| Literature DB >> 19570756 |
P Jacob1, W Rühm, L Walsh, M Blettner, G Hammer, H Zeeb.
Abstract
Occupational exposures to ionising radiation mainly occur at low-dose rates and may accumulate effective doses of up to several hundred milligray. The objective of the present study is to evaluate the evidence of cancer risks from such low-dose-rate, moderate-dose (LDRMD) exposures. Our literature search for primary epidemiological studies on cancer incidence and mortality risks from LDRMD exposures included publications from 2002 to 2007, and an update of the UK National Registry for Radiation Workers study. For each (LDRMD) study we calculated the risk for the same types of cancer among the atomic bomb survivors with the same gender proportion and matched quantities for dose, mean age attained and mean age at exposure. A combined estimator of the ratio of the excess relative risk per dose from the LDRMD study to the corresponding value for the atomic bomb survivors was 1.21 (90% CI 0.51 to 1.90). The present analysis does not confirm that the cancer risk per dose for LDRMD exposures is lower than for the atomic bomb survivors. This result challenges the cancer risk values currently assumed for occupational exposures.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19570756 PMCID: PMC2776242 DOI: 10.1136/oem.2008.043265
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Occup Environ Med ISSN: 1351-0711 Impact factor: 4.402
List of cancer mortality studies, which were included in the analysis
| No | Reference, country | Population | Follow-up, cancer cases | Type of exposure | Cancer outcomes | ERR per dose, |
| 1 | Boice 2006, USA | Workers at Rocketdyne | −1999, 3066 | External and internal | All cancer excluding leukaemia | 0.0 (−1.9 to 2.4)* |
| 2 | Cardis 2007, 14 countries† | Radiation workers in nuclear industry | Variable, 6119 | External | All cancer excluding leukaemia | 0.6 (−0.1 to 1.4) |
| 3 | Ivanov 2001, Russia‡ | Chernobyl clean-up workers | 1991–1998, 515 | External | Neoplasms ICD-9 140–239 | 2.1 (1.3 to 2.9)* |
| 4 | Ivanov 2006, Russia | Chernobyl clean-up workers | 1992–2002, 651 | External | Solid cancer | 1.5 (0.2 to 2.9)* |
| 5 | Krestinina 2005, Russia | Techa River residents | −1999, 1842 | External and internal | Solid cancer except bone cancer | 0.9 (0.2 to 1.7)* |
| 6 | Muirhead 2009, UK | Radiation workers | −2001, 6959 | External | Malignant neoplasms excluding leukaemia | 0.3 (0.02 to 0.6) |
| 7 | Stayner 2007, USA | ORNL workers | −1984, 225 | External | All cancer excluding leukaemia | 4.8 (0.4 to 13.3)§ |
| 8 | Telle-Lamberton 2007, France¶ | French nuclear workers | 1968–1994, 721 | External | All cancer excluding leukaemia | 1.5 (−0.5 to 4.0) |
| 9 | Wing 2005, USA | Hanford workers | −1994, 2265 | External and internal | All cancer | 0.3 (−0.3 to 1.0) |
ERR, excess relative risk; ORNL, Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
*95% confidence interval.
†Canadian data excluded from 15-countries study.
‡Summarised by Ivanov et al25 in 2007, and therefore included in our analysis.
§After correction for dose uncertainties. The result without this correction is 5.4 (0.5 to 12.6) Gy−1.
¶Results for “all cancer excluding leukaemia” were supplied by personal communication with Telle-Lamberton (2008).
List of cancer incidence studies, which were included in the analysis
| No | Reference, country | Population | Follow-up, cancer cases | Type of exposure | Cancer outcomes | ERR per dose, |
| 10 | Ivanov 2004, Russia | Chernobyl clean-up workers | 1996–2001, 1370 | External | Solid cancer | 0.3 (−0.4 to 1.2)* |
| 11 | Krestinina 2007, Russia | Techa River residents | 1956–2002, 1836 | External and internal | Solid cancer except bone cancer | 1.0 (0.3 to 1.9)* |
| 12 | Muirhead 2009, UK | Radiation workers | −2001, 10 855 | External | Malignant neoplasms excluding leukaemia | 0.3 (0.04 to 0.5) |
*95% confidence interval.
