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Carcinogenesis induced by space radiation: A systematic review

Zhiyong Guo, Guangming Zhou, Wentao Hu

2022Neoplasia51 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The carcinogenic risk from space radiation has always been a health risk issue of great concern during space exploration. In recent years, a large number of cellular and animal experiments have demonstrated that space radiation, composed of high-energy protons and heavy ions, has shown obvious carcinogenicity. However, different from radiation on Earth, space radiation has the characteristics of high energy and low dose rate. It is rich in high-atom-number and high-energy particles and, as it is combined with other space environmental factors such as microgravity and a weak magnetic field, the study of its carcinogenic effects and mechanisms of action is difficult, which leads to great uncertainty in its carcinogenic risk assessment. Here, we review the latest progress in understanding the effects and mechanisms of action related to cell transformation and carcinogenesis induced by space radiation in recent years and summarize the prediction models of cancer risk caused by space radiation and the methods to reduce the uncertainty of prediction to provide reference for the research and risk assessment of space radiation.

Topics & Concepts

Space radiationCarcinogenIonizing radiationRadiationPhysicsCarcinogenesisRadiation exposureCancerRisk analysis (engineering)Medical physicsComputer scienceEnvironmental scienceCancer researchNuclear medicineBiologyMedicineIrradiationCosmic rayNuclear physicsGeneticsRadiation Therapy and DosimetryEffects of Radiation ExposureSpaceflight effects on biology
Carcinogenesis induced by space radiation: A systematic review | Litcius