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Title: Effects of low doses and low dose rates of external ionizing radiation: Cancer mortality among nuclear industry workers in three countries

Journal Article · · Radiation Research
DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/3579020· OSTI ID:81174
; ;  [1]; ;  [2];  [3];  [4];  [5];  [6]
  1. International Agency for Research on Cancer, Lyon (France)
  2. Pacific Northwest Laboratories, Richland, WA (United States)
  3. Public Health and Primary Care, Oxford (United Kingdom)
  4. Univ. of Toronto (Canada)
  5. Austrailian Institute of Health and Welfare, Canberra (Australia)
  6. Imperial Cancer Research Fund, Oxford (United Kingdom); and others

Studies of the mortality among nuclear industry workforces have been carried out, and nationally combined analyses performed, in the U.S., the UK and Canada. This paper presents the results of internationally combined analyses of mortality data on 95,673 workers (85.4% men) monitored for external exposure to ionizing radiation and employed for 6 months or longer in the nuclear industry of one of the three countries. These analyses were undertaken to obtain a more precise direct assessment of the carcinogenic effects of protracted low-level exposure to external, predominantly {gamma}, radiation. The combination of the data from the various studies increases the power to study associations between radiation dose and mortality from all causes or from all cancers. Mortality from leukemia, excluding chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL)-the cause of death most strongly and consistently related to radiation dose in studies of atomic bomb survivors and other populations exposed at high dose rates-was significantly associated with cumulative external radiation dose (one-sided P value = 0.046; 119 deaths). Among the 31 other specific types of cancer studied, a significant association was observed only for multiple myeloma (one-sided P value = 0.037; 44 deaths), and this was attributable primarily to the associations reported previously between this disease and radiation dose in the Hanford (U.S.) and Sellafield (UK) cohorts. The excess relative risk (ERR) estimates for all cancers excluding leukemia, and leukemia excluding CLL, the two main groupings of causes of death for which risk estimates have been derived from studies of atomic bomb survivors, were -0.07 per Sv [90% confidence interval (CI):-0.4,0.3] and 2.18 per Sv (90% CI:0.1,5.7), respectively. These values correspond to a relative risk of 0.99 for all cancers excluding leukemia and 1.22 for leukemia excluding CLL for a cumulative protracted dose of 100 mSv compared to O mSv. 53 refs., 1 fig., 8 tabs.

Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE
OSTI ID:
81174
Journal Information:
Radiation Research, Vol. 142, Issue 2; Other Information: PBD: May 1995
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English