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CELLULAR AND ORGANISM DOSE-RESPONSE: BIOPOSITIVE (HEALTH BENEFIT) EFFECTS Myron Pollycove, M.D., NRC/UCSF and KEY WORDS: radiation hormesis, DNA damage, DNA repair, aging, cancer, mortality INTRODUCTION BIOLOGY OF THE ANTIMUTAGENIC SYSTEM OF DNA DAMAGE CONTROL RESPONSE TO LOW-DOSE RADIATION RESPONSE OF THE IMMUNE SYSTEM TO RADIATION |
ABSTRACT The genes in every cell continuously undergo an immense amount of metabolic damage by reactive oxygen species (ROS) which is prevented, repaired, and removed by a complex antimutagenic system. Recent studies document low dose radiation stimulation of many cellular functions, including antioxidant prevention, enzymatic repair, and immunologic and apoptotic removal of DNA damage. This homeostatic system is stimulated by a ten, or even a hundredfold increase in background radiation. Enhanced prevention of gene mutations by the spatial and temporal differences of ionizing radiation ROS and metabolic ROS is associated with radiation hormesis: decreased mortality and decreased cancer mortality observed in populations exposed to low dose radiation. Therapeutic stimulation of the immune system by low dose body irradiation prevents and removes cancer metastases in mice, rats, and humans. INTRODUCTION The prime concern of radiation protection policy since 1959 has been protecting DNA from damage by reducing exposure to ionizing radiation "as low as reasonably achievable" (ALARA). This policy is based upon the linear nonthreshold hypothesis (LNT) that carcinogenic gene mutuations are produced in linear proportion to the radiation dose, no matter how small, 1995 NCRP Report 1211. Confidence in LNT is based on the biophysical concept that the passage of a single charged particle could cause damage to DNA that would result in cancer. Current understanding of the basic molecular biologic mechanisms involved will be examined after presenting several statistically significant epidemiologic studies that contradict the LNT hypothesis. Over eons of time a complex biosystem evolved in aerobic organisms to control the DNA alterations (oxidative adducts) produced by about 109 free radicals/cell/d derived from about 0.2-0.3% of all metabolized oxygen. Antioxidant prevention of DNA alterations, enzymatic repair of DNA damage, and removal of persistent DNA alterations by the immune system and apoptosis, sequentially reduce DNA damage from about 106 DNA alterations/cell/d to about 1 "mutation"/cell/d. These mutations accumulate in stem cells during a lifetime with progressive DNA damage-control impairment implicated in aging and malignant growth. A comparatively negligible number of mutations, an average of about 10-7 mutations/cell/d, is produced by low LET radiation background of 0.1 cGy/y. The remarkable efficiency of this biosystem is increased by the adaptive responses to low-dose ionizing radiation. Each of the sequential functions that prevent, repair, and remove DNA damage are adaptively stimulated by low-dose ionizing radiation in contrast to their impairment by high-dose radiation. The biologic effect of radiation is determined by its effect on the biosystem that controls the relentless enormous burden of oxidative DNA damage. At low doses, radiation stimulates this biosystem with consequent significant decrease of metabolic mutations. This reduction of gene mutations in response to low-dose radiation provides a biological explanation of the statistically significant observations of decreased human mortality and cancer mortality that contradict the biophysical concept upon which confidence in the LNT hypothesis is based. What are some of the statistically significant epidemiologic studies that demonstrate risk decrements (hormesis) as predicted by the adaptive responses to low-dose radiation of the DNA damage-control biosystem? For several decades increased longevity and decreased cancer mortality have been reported in populations exposed to high background radiation. Such observations have been considered spurious or inconclusive because of unreliable public health data or undetermined confounding factors such as pollution of air, water and food, smoking, and socioeconomic variables. Recently, however, several epidemiologic statistically significant controlled studies have demonstrated that exposure to low or intermediate levels of radiation are associated with positive health effects. Radiation hormesis is the stimulatory response to subtoxic radiation exposure.
Epidemiologic studies showing beneficial effects of low doses of radiation in atomic
bomb survivors (Figure 2)
These beneficial effects are consistent with the findings of B. L. Cohen, Professor of
Physics, University of Pittsburgh, that relate the incidence of lung cancer to radon
exposure in nearly 90% of the population of the United States.5 The 1601
counties selected for adequate permanence of residence provide extremely high-power
statistical analysis. After applying the BEIR IV6 correction for variations in
smoking frequency, the study shows that lung cancer mortality decreases with increasing
mean radon level in homes, in sharp contrast to the BEIR IV theoretical increased
mortality derived by linear extrapolation of effects in uranium miners exposed to very
high radon concentrations. The discrepancy between theoretical and measured slopes is 20
standard deviations (Figure 4).
