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Managing and Mitigating Accidental Radiation Exposures

Radiation victim management and the haematologist in the future: Time to revisit therapeutic guidelines?

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Pages 636-648 | Received 17 Jul 2009, Accepted 16 Mar 2010, Published online: 05 Jul 2010
 

Abstract

Purpose: The use of nuclear/radiation devices against the civilian population is now a realistic scenario. Haematopoietic syndrome is the primary therapeutic challenge in the case of whole body acute exposure over 2 Grays (Gy) whereas burns and combined injuries would be frequently observed in myelo-suppressed patients. Optimisation of scoring and treatments are important goals to achieve.

Conclusion: The European Response Category (RC) concept represents an attempt to integratively assess haematological/extrahematological radiation-induced lesions. Based on the frequently observed heterogeneity of bone marrow damage in accidental/intentional irradiations, the stimulation of residual stem cells using granulocyte Colony-stimulating factor remains the therapeutic standard after exposure to less than the lethal dose 50 % (Haematopoietic[H] score 3-H3). Allogeneic stem cell transplantation is indicated in case of medullary eradication (Haematopoietic score 4-H4) whereas extramedullary toxicity may determine the outcome. Especially in case of numerous casualties exhibiting acute radiation sydrome, the administration of survival factor combinations remains questionable, at least as a palliative treatment. In addition pleiotropic cytokines injection such as erythropoietin and keratinocyte growth factor and grafting multipotent mesenchymal stem cells – from underexposed bone marrow areas or fat tissues – could be proposed to prevent multiple organ failure syndrome development. Multi-disciplinary teams should be prepared to manage such patients.

Declaration of interest: The authors report no conflicts of interest. The authors alone are responsible for the content and writing of the paper.

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