Literature DB >> 12643796

Joint effects of radiation and smoking on lung cancer risk among atomic bomb survivors.

Donald A Pierce1, Gerald B Sharp, Kiyohiko Mabuchi.   

Abstract

Results are given on the joint effect of radiation exposure and cigarette smoking on lung cancer risks among A-bomb survivors, based on 592 cases through 1994. Information on smoking was derived from mail surveys and clinical interviews of 45113 persons in the Radiation Effects Research Foundation cohort. Radiation and smoking effects on lung cancer are found to be significantly sub-multiplicative and quite consistent with additivity. The smoking relative risk, previously very low in studies of this cohort, is now similar to that found in Western populations. This increase is likely to be related to the scarcity of cigarettes during and after the war. The smoking relative risk depends little on sex. After adjusting for smoking, the radiation-related risks relative to background rates for nonsmokers are similar to those for other solid cancers: a sex-averaged ERR/Sv of about 0.9 with a female:male sex ratio of about 1.6. Adjusting for smoking removes a spuriously large female:male ratio in radiation relative risk due to confounding between sex and smoking level. The adjustment also removes an artifactual age-at-exposure effect in the radiation relative risk, opposite in direction to other cancers, which is due to birth cohort variation in lung cancer rates.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12643796     DOI: 10.1667/0033-7587(2003)159[0511:jeoras]2.0.co;2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Radiat Res        ISSN: 0033-7587            Impact factor:   2.841


  29 in total

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2.  Flexible dose-response models for Japanese atomic bomb survivor data: Bayesian estimation and prediction of cancer risk.

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3.  Radiation risk of screening with low dose CT.

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5.  Smoking and hormesis as confounding factors in radiation pulmonary carcinogenesis.

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Review 6.  Lung cancer in never smokers: clinical epidemiology and environmental risk factors.

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7.  How is the risk of radiation-induced cancer influenced by background risk factors? Invited commentary on "a method for determining weights for excess relative risk and excess absolute risk when applied in the calculation of lifetime risk of cancer from radiation exposure" by Walsh and Schneider (2012).

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Journal:  Radiat Environ Biophys       Date:  2012-11-20       Impact factor: 1.925

8.  RadRAT: a radiation risk assessment tool for lifetime cancer risk projection.

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Review 9.  Cancer risk at low doses of ionizing radiation: artificial neural networks inference from atomic bomb survivors.

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Review 10.  Childhood exposure to external ionising radiation and solid cancer risk.

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