac ablation, cardiac pacemakers, intracardiac defibrillator or implantation, transcutaneous aortic valve implantation, dilation of chronic coronary total occlusion and endovascular thoraco-abdominal aneurysm repair. From original data of references 14–16. There is substantial variability in operator dose across procedures and within each procedure. On the y-axis, a log scale is used. Right side: The annual radiation exposure for different specialists. Interventional cardiologists are by far the most exposed (modified from Vano E et?al., 1998, ref. 4). (b) The map of radiation exposure in the cardiac interventionalist. There are “hot regions” of higher exposure in the eye, thyroid and brain that should be carefully protected by glasses, collars and cap. Radiation exposure on the left is almost double that on the right side (modified from Vano E et?al., 1998, ref. 4). Right side: Estimated cumulative dose after 20 years of professional life in the cardiac cath lab: the whole body dose (below lead apron) is around 100 mSv; the head dose is 10 times higher, and in the head, the left head dose is twice that of the right side dose. Obviously, in this order of magnitude there are substantial variations (up to 10 times) depending on years of exposure, volume of activity, type of procedure, technology used, protection habits and radiation awareness.
Figure 2The dose-effect relationship between radiation exposure and cancer (left side) and radiation exposure and atherosclerosis (right side). The solid line indicates the epidemiological evidence, which is conclusive for cancer risk above 50 mSv and for atherosclerosis risk above 500 mSv. The dashed line indicates the dose range with absent or inconclusive evidence. Freely adapted from refs 3 (BEIR VII, 2006) and 7 (ICRP publication 103, 2007).
Tissue weighting factors from ICRP (2007 vs 1991 and 1997)
| Bladder | _ _ _ | 0.05 | 0.04 |
| Bone | 0.03 | 0.01 | 0.01 |
| Brain | _ _ _ | _ _ _ | 0.01 |
| Breasts | 0.15 | 0.05 | 0.12 |
| Colon | _ _ _ | _ _ _ | 0.12 |
| Esophagus | _ _ _ | 0.05 | 0.04 |
| Liver | _ _ _ | 0.05 | 0.04 |
| Lower large intestine | _ _ _ | 0.12 | _ _ _ |
| Lungs | 0.12 | 0.12 | 0.12 |
| Ovaries/testes | 0.25 | 0.20 | 0.08 |
| Red marrow | 0.12 | 0.12 | 0.12 |
| Remainder tissues | 0.30 | 0.05 | 0.12 |
| Salivary glands | _ _ _ | _ _ _ | 0.01 |
| Skin | _ _ _ | 0.01 | 0.01 |
| Stomach | _ _ _ | 0.12 | 0.12 |
| Thyroid | 0.05 | 0.04 |
Adapted from refs 7, 26 and 27.
Reports of brain cancer incidence in physicians, radiologists and interventionalists
| Matanoski et al., 1975 [ | Cohort study of mortality in 6,500 US male radiologists (years first worked 1920–1969) over a 50-year period | Excess cancer risk among radiologists compared with other physicians |
| Wang JX et al., 1990 [ | Cohort study of Chinese diagnostic x-ray workers (1950 to 1985) | Trend of excess cancer risk (standardized incidence ratio 1.2 for employment duration 10–14 years; 2.3 for 15–19 years) compared to non-radiation medical workers, not available for brain cancer |
| Andersson M et al., 1991 [ | Cohort study of Danish radiation therapy workers | Trend of excess cancer risk (standardized incidence ratio 1.09 with measured radiation dose < 5 mSv, and 2.23 with dose 5–50 mSv), not available for brain cancer |
| Carozza et al., 2000 [ | Case–control study of occupation and glioma | Physicians at increased, albeit imprecise, risk of glioma (OR 3.5, CI 0.7- 17) |
| Andersen M et al., 1999 [ | Population-based study of occupation and cancer incidence (from the 1990s to 1980s) | Brain cancer increased among physicians in general; no breakdown by specialty |
| Hardell et al., 2001 [ | Case control study of 233 gliomas | Excess cancer risk of 6.0 in fluoroscopists |
| Blettner et al., 2007 [ | Case control study of German patients (age 30–59 years at diagnosis) with brain cancer in 2001–2003 | Occupational exposure (physicians, nurses, radiographers) with OR 2.49 (0.74–8.38) for neurinoma, OR close to 1 for glioma and meningioma |
| Finkelstein et al., 1998 [ | Report of a case cluster (1990s) | Brain cancer in two interventionalists |
| Roguin et al., 2012 [ | Report of a case cluster (2000s) | 3 brain gliomas and 1 meningioma, left-sided, in 4 interventional cardiologists |
Figure 3The modified cellular and pathophysiological model leading to neurodegenerative and atherosclerotic disease through possibly shared molecular pathways. Modified from ref. 48.
Figure 4The cellular and experimental effects of x-ray on adult brain. Adult neurogenesis occurs in the caudate nucleus, hippocampus and olfactory bulb (left upper panel, A); environmental factors can positively (environmental enrichment) or negatively modulate adult brain plasticity (right upper panel, B); of many physical, chemical and genetic factors modulating plasticity, x-rays are a recognized potent inhibitor of neurogenesis (left lower panel, C). The inhibition of neurogenesis in a mouse model is more striking in males than in females, and with repetitive, chronic rather than with acute exposures (right lower panel, D, modified from ref 70, Silasi et al.).
Figure 6Scatter dose rate values during fluoroscopy in interventional cardiologists without protection (as is was standard practice in many laboratories until some years ago). The use of lead cap protection or total body protection with radioprotection cabin or ceiling suspended screen reduces the scatter dose to less than 1%. From the International Atomic Energy Agency collection of slides (Radiation Protection of Patients, on the dedicated and continuously updated website: http://rpop.iaea.org.website), ref 96 (Kuon 2003) and ref. 18 (Dragusin, 2007).
Ongoing studies on interventional cardiologists
| Multispecialty Occupational Health Group | Italian Society of Invasive Cardiology (GISE) | |
| · 44,000 fluoroscopists (interventional cardiologists, radiologists, neuroradiologists) | · 500 exposed interventional cardiologists (nurses, technicians) | |
| Epidemiological clinical endpoints (cancer, cataract, vascular events) | Surrogate biomarkers of genetic, vascular, reproductive, cognitive effect |