Systematic review of experimental studies on the relative biological effectiveness of tritium
- PMID: 18071729
- DOI: 10.1007/s00411-007-0143-y
Systematic review of experimental studies on the relative biological effectiveness of tritium
Abstract
Tritium ((3)H) is a radioactive isotope of hydrogen. A number of factors combine to create a good deal of interest in tritium doses, both to workers and to members of the public. Tritium is ubiquitous in environmental and biological systems and is very mobile due to its occurrence as water. In this study we systematically review experimental data relating to tritium exposure with a view to assessing its low dose limiting relative biological effectiveness (RBE(max)). Interpretation of published experimental studies is complicated by the fact that the reference radiations varied, and doses and dose rates were frequently much higher than those normally received by humans. The four available animal carcinogenicity studies gave RBE values of about 2.5 with chronically-delivered gamma-ray reference, and about 1.2 with chronically-delivered X-ray reference. However, because of problems associated with the design and interpretation of the experiments, we do not consider that these RBE values should be taken to apply to the induction of cancer at low doses (i.e. they should not be interpreted as RBE(max)). Combining the six studies with chronic gamma-ray reference, with adequate quantitative data that examined endpoints apart from cell survival and related endpoints, yields an aggregate RBE estimate of 2.19 (95% CI 2.04, 2.33); the analogous combined RBE estimate using the three studies with chronic X-ray reference groups is 1.17 (95% CI 0.96, 1.39). Again, problems with the design, in particular the range of doses used in some of these studies, mean that these RBE values should also probably not be interpreted as RBE(max).
References
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources