| Literature DB >> 27019716 |
Ji Young Yoon1, Jung-Dong Lee2, So Won Joo1, Dae Ryong Kang1.
Abstract
Lung cancer has high mortality and incidence rates. The leading causes of lung cancer are smoking and radon exposure. Indeed, the World Health Organization (WHO) has categorized radon as a carcinogenic substance causing lung cancer. Radon is a natural, radioactive substance; it is an inert gas that mainly exists in soil or rock. The gas decays into radioactive particles called radon progeny that can enter the human body through breathing. Upon entering the body, these radioactive elements release α-rays that affect lung tissue, causing lung cancer upon long-term exposure thereto. Epidemiological studies first outlined a high correlation between the incidence rate of lung cancer and exposure to radon progeny among miners in Europe. Thereafter, data and research on radon exposure and lung cancer incidence in homes have continued to accumulate. Many international studies have reported increases in the risk ratio of lung cancer when indoor radon concentrations inside the home are high. Although research into indoor radon concentrations and lung cancer incidence is actively conducted throughout North America and Europe, similar research is lacking in Korea. Recently, however, studies have begun to accumulate and report important data on indoor radon concentrations across the nation. In this study, we aimed to review domestic and foreign research into indoor radon concentrations and to outline correlations between indoor radon concentrations in homes and lung cancer incidence, as reported in ecological studies thereof. Herein, we noted large differences in radon concentrations between and within individual countries. For Korea, we observed tremendous differences in indoor radon concentrations according to region and year of study, even within the same region. In correlation analysis, lung cancer incidence was not found to be higher in areas with high indoor radon concentrations in Korea. Through our review, we identified a need to implement a greater variety of statistical analyses in research on indoor radon concentrations and lung cancer incidence. Also, we suggest that cohort research or patient-control group research into radon exposure and lung cancer incidence that considers smoking and other factors is warranted.Entities:
Keywords: Ecological study; Lung cancer; Radon; Radon survey
Year: 2016 PMID: 27019716 PMCID: PMC4807540 DOI: 10.1186/s40557-016-0098-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Occup Environ Med ISSN: 2052-4374
Radon levels in homes throughout the world
| Country | Period[ref] | Area | No. of dwellings | 222Rn (Bq/m3) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AM(SD) | GM(SD) | Median (Min, Max) | Excessive rate (%) | Recommended level | ||||
| USA | 1989–1990 [ | Nationwide (sample size) | 5,694 | 1.25(0.12) | 0.68(0.08) | - | 6.0 | 4pCi/L (USA unit is pCi/L) |
| 1991 [ | Texas | 2,890 | 1.0 | 0.5 | 0.6 | 3.6 | ||
| 2003–2004 [ | Illinois | 22,082 | - | 5.16(3.47) | 3.6 (0.4, 178.9) | 46.0 | ||
| 2010 [ | Ohio | 159,340 | - | 3.99 | -(-, 927.6) | 32.64 | ||
| −2014 [ | Kansas | 73,959 | 5.1 | - | -(-, 1,121.6) | 42.6 | ||
| −2014 [ | New York | 73,519 | 6.24 | 2.72(3.52) | -(-, 522.1) | - | ||
| −2015.6 [ | Nevada | 17,255 | 3.68 | - | - | 26.4 | ||
| Canada | 2007 [ | Ottawa | 93 | 110(168) | 74(2.26) | -(8,1525) | 12.0 | 200 |
| 2008 [ | Winnipeg | 116 | 143(101) | 112(2.07) | -(20, 483) | 20.0 | ||
| 2010 [ | Fredericton | 45 | 138(213) | 82(2.56) | -(16, 1374) | 18.0 | ||
| 2010 [ | Halifax | 64 | 259(475) | 107(3.67) | -(4, 2341) | 32.0 | ||
| UK | 1986–1987 [ | Nationwide (sample size) | 2,093 | 20.5 | 15(2.2) | - | 0.5 | 200 |
| −2009 [ | England | 465,000 | 99 | 53 | - | 11.3 | ||
| −2009 [ | Wales | 16,800 | 91 | 51 | - | 10.7 | ||