Datasets, parameters and risk per dose for the atomic bomb survivors corresponding to the low-dose-rate, moderate-dose studies of cancer mortality in table 1, and the risk ratios, q
| No | Population | Male fraction | Average age at start of follow-up | Average age at end of follow-up | Dose quantity | ERR per dose (Gy−1) in LSS, | Risk ratio, |
| 1 | Workers at Rocketdyne | 0.92 | 31 | 56 | Skin dose | 0.26 (0.16 to 0.35)* | 0.00 (−7.25 to 7.33) |
| 2 | Radiation workers in nuclear industry | 0.90 | 31 | 46 | Colon dose | 0.49 (0.30 to 0.67) | 1.19 (−0.34 to 3.12) |
| 3 | Chernobyl clean-up workers† | 1.00 | 35 | 47 | Skin dose | 0.47 (0.29 to 0.65)* | 4.49 (2.79 to 7.17) |
| 4 | Chernobyl clean-up workers | 1.00 | 35 | 50 | Skin dose | 0.23 (0.11 to 0.34)* | 6.66 (1.67 to 14.7) |
| 5 | Techa River residents‡ | 0.40 | 28 | 63 | Stomach dose | 0.54 (0.42 to 0.65)* | 1.71 (0.52 to 3.04) |
| 6 | UK radiation workers | 0.90 | 29 | 52 | Skin dose | 0.30 (0.21 to 0.39) | 0.91 (0.01 to 2.01) |
| 7 | ORNL workers | 1.00 | 30 | 57 | Skin dose | 0.25 (0.16 to 0.33) | 19.6 (−6.38 to 51.3) |
| 8 | French nuclear workers | 0.79 | 31 | 49 | Skin dose | 0.33 (0.23 to 0.43) | 4.59 (−2.34 to 12.6) |
| 9 | Hanford workers | 0.76 | 31 | 55 | Skin dose | 0.41 (0.33 to 0.49) | 0.73 (−0.87 to 2.35) |
ORNL, Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
*95% confidence interval.
†Calculations performed for all cancer, because out of 515 neoplasms (ICD-9 140–239) there were only three non-cancer cases (ICD-9 208–239).
‡Calculations performed for all solid cancer, because mortality data with DS02 were not available for bone cancer.
Datasets, parameters and risk per dose for the atomic bomb survivors corresponding to the low-dose-rate, moderate-dose studies of cancer incidence in table 2, and the risk ratios, q
| No | Population | Male fraction | Average age at start of follow-up | Average age at end of follow-up | Dose quantity | ERR per dose (Gy−1) for acute exposure, | Risk ratio, |
| 10 | Chernobyl clean-up workers | 1.00 | 35 | 49 | Skin dose | 0.33 (0.21 to 0.46)* | 0.99 (−1.10 to 3.25) |
| 11 | Techa River residents | 0.43 | 25 | 65 | Stomach dose | 0.59 (0.49 to 0.69)* | 1.70 (0.54 to 2.92) |
| 12 | UK radiation workers | 0.90 | 29 | 52 | Skin dose | 0.37 (0.29 to 0.46) | 0.71 (0.09 to 1.42) |
*95% confidence interval.
Figure 1Excess relative risk per dose for cancer mortality in nine studies of low-dose-rate, moderate-dose exposures (red symbols), as compared with acute, high-dose exposures (atomic bomb survivors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki) (blue symbols). The error bars indicate 95% CIs for the studies of workers at Rocketdyne, the Chernobyl emergency workers and the Techa River residents, and 90% CIs for all other studies.
Figure 2Excess relative risk per dose for cancer incidence in three studies of low-dose-rate, moderate-dose exposures (red symbols), as compared with acute, high-dose exposures (atomic bomb survivors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki) (blue symbols). The error bars indicate 95% CIs for the Chernobyl emergency workers and the Techa River residents, and 90% CIs for the UK National Registry for Radiation Workers.
Ratios of the excess relative risk per dose in low-dose-rate, moderate-dose studies and for the atomic bomb survivors as calculated in three analyses (main analysis in bold)
| Endpoint | Criterion to select independent studies | Numbers of studies included* | Risk ratio, | p Value for heterogeneity |
| Mortality | Smaller number of cancer cases | 1, 2, 3, 5 | 2.08 (1.16 to 3.01) | 0.21 |
| Incidence | – | 10, 11, 12 | 0.98 (0.41 to 1.54) | 0.49 |
*Compare tables 1 and 2.
Figure 3Ratio Q of excess relative risk-per-dose values for cancer after low-dose-rate, moderate-dose exposures and after acute, high-dose exposures as recommended by the International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP),2 used by BEIR VII (95% CI),3 and derived in the present analysis from epidemiological studies (epi-risk, 90% CI).