Title: Summaries of topical sessions
1Summaries of topical sessions
2Thank you for active participation !
- 850 participants and 50 accompanying persons
- 44 countries
- 550 participants in refresher couses
- Satellite events
- Technical visit to Olkiluoto 67
- NOTE workshop 130
- Radon excursion 39
- Specialist workshop 1 (medical) 90
- Specialist workshop 2 (nuclear industry) 109
3Summaries of topical sessions
- 157 oral contributions and 351 posters
- Chairs and co-chairs of each 19 sessions provided
1-2 slides on current issues and key conclusions - Health-related issues - Sisko Salomaa
- Environmental issues and protection of public -
Mikhail Balonov - Analytics and dosimetry - Sigurdur Emil Palsson
- Radiation practises and regulation - Tua Rahola
4Summary of health related sessions
- Sisko Salomaa
- Patrick Smeesters
- Stelios Christofides
- Mika Kortesniemi
- Andrey Busmanov
- Wendla Paile
- Yuri Franken
- Kari Jokela
5S01 Biological and health effects of ionising
radiation
- Radiation-induced cardiovascular disease
- Cohort of Mayak PA nuclear workers (about 12000
W.) - Ischemic heart disease and cerebrovascular
diseases ? incidence with cumulative dose (ext
liver Pu dose) - Plausible mechanism at low or fractionated dose
linearly dose-related monocyte death resulting in
increase of MCP-1 (chemo-attractant) to be
tested - Review of epidemiological evidence at low and
moderate doses ? ERR but large variability - Radiation-induced cataracts
- further evidence at low doses (lenticular
opacities in radiologistsSTUK) and ongoing
epidemiological research (int. cardiol.)
6S01 Biological and health effects of ionising
radiation
- New evidence on old issues reinforces the need of
ALARA approach - Genetic risk
- new data on RI trangenerational instability
- CNS of fœtus
- low doses impair neurite outgrowth
- RI thyroid cancer in adults
- ? Risk of thyroid cancer among Chernobyl
liquidators (mean age 37 y) - A lot of research, particularly in molecular
biology, are in progress and try to complete the
puzzle
7S02 Medical use of Radiation
- Special attention is given to patient dose
optimisation from high dose modalities and
procedures (MSCT, PET, PET/CT, SPECT/CT, etc),
Interventional Radiology and Cardiology, with
emphasis on paediatric and recurrent
examinations. - Also dose optimisation tools have been improved,
and focus has expanded increasingly on the
minimisation of radiation dose. - There is a trend in estimating the Life
Attributable Risk (LAR) for cancer induction from
the high dose procedures, especially for
paediatrics.
8S02 Medical use of Radiaiton
- Miss-justification is becoming a major concern.
There is a need for enhanced education and
training for the Healthcare Professionals to
facilitate evidence based decisions for
examination practices. - The setting up of National Derived Reference
levels (DRLs) especially for high dose
modalities, interventional procedures and for
peadiatrics is considered as a tool for
optimisation. - In Radiotherapy the estimation of the
out-of-target dose in estimating the risk of
induction of secondary cancers is becoming
important for high dose rate procedures
(gamma-knife, IMRT, IGRT).
9S13 Medical response in radiation accidents
- General trend of session modern treatment of
radiation victims. - Russian and French scientists and medical doctors
reported about new therapeutic approach for the
treatment of radiation burns combining surgery
and mesenchymal stem cell treatment. They showed
new clinical cases of local radiation injuries
treated by the new method. - French scientists demonstrated the result of
experiments with new medicine Calixarene
nanoemulsion in successful treatment for
uranium contaminated skin.
10S13 Medical response in radiation accidents
- Biodosimetric area. The study confirmed that the
PCC ring assay is suitable for use as a good
biodosimeter following whole-body exposure to
high (above 8 Gy) doses of radiation.
11S14 Non-ionising radiation protection
- INTERPHONE meta-analysis on brain cancers and
mobile telephone use Overall no increase of
meningioma and glioma. Indication of small
increase of tumors in the highest exposure group.
Biases and other error sources prevent detecting
of small risk. More epidemiologic studies is
needed for effects of heavy use of mobile phones
more than 10 years (Cardis). - Gliomas are not located in those parts of brain
with the highest exposure to the RF-field of a
mobile phone (Larjavaara et al.) - Hyperthermia-induced proliferation of cancer
cells in vitro - is depressed by 2.2 GHz pulsed EMF (Trillo
et al.). -
12S14 Non-ionising radiation protection
- Scattering and diverging of a laser beam by
microlens formation is a novel idea for laser eye
protectors (Branca and Dejan). - The UV-A induced melanoma metastasis may be due
to UV-A induced immunosuppression and to a
lesser extent due to alteration of the adhesive
properties of melanoma cells (Pastila et al.) - The use of sunbeds by young people in Iceland 20
of 12-15 and 52 of 16-19 years old use
sunbeds (Sigurdsson et al.)
