Letter to the Editor published in Radiology
Linear No-Threshold Model May Not Be Appropriate for Estimating Cancer Risk from CT,
Mohan Doss
Radiology Jan 2014, Vol. 270, No. 1:307 –308.
Available at: http://pubs.rsna.org/doi/pdf/10.1148/radiol.13131661
Editor,
I read with interest the recent
article by Zondervan and colleagues in the May 2013 issue of Radiology (1) regarding the increased cancer risk from CT
scans. They cited the references (2-4) which claimed increased risk of cancer
from low dose radiation based on comparison to atomic bomb survivor data (5) and/or the linear no-threshold (LNT) model
for radiation-induced cancers, justified by the atomic bomb survivor data.
The latest comprehensive report
from the atomic bomb survivor study was published in 2012 by Ozasa et al. (6). With the additional statistics, a
significant curvature has been reported in the dose-response relationship for
cancers in the dose range of 0-2 Gy, as seen in
Table 7 of (6). Ozasa et al. said on p.238 of their report
that the curvature is apparently due to “relatively lower than expected risks
in the dose range 0.3–0.7 Gy, a finding without a current explanation”. Whereas there is no explanation for the shape
of dose-response curve in this dose range using the LNT model, there is an
explanation using the radiation hormesis model (7),
implying there may be a reduced risk of cancer from low dose radiation. Since the observed dose-response in the
atomic bomb survivor data played a key role in the establishment of the LNT
cancer risk model in BEIR VII report, and since the shape of dose-response in
the latest update cannot be explained using the LNT model, the cancer risk
models in the BEIR VII report should no longer be used.
Hence, when discussing CT
radiation concerns, radiologists should inform patients about the new findings
from the atomic bomb survivor study, and dismiss such concerns as being
baseless and potentially harmful due to missed diagnoses if the indicated
diagnostic studies are not performed due to the concerns. Also, the present widespread efforts to monitor
and reduce CT radiation dose should be discontinued, as they consume
considerable resources while providing no health benefit to patients, and may
be harming patients’ health because of the potential for misdiagnoses from the
use of alternative suboptimal imaging modalities or reduced image quality.
References
Letter to the Editor published in Radiology
Available at: http://pubs.rsna.org/doi/pdf/10.1148/radiol.13131661