The future of biological dosimetry in mass casualty radiation emergency response, personalized radiation risk estimation and space radiation protection.

Elizabeth A Ainsbury, Jayne Moquet, Mingzhu Sun, Stephen Barnard, Michele Ellender, David Lloyd
Author Information
  1. Elizabeth A Ainsbury: Public Health England, Centre for Radiation, Chemical and Environmental Hazards, Chilton, UK. ORCID
  2. Jayne Moquet: Public Health England, Centre for Radiation, Chemical and Environmental Hazards, Chilton, UK. ORCID
  3. Mingzhu Sun: Public Health England, Centre for Radiation, Chemical and Environmental Hazards, Chilton, UK. ORCID
  4. Stephen Barnard: Public Health England, Centre for Radiation, Chemical and Environmental Hazards, Chilton, UK. ORCID
  5. Michele Ellender: Public Health England, Centre for Radiation, Chemical and Environmental Hazards, Chilton, UK. ORCID
  6. David Lloyd: Public Health England, Centre for Radiation, Chemical and Environmental Hazards, Chilton, UK.

Abstract

PURPOSE: The aim of this brief personal, high level review is to consider the state of the art for biological dosimetry for radiation routine and emergency response, and the potential future progress in this fascinating and active field. Four areas in which biomarkers may contribute to scientific advancement through improved dose and exposure characterization, as well as potential contributions to personalized risk estimation, are considered: emergency dosimetry, molecular epidemiology, personalized medical dosimetry, and space travel.
CONCLUSION: Ionizing radiation biodosimetry is an exciting field which will continue to benefit from active networking and collaboration with the wider fields of radiation research and radiation emergency response to ensure effective, joined up approaches to triage; radiation epidemiology to assess long term, low dose, radiation risk; radiation protection of workers, optimization and justification of radiation for diagnosis or treatment of patients in clinical uses, and protection of individuals traveling to space.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Humans
Mass Casualty Incidents
Radiation Protection
Radiation, Ionizing
Radiometry
Triage

Word Cloud

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