The model, known as linear no-threshold (LNT), is used to estimate cancer risks from low-dose radiation such as medical imaging, the researchers said.
However, risk estimates based on this model are only theoretical and, as yet, have never been conclusively demonstrated by empirical evidence, they said.
Use of the LNT model drives unfounded fears and excessive expenditures on putative but unneeded and wasteful safety measures, according to James Welsh, a professor at the Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine in US.
The researchers reexamined the original studies, dating back more than 70 years, which led to adoption of the LNT model.
This reappraisal found that the data reported in those studies do not actually support the LNT model.
In the LNT model, the well-established cancer-causing effects of high doses of radiation are extended downwards in a straight line to very low doses.
The LNT model dates to studies, conducted in the 1940s, of fruit flies exposed to various doses of radiation. The scientists who conducted those studies concluded there is no safe level of radiation, thus giving rise to the LNT model that is used to this day.
However, their conclusion was unwarranted because their experiments had not been done at truly low doses. A study exposing fruit flies to low-dose radiation was not conducted until 2009, and this study did not support the LNT model.
Any claim that low-dose radiation from medical imaging procedures is known to cause cancer "should be vigorously challenged, because it serves to alarm and perhaps harm, rather than educate," they said.
The researchers suggested that the LNT model "should finally and decisively be abandoned.
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