The thirteen-year 10 million dollar U.S. Nuclear Shipyard Workers Study (NSWS) of the health effects of low-dose radiation was performed by the Johns Hopkins Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health and Hygiene, reported to the Department of Energy in 1991 7 and reported in UNSCEAR 1994.8 Professor Arthur C. Upton, who concurrently chaired the NAS BEIR V Committee on "Health Effects of Exposure to Low Levels of Ionizing Radiation," 9 chaired the Technical Advisory Panel that advised on the research and reviewed results. The results of this study contradict the conclusions of the BEIR V report 9
that small amounts of radiation have risk - the LNT hypothesis. From the database of
almost 700,000 shipyard workers, including about 108,000 nuclear workers, three closely
matched study groups were selected, consisting of 28,542 nuclear workers (NW) with working
lifetime doses Æ5 mSv (many received doses well in excess of 50 mSv), 10,462 NW with
doses <5 mSv and 33,352 non-nuclear workers (NNW). Deaths in each of the groups were
classified as due to: all causes, all malignant neoplasms, leukemia, lymphatic and
hematopoietic cancers, mesothelioma, and lung cancer. The results demonstrate
statistically significant decreases of the standardized mortality ratios for NW > 0.5
mSv of death from "all causes", 0.76 vs. 1.02 for NNW, a decrease of 16 standard
deviation (SD), and of death from "all malignant neoplasms", 0.95 vs. 1.12 for
NNW, a decrease of >4 SD P<0.001 (Figure 5).
This highly significant risk decrement for death from "all malignant neoplasms" is omitted from the NSWS Summary of Findings, the UNSCEAR 1994 report of the NSWS, and the DOE press release of this study. The NNW and NW were similarly selected for employment, both with a median age of entry of about 34 years, were afforded the same health care thereafter, and performed the identical type of work, except for exposure to 60Co gamma radiation. The highly significant risk decrements for NW>0.5 mSv exclude "the healthy worker effect" and contradict the LNT hypothesis. This DOE NSWS was never published. The study provides evidence with extremely high statistical power that low levels of ionizing radiation are associated with risk decrements, i.e., are hormetic. Radiation hormesis is the stimulatory response of the organism to subtoxic exposure to radiation. The Canadian Breast Cancer Fluoroscopy Study10 reports the observations of
the mortality from breast cancer in a cohort of 31,710 women who had been examined by
multiple fluoroscopy between 1930 and 1952. The observed rates of mortality are related to
breast radiation doses and presented in tables with no graphs. The authors compare linear
and linear-quadratic dose-response models fit to the data and conclude, "that the
most appropriate form of dose-response relations is a simple linear one, with different
slopes for Nova Scotia and the other provinces." On the basis of this linear model
fit that includes only non-significant data and excludes the data with the highest
confidence limits (Figure 6),
BIOLOGY OF THE ANTIMUTAGENIC SYSTEM OF DNA DAMAGE CONTROL During the past decade rapid advances in our knowledge of molecular biology, cell and body function explain why low-dose radiation is associated with positive health effects in contrast to the carcinogenic effect of high-dose radiation. Our understanding is based upon current, cellular molecular biology observations. Estimates are based on published data:
RESPONSE TO LOW-DOSE RADIATION
The efficiency of this biosystem is increased by adaptive responses to low-dose ionizing radiation (Figures 8-10). This is well documented in UNSCEAR 1994:8
This statement applies not only to the mutations produced by radiation and other environmental toxic agents, but also to the enormous number of endogenous daily metabolic mutations. The operative effect of reducing metabolic mutations by stimulatory adaptive response of the DNA damage-control biosystem to low-dose radiation damage is the critical factor, not reduction of a relatively negligible number of mutations produced by low-dose radiation. Assuming a 20% increased efficiency of biosystem control in response to a tenfold
increase of annual background radiation from 0.1 cGy/y, to 1 cG/y, radiation mutations
would indeed increase from 1x10-7/cell/d to 8x10-7/cell/d but metabolic
mutations would decrease from Ç1/cell/d to Ç0.8/cell/d (Figures 7, 11).19
UNSCEAR did not consider that the increase of radiation mutations by low-dose radiation
is negligible compared to the operative effect of the adaptive response to low-dose
radiation upon the high background of metabolic mutations. The biologic effect of
radiation is determined by its effect on the biosystem that controls the relentless
enormous burden of oxidative DNA damage. Acute high-dose radiation impairs this
biosystem with consequent significant increase of radiation and metabolic mutations and
corresponding risk increments. Low-dose radiation stimulates the DNA damage-control
biosystem with consequent significant decrease of metabolic mutations and corresponding risk
decrements (Figures 7-12),35,36 i.e., radiation hormesis.
