[Intl_DxMedPhys] [EXTERNAL] Re: Heads up on NEJM paper on radiation exposure in peds and hematologic cancer risk
Yang, Kai,PhD
KYANG11 at mgh.harvard.edu
Wed Sep 24 09:52:15 EDT 2025
Hi everyone, as I am reading through the appendix 1 for that paper, it turned out that they didn't even have most of the real dose data, but other than "guessing it out"? Below is the exact text, would love to hear what others think.
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[cid:0eb344bf-47b8-43c1-ada6-c1dd5b9c8203]
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From: Intl_dxmedphys_wd_osu_list <intl_dxmedphys_wd_osu_list-bounces at lists.osu.edu> on behalf of Jerry Thomas via Intl_dxmedphys_wd_osu_list <intl_dxmedphys_wd_osu_list at lists.osu.edu>
Sent: Monday, September 22, 2025 12:11 PM
To: Mark Supanich <Mark_Supanich at rush.edu>
Cc: intl_dxmedphys_wd_osu_list at lists.osu.edu <intl_dxmedphys_wd_osu_list at lists.osu.edu>
Subject: Re: [Intl_DxMedPhys] [EXTERNAL] Re: Heads up on NEJM paper on radiation exposure in peds and hematologic cancer risk
Mark and Baojun, Great points. Both need to be in a letter to the editor. Unfortunately, the reviewers of this paper failed to do their job. -- They were either, biased in favor of the paper's conclusions, busy and did not read the paper
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Mark and Baojun,
Great points. Both need to be in a letter to the editor. Unfortunately, the reviewers of this paper failed to do their job. -- They were either, biased in favor of the paper's conclusions, busy and did not read the paper critically, or were reviewing work that they were not qualified to review. Regardless this paper will be quoted, so it is now imperative that a letter to the editor be written. I would enjoy reading the response to the letter. --- especially the support for hormesis that Mark pointed out.
Jerry Thomas, MS, FAAPM, DABR, CHP, DABSNM
Diagnostic Medical Physicist / Radiation Safety Officer
Ascension Via Christi Hospitals Wichita
Wichita, KS 67214
Phone: 316-268-5958 (office)
240-447-1014 (cell)
On Fri, Sep 19, 2025 at 3:18 PM Mark Supanich via Intl_dxmedphys_wd_osu_list <intl_dxmedphys_wd_osu_list at lists.osu.edu<mailto:intl_dxmedphys_wd_osu_list at lists.osu.edu>> wrote:
An interesting note on this is that they also could have claimed that low levels of ionizing radiation have a positive impact on hematologic cancer rates. They cancer incidence rate (cases per 10,000 in their cohort) was lower for groups receiving
An interesting note on this is that they also could have claimed that low levels of ionizing radiation have a positive impact on hematologic cancer rates. They cancer incidence rate (cases per 10,000 in their cohort) was lower for groups receiving between 5-15 mGy dose to the bone marrow than the group with no medical imaging. Their own calculated ERR was even <1 for the 5-10 mGy group.
I wonder why the headlines aren't: "exposure to low levels of ionizing radiation protects children from blood cancer"?
[Beaming face with smiling eyes]
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Subject: Re: [Intl_DxMedPhys] Heads up on NEJM paper on radiation exposure in peds and hematologic cancer risk
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If we replace “accumulative dose to bone marrow” with “total number of blood draws or hospital visits,” the relationship would likely still hold. By the authors’ reasoning, one could then conclude that blood draws or hospital visits cause cancer?!
If we replace “accumulative dose to bone marrow” with “total number of blood draws or hospital visits,” the relationship would likely still hold. By the authors’ reasoning, one could then conclude that blood draws or hospital visits cause cancer?!
In reality, children who undergo multiple CT examinations typically do so because of more severe or complex medical conditions. These patients are inherently predisposed to more hospital encounters and already have a higher baseline risk of hematologic malignancies, independent of imaging. The causal inference presented by the authors is deeply flawed and misleading.