13Summary of environmental sessionsand exposure of
public
- Mikhail Balonov
- Seppo Klemola
- James McLaughlin
- Hannu Arvela
- Augustin Janssens
- Mika Markkanen
- Mark Dowdall
- Tarja K. Ikäheimonen
- Franz Josef Maringer
- Päivi Kurttio
- Ted Lazo
- Iisa Outola
14Radiation protection of the public Sessions 03,
06, 15, 16 and 17
- Public exposure Exposure incurred by members of
the public from radiation sources, excluding any
occupational or medical exposure and the normal
local natural background radiation. - ICRP-103 The component of public exposure due to
natural sources is by far the largest, but this
provides no justification for reducing the
attention paid to smaller, but more readily
controllable, exposures to man-made sources. - Public exposure situations planned, existing
(and emergency)
Third European IRPA Congress 2010, Helsinki,
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15Radiation protection of the public (continued)
- Planned Exposure Situations radiation and
radioactive discharges from operating facilities
(industry, medicine, etc) - Nuclear industry
- Discharges of tritium and other r/nuclides
monitoring, modeling - New regulation for clearance materials
- Physical shielding of major medical facilities
- Air-borne releases
- Environmental monitoring for radiation protection
purposes and for model improvement - Waste management
- Emerging issue of biota protection
- Less need for regulation, well developed area
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16Radiation protection of the public (continued)
- NORM industries
- Awareness of NORM is increasing
- More surveys and site specific assessments are
being done - New types of industries and situations involving
NORM are being identified (Gas and oil mining,
fertiliser production, construction industry,
geothermal industry, etc) - Regulatory requirements and controls are under
development - To which extent the requirements for planned
exposure situations should be applied? - Application of a graded approach to regulation
- Operators lack expertise and experience in NORM
management - Need for specific education and training
- Need for further guidelines on NORM management
- Determination and quantification of NORM
- methods suitable for monitoring large volumes
with varying concentrations should be developed
Third European IRPA Congress 2010, Helsinki,
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17Radiation protection of the public (continued)
- Existing Exposure Situations - elevated radiation
levels in the human or natural environments,
including nuclear legacy (PUNE sites, etc) - Dwellings and public buildings
- Rn in air
- Continued interest in risk assessment based on
new data - Trends to reduce reference levels in many
countries - National and regional monitoring programs
(geochemical and indoor) - Remediation programs in some countries
- Radiation from building materials regulation,
monitoring and control, mostly at construction
stage - Environments with elevated radiation levels
monitoring and remediation (if justified) - Former uranium mining and milling sites (Central
Asia etc) - Areas of past nuclear practices or accidents
- External radiation monitoring, modeling and
control - Radionuclides in foods - inspection of some kinds
- Radionuclides in drinking water - monitoring and
mitigation of wells (if justified) - International guidance on regulation still needed
Third European IRPA Congress 2010, Helsinki,
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18S09 Radiation protection of the biota
- Can NTE biology change the general approach?
- International activities are going on (ICRP,
IAEA, etc.) - More effects detected in areas with elevated
radiation levels - Dose assessments are topical
- What is the significance of NORM in the
protection of the environment? - Lack of transfer coefficients and concentration
factors - Radiation and biological monitoring in progress
- Finnish Lakes (S09-03)
- Chernobyl-affected zones, Radioactive waste
storage areas, Nuclear weapons test sites
(S09-04) - NPP Ecological Risk Assessment studies (P09-05)
- Development of internationally recognized system
of biota protection and its harmonization with
human protection is crucial
Third European IRPA Congress 2010, Helsinki,
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19Summary of sessions related to analytics and
dosimetry
- Sigurdur Emil Palsson
- Hannele Aaltonen
- Herwig Paretzke
- Hannu Järvinen
- Harri Toivonen
- Inger Margarethe Eikelman
- Irena Malatova
- Roy Pöllänen
20S04 Dosimetry 1/2
- Innovations and trends in internal dosimetry
- Use of new ICRU/ICRP reference phantoms
- Biokinetic models are being improved by human
data - Look-up tables (TMT handbook) are useful but
users should be aware of their limitations - A detailed exposure assessments for miners
illustrated the need for taking the main relevant
factors into conideration. - Early life Techa river improved assessment of
in utero and postnatal doses were developed to
evaluate risks from chronic exposures - Internal dosimetry for 241Am has been improved by
MC simulations - A clear trend can be recognized that uncertainty
asssesments are gaining high importance now (GUM
recommendations)
Third European IRPA Congress 2010, Helsinki,
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21S04 Dosimetry 2/2
- Innovations and trends in external dosimetry
- Refurbishing of graphite calorimeter standards
developed for 60Co gamma beams. - Novel materials are being used for active and
passive radiation detectors - Recombination chambers providing information on
radiation quality besides the ambient dose rate - Guidelines are available for optimum use of
