| Literature DB >> 31130979 |
Nadia Narendran1,2, Lidia Luzhna1, Olga Kovalchuk1.
Abstract
Ionizing radiation is a well-established cause of deleterious effects on human health. Understanding the risks of radiation exposure is important for the development of protective measures and guidelines. Demographic factors such as age, sex, genetic susceptibility, comorbidities, and various other lifestyle factors influence the radiosensitivity of different subpopulations. Amongst these factors, the influence of sex differences on radiation sensitivity has been given very less attention. In fact, the International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) has based its recommendations on a population average, rather than the data on the radiosensitivity of distinct subpopulations. In this study, we reviewed major human studies on the health risks of radiation exposure and showed that sex-related factors may potentially influence the long-term response to radiation exposure. Available data suggest that long-term radiosensitivity in women is higher than that in men who receive a comparable dose of radiation. The report on the biological effects of ionizing radiation (BEIR VII) published in 2006 by the National Academy of Sciences, United States emphasized that women may be at significantly greater risk of suffering and dying from radiation-induced cancer than men exposed to the same dose of radiation. We show that radiation effects are sex-specific, and long-term radiosensitivity in females is higher than that in males. We also discuss the radiation effects as a function of age. In the future, more systematic studies are needed to elucidate the sex differences in radiation responses across the life continuum - from preconception through childhood, adulthood, and old age - to ensure that boys and girls and men and women are equally protected across ages.Entities:
Keywords: aging; cancer; radiation; radiation effects and adverse reactions; sex differences
Year: 2019 PMID: 31130979 PMCID: PMC6509159 DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2019.00260
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Genet ISSN: 1664-8021 Impact factor: 4.599
FIGURE 1Sex differences in response to ionizing radiation.
Geographic area of study, ages, and sex differences showing relationship to radiation exposure (Prysyazhnyuk et al., 2002a, 2007; Yablokov et al., 2009).
| Area studied | Year | Radioactivity | Investigated ages | Diseases/Conditions | Sex differences | Statistical significance | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chernigov, Kev, Zhytomir regions | 1990–1999 | <100 kBq m-2 (low levels) | Adolescents and adults | Thyroid cancer | Low levels - 2 | Regression coefficient b+ m: Males | |
| Ukraine | 1986 | Contaminated with Sr-90 and Pu | Adolescents | Sexual development | Puberty delayed by 2 years in boys Puberty delayed by 1 year in girls | ||
| Belarus | 1993–2003 | Children born after the catastrophe in heavily contaminated areas | Reproductive organ disorders | Threefold increase in boys Fivefold increase in boys | |||
| Ukraine | 1988–1998 | 10–20 mSv | Adult evacuees | Thyroid gland pathology as a result of hypothyroidism, thyroidite and non-toxical nodular goiter | Annual level of thyroid pathology in females was higher than in males |
List of most common radiation-exposure associated morbidities in females and males.
| • Thyroid cancer in women of all ages |
| • Goiter and thyroiditis |
| • Production of thyroglobulin in girls |
| • Testosterone increase in young females |
| • Impaired leg blood flow |
| • Reproductive system disruption |
| • Fertility loss |
| • Complications in labor and delivery, uterine hemorrhages |
| • Increased number of miscarriages and pregnancy complications |
| • Increased overall cancer incidence |
| • breast cancer |
| • Uterine fibroids and uterine cancer |
| • Pediatric brain tumors in girls |
| • Lung cancer in occupationally exposed females |
| • Goiter and thyroiditis, thyroid cancer in men older than 50 |
| • Decrease of thyroxine in boys |
| • Early male impotence/erectile dysfunction |
| • Low sperm count, decreased sperm motility |
| • Prostate cancer |
| • Pediatric leukemia in boys |
| • Lung cancer |