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Research ArticleIssues and Controversies

Subjecting Radiologic Imaging to the Linear No-Threshold Hypothesis: A Non Sequitur of Non-Trivial Proportion

Jeffry A. Siegel, Charles W. Pennington and Bill Sacks
Journal of Nuclear Medicine January 2017, 58 (1) 1-6; DOI: https://doi.org/10.2967/jnumed.116.180182
Jeffry A. Siegel
1Nuclear Physics Enterprises, Marlton, New Jersey
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Charles W. Pennington
2NAC International (retired), Norcross, Georgia, and executive nuclear energy consultant, Alpharetta, Georgia; and
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Bill Sacks
3U.S. Food and Drug Administration (retired), Green Valley, Arizona
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Abstract

Radiologic imaging is claimed to carry an iatrogenic risk of cancer, based on an uninformed commitment to the 70-y-old linear no-threshold hypothesis (LNTH). Credible evidence of imaging-related low-dose (<100 mGy) carcinogenic risk is nonexistent; it is a hypothetical risk derived from the demonstrably false LNTH. On the contrary, low-dose radiation does not cause, but more likely helps prevent, cancer. The LNTH and its offspring, ALARA (as low as reasonably achievable), are fatally flawed, focusing only on molecular damage while ignoring protective, organismal biologic responses. Although some grant the absence of low-dose harm, they nevertheless advocate the “prudence” of dose optimization (i.e., using ALARA doses); but this is a radiophobia-centered, not scientific, approach. Medical imaging studies achieve a diagnostic purpose and should be governed by the highest science-based principles and policies. The LNTH is an invalidated hypothesis, and its use, in the form of ALARA dosing, is responsible for misguided concerns promoting radiophobia, leading to actual risks far greater than the hypothetical carcinogenic risk purportedly avoided. Further, the myriad benefits of imaging are ignored. The present work calls for ending the radiophobia caused by those asserting the need for dose optimization in imaging: the low-dose radiation of medical imaging has no documented pathway to harm, whereas the LNTH and ALARA most assuredly do.

  • radiological imaging
  • linear no-threshold
  • ALARA
  • hormesis
  • adaptive response
  • radiophobia

Footnotes

  • Published online Aug. 4, 2016.

  • © 2017 by the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging.
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Journal of Nuclear Medicine: 58 (1)
Journal of Nuclear Medicine
Vol. 58, Issue 1
January 1, 2017
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Subjecting Radiologic Imaging to the Linear No-Threshold Hypothesis: A Non Sequitur of Non-Trivial Proportion
Jeffry A. Siegel, Charles W. Pennington, Bill Sacks
Journal of Nuclear Medicine Jan 2017, 58 (1) 1-6; DOI: 10.2967/jnumed.116.180182

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Subjecting Radiologic Imaging to the Linear No-Threshold Hypothesis: A Non Sequitur of Non-Trivial Proportion
Jeffry A. Siegel, Charles W. Pennington, Bill Sacks
Journal of Nuclear Medicine Jan 2017, 58 (1) 1-6; DOI: 10.2967/jnumed.116.180182
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  • Article
    • Abstract
    • FAILURE OF THE LNTH GOLD STANDARD
    • CONTRARY TO THE LNTH, BIOLOGY RESPONDS ADAPTIVELY
    • ABSENCE OF ACUTE, LOW-DOSE RADIATION CARCINOGENESIS IS EVIDENCE
    • EVALUATION OF THE PRESENTED EVIDENCE
    • A NON SEQUITUR: MEDICAL IMAGING SHOULD BE INFLUENCED BY THE LNTH
    • MEDICAL IMAGING AND THE FAILURE OF LNTH ORTHODOXY
    • Footnotes
    • REFERENCES
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Keywords

  • radiological imaging
  • Linear no-threshold
  • ALARA
  • Hormesis
  • adaptive response
  • Radiophobia
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