active personal dosemeters (APDs) problems at
high dose rates - LiF fading and the difference between low
temperature peaks in personal dosimetry can be
used to develope a powerful tool to estimate
exposure conditions - Innovations and trends in radioecology and other
applications - Location-specific parameter changes in European
level should be considered for the ECOSYS model
to improve the basis of the ARGOS and RODOS
decision support systems in preparedness against
nuclear accidents
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22S10 Nuclear and Radiological Emergencies and
Incidents
- Observation
- No major nuclear or radiological emergency
reported - Challenge
- Maintaining and developing this high standard of
safety culture, e.g. by increased international
co-operation and cross disiplinary work. - Sharing experience
- reports on lessons learned during abnormal events
- networking and cooperation between relevant
organisations in different countries
Third European IRPA Congress 2010, Helsinki,
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23S10 (continued)
- Sharing knowledge
- monitoring techniques
- results of development of modelling tools for
prediction exposure or transportation of
radioactive substances in air and in aquatic
environment - Sharing information
- results of assessments
- new guidance and documentation
- information on national arrangements and data
handling
Third European IRPA Congress 2010, Helsinki,
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24S11 Nuclear Security and Malevolent Use of
Radiation (1/2)
- Nuclear Security was addressed for the first time
in IRPA meetings - Malevolent use of radiation is a serious threat
to the society - Safety and security are the two sides of the same
coin - Security measures have to be adopted by the
radiation protection community - Novel in-field detection techniques
- Modelling, dispersion calculus, consequence
management - Portal monitoring - resolving alarms and response
- Measurement and analysis methods for alpha
radiation - Novel algorithms for new type of data
- Experiences at Major Public Events (Copenhagen,
Vancouver)
Third European IRPA Congress 2010, Helsinki,
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25S11 Nuclear Security and Malevolent Use of
Radiation (2/2)
- A scientific breakthrough was presented Optical
remote detection of alpha radiation, Tampere
Technical University, Finland - Safety, Security and Safeguards have similarities
from technological point of view, and they
benefit from the science in the different
disciplines.
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26S12 Radiation Detection Technologies and
Radionuclide Analytics
- Use of new detection methods such as
- OSL (optical stimulated luminiscence) in NaCl for
retrospective dosimetry, - Remote detection of alpha particles through UV
radiation - LaBr3 scintillation detectors in monitoring
network - Tissue equivalent proportional counter (TEPC) for
precise measurement of neutrons and photons in
unknown mixed radiation areas - Determination of alpha particles emitting
radionuclides in the environment, in radioactive
waste, for nuclear safeguards, for forensic and
security purposes - AMS (Accelerator Mass Spectrometry) for sensitive
actinides isotopic ratio measurement - Sophisticated software enabling spectrometry
without radiochemical separation
Third European IRPA Congress 2010, Helsinki,
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27S12 Radiation Detection Technologies and
Radionuclide Analytics
- New applications/areas current trends
- Enhancement of nuclear/radiation security
forensic analyses - Development of coincidence methods
- application of Monte Carlo methods in different
fields - use of instrumentation from hospitals (clinical
gamma camera) for emergency preparedness - minimizing activity and dose with enhanced image
quality in medical exposure
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28Summary of sessions related to radiation
practises and regulation
- Tua Rahola
- Jack Valentin
- Eduardo Gallego
- Ritva Havukainen
- Pedro Carboneras Martinez
- Risto Paltemaa
- Klaus Henrichs
- Veli Riihiluoma
29- S05 Waste decommissioning
- Final HLW disposal now close to licensing in some
countries - Waste from decomm. of nuclear installations now a
reality - S07 Education training
- Roles of different experts to be specified
- Emerging tools, platforms, and networks promise
future improvements - S08 Protection of workers
- Challenges difficult radiation environments,
imprecise dose models, training needs - Prospects ALARA programmes, peer comparisons
(also between sectors), ORAMED ISOE - ISEMIR
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30S18 Recommendations, standards, regulations
- Platforms ICRP P103, risk comparisons, QMS
- Challenges Differing perceptions between
countries, medical radiological protection,
TENORM - Observations and conclusions
- ICRP P103 broadly accepted as basis for new
standards (but some practice/intervention
problems still unsolved) - Can satisfactory conditions at a site be
specified objectively? - Risk remains a useful yardstick to set regulatory
levels - (Quality) Management systems are worth the effort
- Justification of diagnostic examinations should
be improved using, e.g., stakeholder involvement - Multimodal medical imaging requires special
consideration - TENORM discharges need attention
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31S19 Radiation and society
- Resources and associations presented, case
studies of stakeholder involvement described - Practical experience of stakeholder involvement
now available, can be used in new situations
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