How the US National Academy of Sciences misled the world community on cancer risk assessment: new findings challenge historical foundations of the linear dose response
- PMID: 23912675
- DOI: 10.1007/s00204-013-1105-6
How the US National Academy of Sciences misled the world community on cancer risk assessment: new findings challenge historical foundations of the linear dose response
Abstract
This paper extends several recent publications indicating that Hermann J. Muller: (1) Made deceptive statements during his Noble Prize Lecture on December 12, 1946, that were intended to promote the acceptance of the linear dose-response model for risk assessment for ionizing radiation and (2) that such actions of Muller were masked by a series of decisions by Muller's long-time colleague and esteemed radiation geneticist Curt Stern, affecting key publications in the mutation literature. Such actions further enhanced acceptance of the linearity dose-response model while preventing Muller's deceptions from being discovered. This paper provides documentation that Muller reinforced such practices within the scientific literature in the early 1950s, by supporting scientifically questionable actions of Stern. Detailed documentation is provided that demonstrates how these actions affected national and international risk assessment policy for ionizing radiation and chemical carcinogens via the recommendations of the National Academy of Sciences Biological Effects of Atomic Radiation committee in 1956, to adopt the linear dose-response model.
Comment in
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Response to Letter of Ralph J Cicerone and Kevin Crowley regarding "How the US National Academy of Sciences misled the world community on cancer risk assessment: new findings challenge historical foundations of the linear dose response." [DOI 10.1007/s00204-013-1105-6, Review Article].Arch Toxicol. 2014 Jan;88(1):173-7. doi: 10.1007/s00204-013-1177-3. Epub 2013 Nov 30. Arch Toxicol. 2014. PMID: 24292227 No abstract available.
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Letter from Ralph J Cicerone regarding Edward Calabrese's paper published online first on August 4th: "how the US national academy of sciences misled the world community on cancer risk assessment: new findings challenge historical foundations of the linear dose response." [DOI 10.1007/s00204-013-1105-6, Review Article].Arch Toxicol. 2014 Jan;88(1):171-2. doi: 10.1007/s00204-013-1176-4. Epub 2013 Dec 6. Arch Toxicol. 2014. PMID: 24311193 No abstract available.
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Leukemia incidence of 96,000 Hiroshima atomic bomb survivors is compelling evidence that the LNT model is wrong: Edward Calabrese's papers "Origin of the linear no threshold (LNT) dose-response concept" (Arch Toxicol (2013) 87:1621-1633) and "How the US National Academy of Sciences misled the world community on cancer risk assessment: new findings challenge historical foundations of the linear dose response" (Arch Toxicol (2013) 87:2063-2081).Arch Toxicol. 2014 Mar;88(3):847-8. doi: 10.1007/s00204-014-1207-9. Epub 2014 Feb 7. Arch Toxicol. 2014. PMID: 24504164 No abstract available.
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Adoption of linear no-threshold model violated basic scientific principles and was harmful: Letter from Mohan Doss regarding Edward Calabrese's paper "How the US National Academy of Sciences misled the world community on cancer risk assessment: new findings challenge historical foundations of the linear dose response" (Arch Toxicol (2013) 87:2063-2081) and the letter from Ralph J Cicerone (Arch Toxicol (2014) 88:171-172).Arch Toxicol. 2014 Mar;88(3):849-52. doi: 10.1007/s00204-014-1208-8. Epub 2014 Feb 7. Arch Toxicol. 2014. PMID: 24504165 No abstract available.
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