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Dose-Time Relations for Induction of Lung Cancer in Uranium Miners

Abstract

Lack of data on the concentration of radon and daughters in the air inhaled by uranium miners has made it difficult in the past to establish radiation dose and time factors for induction of lung cancer. Recent determinations by others of {sup 210}Pb in the bones of miners who died of cancer provide, however, a new approach. Because {sup 210}Pb, a decay product of radon, accumulates in bone but is also excreted, its concentration, after prolonged exposure, will approach an equilibrium which is a measure of the rate of exposure. It is shown that the {sup 210}Pb. levels in bone at the end of mining are as closely proportional to existing measured and estimated exposure rates to radon as can be expected. It is reasonable, therefore, to use {sup 210}Pb levels in bone as measures of prior exposure rates. When this is done a graph of survival times from beginning of exposures against reciprocal of {sup 210}Pb shows that lung cancer in man exhibits the two types, early and late, previously revealed in bone cancer in dogs and skin cancer in rats. When the dose is high, death follows initiation of cancer in about 7 years. When the dose is  More>>
Authors:
Blair, H. A. [1] 
  1. University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, NY (United States)
Publication Date:
Nov 15, 1969
Product Type:
Conference
Report Number:
IAEA-SM-118/4
Resource Relation:
Conference: Symposium on Radiation-Induced Cancer, Athens (Greece), 28 Apr - 2 May 1969; Other Information: 4 refs., 4 figs., 1 tab.; Related Information: In: Radiation-Induced Cancer. Proceedings of a Symposium on Radiation-Induced Cancer| 512 p.
Subject:
63 RADIATION, THERMAL, AND OTHER ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTANT EFFECTS ON LIVING ORGANISMS AND BIOLOGICAL MATERIALS; BIOLOGICAL RADIATION EFFECTS; CARCINOGENESIS; DAUGHTER PRODUCTS; DOGS; EPITHELIOMAS; LEAD 210; LUNGS; MINERS; RADIATION DOSES; RADON; RATS; SKELETON; URANIUM MINES
OSTI ID:
22182155
Research Organizations:
International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna (Austria); World Health Organization, Geneva (Switzerland)
Country of Origin:
IAEA
Language:
English
Other Identifying Numbers:
Other: ISSN 0074-1884; TRN: XA13M3970006654
Submitting Site:
INIS
Size:
page(s) 203-211
Announcement Date:
Jan 23, 2014

Citation Formats

Blair, H. A. Dose-Time Relations for Induction of Lung Cancer in Uranium Miners. IAEA: N. p., 1969. Web.
Blair, H. A. Dose-Time Relations for Induction of Lung Cancer in Uranium Miners. IAEA.
Blair, H. A. 1969. "Dose-Time Relations for Induction of Lung Cancer in Uranium Miners." IAEA.
@misc{etde_22182155,
title = {Dose-Time Relations for Induction of Lung Cancer in Uranium Miners}
author = {Blair, H. A.}
abstractNote = {Lack of data on the concentration of radon and daughters in the air inhaled by uranium miners has made it difficult in the past to establish radiation dose and time factors for induction of lung cancer. Recent determinations by others of {sup 210}Pb in the bones of miners who died of cancer provide, however, a new approach. Because {sup 210}Pb, a decay product of radon, accumulates in bone but is also excreted, its concentration, after prolonged exposure, will approach an equilibrium which is a measure of the rate of exposure. It is shown that the {sup 210}Pb. levels in bone at the end of mining are as closely proportional to existing measured and estimated exposure rates to radon as can be expected. It is reasonable, therefore, to use {sup 210}Pb levels in bone as measures of prior exposure rates. When this is done a graph of survival times from beginning of exposures against reciprocal of {sup 210}Pb shows that lung cancer in man exhibits the two types, early and late, previously revealed in bone cancer in dogs and skin cancer in rats. When the dose is high, death follows initiation of cancer in about 7 years. When the dose is low, the usual case, there is an additional latency of 16 years so the time from attainment of initiating dose to death is 23 years. The initiating dose for the high dose type is about 65 pCi {sup 210}Pb per gram years and for the low dose type about 10 pCi per gram years which, in terms of exposure, is about 400 working level months, WLM, as working level, WL, is currently defined. Of the derived parameters the total low dose development time of 23 years is fairly accurate. The high dose development time of 7 years is less certain. The initiating low dose of 10 pCi per gram years is probably moderately accurate, but its counterpart of 400 WLM less certain. The high initiating dose is poorly determined. Twenty three lung cancer cases were involved in this study. Additional cases along with additional environmental and other measurements should increase the accuracy of the dose-time parameters. (author)}
place = {IAEA}
year = {1969}
month = {Nov}
}