Organization:International Centre for Low Dose Radiation Research

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The International Centre for Low Dose Radiation Research (ICLDRR) was established at the University of Ottawa, in 1997, with national and international support. The ICLDRR assembles all published data and conducts analyses concerning the effects of low doses of radiation on humans and in the environment. ICLDRR's main focus is to contribute to clarifying whether low and very low doses of ionizing radiation increase the risk of cancer. To that end, the ICLDRR has assembled and analysed virtually all published data on cancer induction in laboratory animals by low doses of ionizing radiation, and published initial findings at specialized international conferences, since 1998.

The foremost contribution of the ICLDRR is the setup of a radiation low-dose mammal-experiment database.[1][2] Their results have been used in support of the radiation hormesis hypothesis, wherein low-dose radiation may actually be beneficial for health.[3] They were quoted in a famous report by the French Academies as evidence that this effect takes place in 40% of low-dose animal experiments.[4]

The work at ICLDRR is funded by several actors of the nuclear industry such as the United States Department of Energy, Électricité de France, Cogema Resources, Inc. (Canada) or the Central Research Institute of the Electric Power Industry (Japan).[5]

References

  1. Duport, Philippe (2002), "Low-dose radiation carcinogenesis in mammals: A review of A Database of Cancer Induction by Low-Dose Radiation in Mammals: Initial Observations and comparison with some human data", International Symposium on Biological Effects of Low Dose Radiation - Molecular mechanisms for radiation-induced cellular response and cancer development, October 9-11, 2002, Rokkasho, Aomori 039-3212, Japan: Institute for Environmental Sciences (IES), Japan, http://www.ie.uottawa.ca/fichiers/reports/Low-dose%20carcinogenesis%20in%20animals-Rokkasho%202002.pdf 
  2. Duport, Philippe (2003), "A Database of Cancer Induction by Low-Dose Radiation in Mammals: Overview and Initial Observations", International Journal of Low Radiation 1 (1): 120–131, doi:10.1504/ijlr.2003.003488, http://www.ie.uottawa.ca/fichiers/reports/ADatabaseofCancerInduction.pdf 
  3. Hoffmann, George R. (2009), "A Perspective on the Scientific, Philosophical, and Policy Dimensions of Hormesis", Dose-Response 7 (1): 1–51, doi:10.2203/dose-response.08-023.hoffmann, PMID 19343115 
  4. Aurengo, André; Averbeck, Dietrich; Bonnin, André; Le Guen, Bernard; Masse, Roland; Monier, Roger; Tubiana, Maurice; Valleron, Alain-Jacques et al. (2005), Dose-effect relationships and the estimation of the carcinogenic effects of low doses of ionizing radiation, Joint Report n°2, Paris: Academy of Medicine and Academy of Science, http://radscihealth.org/rsh/Papers/FrenchAcadsFinal07_04_05.pdf 
  5. ICLDRR projects, International Centre for Low Dose Radiation Research, archived from the original on April 26, 2012, https://web.archive.org/web/20120426011542/http://www.lowdose.uottawa.ca/projects.htm, retrieved December 1, 2011 

External links