RESPONSE OF THE IMMUNE SYSTEM TO RADIATION Low dose total body irradiation (TBI) and chronic TBI (LDR) stimulate immune system prevention and removal of cancer metastses in mice, rats, and humans. This has been shown in mice for almost 40 years37 and more recently in rats38 and humans39-42. The maximal immune response of mouse splenic cells to sheep red blood cells, both in vitro and in vivo, occurs after a single dose of 0.25 Gy (25 r) (Figure 10)27. Compared to the in vitro response, better homeostasis of the in vivo response is shown by both the smaller maximal response and a greater resistance to suppression by high dose radiation. TBI with subimmunogenic tumor antigen induces tumor immunization (Figure 13)43.
TBI stimulates immune suppression of tumor metastases to lung (Figure 14)41.
Metastases are also suppressed by TBI of tumor-bearing rats (Figure 15)38.
Chronic TBI ( multiple TBI fractions comprising a total course of low dose radiation [LDR]) increases immune system response of splenic T lymphocyte proliferation in mice (Figure 16)39. Mice irradiated 5 days/week for 4 weeks with LDR courses of 10 r, 20 r, and 80 r showed proliferative responses of 115%, 140%, and 160%, respectively, relative to the unirradiated control group 100%. LDR in mice on a chronically restricted diet (CRD: calorically 70% of ad libitum diet)
prevents and removes spontaneous breast cancer tumors (Figure 17)37.
LOW DOSE RADIATION (LDR) IMMUNOTHERAPY OF CANCER Two Harvard University clinical trials of LDR therapy of patients with
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma were published in 1976 (Figure 18)39
Both studies present 4 year survival data. The 1976 study shows 70% 4 year survival in 25 LDR patients and 40% survival in 25 matched control patients treated with COP (Figure18)39. The 1979 study shows 4 year survival of 74% in 39 LDR patients and 52% survival in 225 matched control patients treated with CHOP (Figure 19)40. Sakamoto, et al. (1997) at Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan, published a review of their experimental studies in mice and a clinical trial of LDR in humans41. In mice 15 r TBI induced the maximal suppression of tumor metastases (Figure 14)41. TBI given 6-12 hours before localized high dose tumor therapy increased effectiveness of tumor therapy. 15 r doses of TBI, upper half body irradiation (HBI), and localized splenic irradiation were equally effective in stimulating the mouse immune system. This 1997 study of LDR therapy of patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma is similar to
the 1979 study by Choi, et al. Both used a LDR course of 150 r with equally effective
doses of either 15 r 2x/week or 10 r 3x/week for 5 weeks and CHOP chemotherapy. Choi, et
al. used TBI while Sakamoto, et al. used either TBI or HBI (Figure 20) Sakamoto, et al. present 9 year survival data of 23 LDR patients and 94 control
patients with matched histologic tumor grades (Figure 21)41.
Comparisons of 4 year survival in the Harvard and Tohoku studies are consistent in showing about a 20% better survival of LDR patients compared with control CHOP patients. In the Japanese study, however, a moderate decrease of platelets did not require schedule interruption and the 4 year survival of both LDR and control CHOP patients is increased about 10% above those of the United States studies. This may be related to the well established benefits of lower caloric dietary intake (Figure 17)37 and more exercise in the Japanese population. Though racial differences may be a factor, this has not been demonstrated in Japanese living in the United States. In general, the population of Japan is lean and physically active with a diet low in calories and fat, high in vegetables (particularly soy and seaweed products), with some fruit, little fish and very little meat. Sound nutrition and regular exercise stimulate the immune system. LDR therapy is more effective when administered to patients with better initial immune system activity. The reduction of gene mutations in response to low-dose radiation stimulation of the antimutagenic biosystem of antioxidant prevention, enzymatic repair, and immune system and apoptotic removal of metabolic ROS DNA damage, provides a biological explanation of the statistically significant observations of radiation hormesis: decreased cancer mortality and decreased mortality from all causes. Radiation hormesis contradicts the biophysical concept upon which confidence in the LNT hypothesis is based. Recent research has led to recognition of the importance of the immune system in controlling cancer as well as infectious disease. LDR cancer immunotherapy has been shown to be effective in rodents and man with high statistical significance and repeated confirmation. Published results justify strong financial support of well designed clinical trials of LDR therapy in patients with breast, prostate, colon, ovarian cancer, and lymphomas. Clinical trials are also indicated to determine the efficacy of LDR immune stimulation in therapy of patients with early HIV disease and in potentiation of vaccines for HIV and other infectious diseases. Successful implementation of these trials would provide a long sought major advance of cancer therapy and terminate radiation phobia. Ending the enormous expenditure of many billions of dollars for needless protection from low dose radiation would also furnish funds needed for health care that includes low dose radiation immunotherapy of cancer and infectious diseases.
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Proceedings
of The Symposium on Health Benefits of Low-Dose Radiation: The Science and Medical
Applications November 15, 2000 Washington Hilton, Washington, D.C Sponsored by Radiation, Science and Health; and the Center for Nuclear Technology and Society at Worcester Polytechnic Institute . |
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