| Literature DB >> 28342453 |
Janet Hall1, Penny A Jeggo2, Catharine West3, Maria Gomolka4, Roel Quintens5, Christophe Badie6, Olivier Laurent7, An Aerts5, Nataša Anastasov8, Omid Azimzadeh8, Tamara Azizova9, Sarah Baatout10, Bjorn Baselet11, Mohammed A Benotmane5, Eric Blanchardon7, Yann Guéguen7, Siamak Haghdoost12, Mats Harms-Ringhdahl12, Julia Hess8, Michaela Kreuzer4, Dominique Laurier7, Ellina Macaeva10, Grainne Manning6, Eileen Pernot13, Jean-Luc Ravanat14, Laure Sabatier15, Karine Tack7, Soile Tapio8, Horst Zitzelsberger8, Elisabeth Cardis16.
Abstract
Recent epidemiology studies highlighted the detrimental health effects of exposure to low dose and low dose rate ionizing radiation (IR): nuclear industry workers studies have shown increased leukaemia and solid tumour risks following cumulative doses of <100mSv and dose rates of <10mGy per year; paediatric patients studies have reported increased leukaemia and brain tumours risks after doses of 30-60mGy from computed tomography scans. Questions arise, however, about the impact of even lower doses and dose rates where classical epidemiological studies have limited power but where subsets within the large cohorts are expected to have an increased risk. Further progress requires integration of biomarkers or bioassays of individual exposure, effects and susceptibility to IR. The European DoReMi (Low Dose Research towards Multidisciplinary Integration) consortium previously reviewed biomarkers for potential use in IR epidemiological studies. Given the increased mechanistic understanding of responses to low dose radiation the current review provides an update covering technical advances and recent studies. A key issue identified is deciding which biomarkers to progress. A roadmap is provided for biomarker development from discovery to implementation and used to summarise the current status of proposed biomarkers for epidemiological studies. Most potential biomarkers remain at the discovery stage and for some there is sufficient evidence that further development is not warranted. One biomarker identified in the final stages of development and as a priority for further research is radiation specific mRNA transcript profiles. CrownEntities:
Keywords: Biomarkers; Effects; Exposure; Individual sensitivity; Ionizing radiation; Molecular epidemiology
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28342453 DOI: 10.1016/j.mrrev.2017.01.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mutat Res Rev Mutat Res ISSN: 1383-5742 Impact factor: 5.657