Thanks,
Baojun
From: Intl_dxmedphys_wd_osu_list <intl_dxmedphys_wd_osu_list-bounces+baojunli=bu.edu at lists.osu.edu<mailto:bu.edu at lists.osu.edu>> On Behalf Of Mark Supanich via Intl_dxmedphys_wd_osu_list
Sent: Wednesday, September 17, 2025 6:35 PM
To: intl_dxmedphys_wd_osu_list at lists.osu.edu<mailto:intl_dxmedphys_wd_osu_list at lists.osu.edu>
Subject: [Intl_DxMedPhys] Heads up on NEJM paper on radiation exposure in peds and hematologic cancer risk
Hi all, Just a heads up that NEJM published a paper from Smith-Bindman et al this afternoon. https: //www. nejm. org/doi/full/10. 1056/NEJMoa2502098?query=featured_home It’s an observational study of 3. 5+ million peds looking at cumulative
Hi all,
Just a heads up that NEJM published a paper from Smith-Bindman et al this afternoon. https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2502098?query=featured_home__;!!KGKeukY!yZPKhr2mTtVY5J4oB8YS20iVqEevZH1nS-QKS-tCkHtFL4ZXioOOitfyVAfuZc3I629AInOtdaqGr5XvVbxPsz36b87UQ_8neCrfjdogRyqpcg$ <https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://secure-web.cisco.com/1Pif7c1GVQLMo413q8lyswy_kWQJLqJ3cKx0nQGFkr6roy5XKcaHcgKgfMCEavkXWhlxS8ojxDPVSFGiV159HoqVJmU1jBGSWxEki9pZnNPgFOXuWFFH2cPJ9iESxUtrQHf_ftWuSrAwDenu0XEKs0so3Lp9yPyDyGAV3HvnkyA-TrzcHTi9F93RdM-0fHk1giADz-zhQumMlFKwrrYAqW8VJgUXlHogYD3wj7r1dcf4yGekHSraexmKvdaXr30d08r8i_6QvavJrM510aQFokDAKVMk1V0aM93CarLhqDapQA4xODAM2K6B2mOQ4qdXk/https*3A*2F*2Furldefense.com*2Fv3*2F__https*3A*2Fwww.nejm.org*2Fdoi*2Ffull*2F10.1056*2FNEJMoa2502098*3Fquery*3Dfeatured_home__*3B*21*21KGKeukY*211m_oRWHMFCepm1fT1RIhzq46cPRXjfbhAvYKAO_5iNUOWD5mqN0G-iBdtAZYZy1h5_JOVRouzbgwoLM5N75lJAFaFMiQA3UTRzxHR2RjJ7wH4P8*24__;JSUlJSUlJSUlJSUlJSUlJSUl!!KGKeukY!yZPKhr2mTtVY5J4oB8YS20iVqEevZH1nS-QKS-tCkHtFL4ZXioOOitfyVAfuZc3I629AInOtdaqGr5XvVbxPsz36b87UQ_8neCrfjdqCRxIWHw$ >
It’s an observational study of 3.5+ million peds looking at cumulative exposure to ionizing radiation, particularly focused on bone marrow dose, and increased risk of hematologic cancer incidence. Their results claim an increased incidence of cancer in patients with exposure to imaging, and demonstrate a cummulative dose effect. They claim their results are not likely due to reverse causation as they have reasons for exams and symptoms of these cancers were not common reasons for exams. They also note their results are inline with the EPI-CT study. Of note, it appears that they looked at imaging from 1996-2017 – so much of the imaging likely occurred on imaging equipment without many of the modern dose reduction features.
This is sure to get media play and parents will certainly have questions as the media coverage develops. Continuing to focus on the judicious use of imaging, the benefits of diagnostic imaging to answer clinical questions, and the fact that modern imaging equipment adapts to patient size and uses optimized radiation will be key talking points.
>From the paper: “By the end of follow-up, 7.5% (280,548 of 3,724,623) of all the children and 9.2% (272 of 2961) of those in whom a hematologic cancer developed had received a cumulative dose of at least 1 mGy.”
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There is a lot to look at in this paper and the supplemental materials, so more information/analysis is sure to come.
--
Mark P. Supanich, Ph.D., DABR, FAAPM (he/him)
Director – Diagnostic Medical Physics
Rush University System for Health
Associate Professor & Vice Chair for Physics and Informatics
Rush Medical College Department of Diagnostic Radiology and Nuclear Medicine
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