Abstract

In 2011, the International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) recommended reducing the occupational equivalent dose limit for the lens of the eye from 150 mSv/year to 20 mSv/year, averaged over five years, with no single year exceeding 50 mSv. With this recommendation, several important assumptions were made, such as lack of dose rate effect, classification of cataracts as a tissue reaction with a dose threshold at 0.5 Gy, and progression of minor opacities into vision-impairing cataracts.However, although new dose thresholds and occupational dose limits have been set for radiation-induced cataract, ICRP clearly states that the recommendations are chiefly based on epidemiological evidence because there are a very small number of studies that provide explicit biological and mechanistic evidence at doses under 2 Gy.Since the release of the 2011 ICRP statement, the Multidisciplinary European Low Dose Initiative (MELODI) supported in April 2019 a scientific workshop that aimed to review epidemiological, clinical and biological evidence for radiation-induced cataracts.The purpose of this article is to present and discuss recent related epidemiological and clinical studies, ophthalmic examination techniques, biological and mechanistic knowledge, and to identify research gaps, towards the implementation of a research strategy for future studies on radiation-induced lens opacities.The authors recommend particularly to study the effect of ionizing radiation on the lens in the context of the wider, systemic effects, including in the retina, brain and other organs, and as such cataract is recommended to be studied as part of larger scale programs focused on multiple radiation health effects.

Highlights

  • Cataracts are the most frequent cause of blindness worldwide

  • Because recent epidemiological and experimental studies on radiation-induced cataracts suggested that the dose threshold for cata­ racts could be lower than previously considered or that there may be no dose threshold at all, the International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) recommended in a statement on tissue reactions approved in April 2011, a threshold in absorbed dose to the lens of the eye of 0.5 Gy

  • New dose thresholds and occupational dose limits have been set for radiation-induced cataract, ICRP clearly states that the recom­ mendations are based on epidemiological evidence because there are a very small number of studies that provide explicit biological and mechanistic evidence at doses under 2 Gy

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Summary

Introduction

Cataracts are the most frequent cause of blindness worldwide. Apart from ageing, genetics (congenital cataracts), ultraviolet radiation exposure, diabetes, high body mass index, smoking, alcohol intake, persistent use of corticosteroids and ocular trauma, ionizing radiation exposure to the lens of the eye is a known risk factor for the development of eye lens opacities in human. New dose thresholds and occupational dose limits have been set for radiation-induced cataract, ICRP clearly states that the recom­ mendations are based on epidemiological evidence because there are a very small number of studies that provide explicit biological and mechanistic evidence at doses under 2 Gy. In the light of a scientific workshop held in April 2019 under the auspices of the Multidisciplinary European Low Dose Initiative (MEL­ ODI) association and the EC-funded CONCERT (European Joint Pro­ gramme for the Integration of Radiation Protection Research), this article aims to summarize the state of the art in terms of epidemiological evidence, clinical studies, ophthalmological techniques, mechanistic information, and to identify research gaps towards the implementation of a research strategy for future studies on radiation-induced lens opacities. The following subsections provide a brief overview of the main epidemio­ logical studies published since mid-2016, with particular focus on the studies following exposures at low doses (500 mGy and below) as well as studies addressing the influence of dose rate

Evidence for radiation-induced cataracts
Evidence for cataract surgery as a surrogate for VICs
Latency and probability of lens opacities in treated patients
Ophthalmic examination techniques used in mice
Mechanisms
Experimental designs and models
Discussion
Findings
Conclusion
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