1988
DOI: 10.2307/3577229
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Extrapolation of the Relative Risk of Radiogenic Neoplasms across Mouse Strains and to Man

Abstract: We have examined two interrelated questions: is the susceptibility for radiogenic cancer related to the natural incidence, and are the responses of cancer induction by radiation described better by an absolute or a relative risk model. Also, we have examined whether it is possible to extrapolate relative risk estimates across species, from mice to humans. The answers to these questions were obtained from determinations of risk estimates for nine neoplasms in female and male C3Hf/Bd and C57BL/6 Bd mice and from… Show more

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Cited by 106 publications
(57 citation statements)
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“…The validity of the multiplicative model agrees with results of experimental studies of radiogenic cancer where an additive model could be rejected in most cases in favor of the multiplicative model (12). For these reasons, the National Research Council (13) has adopted the multiplicative model.…”
Section: Multiplicative Versus Additive Modelssupporting
confidence: 72%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The validity of the multiplicative model agrees with results of experimental studies of radiogenic cancer where an additive model could be rejected in most cases in favor of the multiplicative model (12). For these reasons, the National Research Council (13) has adopted the multiplicative model.…”
Section: Multiplicative Versus Additive Modelssupporting
confidence: 72%
“…c) The question whether the life-time dose or the dose per day (i.e., a dose rate) determines the risk creates an uncertainty by a factor 35 corresponding to the human-to-rodent longevity ratio (17). Due to the irreversibility of genotoxic events, the lifetime dose is expected to have a decisive influence, as has been found for ionizing radiation (12) and recently for alkylating chemotherapeutics (18). Therefore, the extrapolation on the basis of daily dose, as done by the U.S. EPA (16), may lead to considerable underestimation.…”
Section: Animal Carinogenicitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Following APC induction, we found an elevated overall CFS expression in BALB/c compared to C57BL/6 mice. This might bear a relation to the high postirradiation breast cancer risk of BALB/c animals (Storer et al 1988) that is due to strain-specific polymorphisms in the coding region of Prkdc, causing chromatid-type aberrations (Ponnaiya et al 1997;Yu et al 2001). The Prkdc gene encodes the DNA-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit, which is known to be involved in DNA double-stranded break repair and post-IR signal transduction (Yu et al 2001).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Based on their post-irradiation survival rate and incidence of radiogenic neoplasms BALB/c and C57BL/6 mice are regarded as radiosensitive or radioresistant, respectively (Storer et al 1988). Indeed, Ponnaiya et al (1997) demonstrated that primary mammary epithelial cells collected from BALB/c mice and exposed in vitro to 3.0 Gy of 137 Cs γ-rays at 0.74 Gy/min.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%