| −2008 [ | Scotland | 19,100 | 37 | 20 | -(-, 4,600) | 1.9 | ||
| −2009 [ | Northern Ireland | 24,000 | 70 | 46 | -(-, 4,900) | 5.0 | ||
| Denmark | 1985–1986 [ | Nationwide | 496 | 47 | 29(2.2) | - | 2.2 | 200 |
| 1995–1996 [ | Nationwide | 3,019 | - | - | -(2, 590) | |||
| -[ | Newly constructed | 200 | - | - | 36.8 (9.0, 118) | 7.0 | 100 (New homes) | |
| Finland | 1990–1991 [ | Nationwide | 3,074 | 123 | 84(2.1) | - | 3.6 (Above 200 12.3) | 400 |
| −1996 [ | Nationwide | 51,443 | 248 | - | -(-, 32,700) | 13.0 (Above 200 33.0) | ||
| Germany | 1978–1984 | Nationwide | 7,500 | 50 | 40 | - | 1.5-2.5 (Above 200) | 100 |
| 1991–1993 [ | ||||||||
| Hungary | 1994–2006 [ | Nationwide | 6,154 | 174(139) | - | -(-, 1,841) | 29.0 | 200 |
| Ireland | 1992–1999 [ | Nationwide | 11,319 | 89 | 57(2.40) | -(10, 1,924) | 8.8 | 200 |
| Japan | 1993–1996 [ | Nationwide | 899 | 15.5(13.5) | 12.7(1.78) | 11.7 (-, 208) | - | - |
| -[ | Hokkaido, Hiroshima, Kochi | 6,645 | 21.3(18.8) | 17.3(1.83) | 16.4 (-) | 0.4 (Above 148) | ||
| China | 1984–1990 [ | Nationwide | 10,811 | 22.5 | 19.6 | - | - | |
| 1994–1998 [ | Shenyang | 608 | 115.7 | 91.2(1.93) | 122.4 (-) | 17.4 (Above 148) | ||
| Gansu | 2,394 | 222.9 | 176.2(2.08) | 227.8 | 65.7 (Above 148) | |||
AM arithmetic mean, SD standard deviation, GM geometric mean, Min minimum, Max maximum
Summary of indoor radon concentrations in homes throughout Korea
| no | Institution[ref] | Period | Area | No. of dwellings | 222Rn (Bq/m3) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AM(SD) | GM(SD) | Median (Min, Max) | Excessive rate (ER)a (%) | |||||
| 1 | KINS [ | 1988 (winter) | 7 citiesc | 530 | 99.9(-) | - | 88.8(-) | 16.0 |
| 2 | KAERI [ | 1990.4–1990.10 | Nationwide | 340 | 59.57(-) | - | 48.90 (-) | - |
| 3 | NIH [ | 1993 | Nationwide | 34 | 27.75(4.07) | - | -(8.14, 99.9) | - |
| 4 | ||||||||
| 5 | 1994.9–12 | Seoul | 410 | 18.9(10.7) | - | 19.70 (9.3, 30.7) | - | |
| 6 | 1995.9–12 | Northern area of Gyeonggi | 197 | 34.6(4.1) | - | -(18.5, 54.0) | - | |
| 7 | KFDA [ | 1996.9–11 | Southern area of Gyeonggi | 384 | 29.4(19.4) | - | -(7.4, 132.8) | - |
| 8 | 1997.8–11 | Incheon, Daejeon, Chungnam, Chungbuk | 590 | Incheon: 8.0(10.9) | - | Incheon: (2.7, 89.7) | - | |
| Daejeon: 25.0(12.6) | Daejeon: (5.7, 82.2) | |||||||
| Chungnam: 32.1(21.5) | Chungnam: (4.9, 145.7) | |||||||
| Chungbuk: 20.0(20.3) | Chungbuk: (2.7, 131.6) | |||||||
| 9 | KINS [ | 1999.12–2000.11 | Nationwide | 2,190 | 53.4(57.5) | 43.3(1.8) | 39.8 (13.6, 1,350) | 1.7 (200b) |
| 10 | KINS [ | 2002–2004 | Nationwide | 450 | 40.4(56.0) | 10.7(2.9) | 25.4 (-, 731) | - |
| 11 | NIER [ | 2011.12–2012.5 | Nationwide | 7,885 | 124.9(144.7) | 91.2(2.1) | 85.7 (7.0, 2,821.3) | 22.2 |
| 12 | NIER [ | 2013.11–2014.4 | Nationwide | 6,648 | 102.0(114.2) | 74.9(2.0) | 68.0 (9.8, 1,936.6) | 16.3 |
| ‘12 highest radon level A area | 1,737 | 155.0(167.8) | 107.4(1.1) | 99.3 (7.4, 1,956.5) | 32.1 | |||
| 13 | CRIPHE [ | 2013.11–2014.3 | Chungnam 5 province | 114 | 92.5(-) | - | -(9.6, 640.4) | 15.8 |
aER is 148 Bq/m3 of the US Environmental Protection Agency’s (USEPA) recommended action level; b200 Bq/m3 of the recommended value in International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) 65; cseven cities include Seoul, Chuncheon, Daejeon, Daegu, Gwangju, Pusan, and Jeju.
AM arithmetic mean, SD standard deviation, GM geometric mean, Min minimum, Max maximum, KINS Korea institute of nuclear safety, KAERI Korea atomic energy research institute, NIH national institute of health, KFDA Korea food and drug safety, NIER national institute of environmental research, CRIPHE Chungnam research institute public health and environment
Fig. 1Mean indoor radon concentrations in homes throughout 251 administrative districts in Korea (December 2011 - May 2012). Source: National Institute of Environmental Research in Korea. 1.Hwacheon-gun(562), 2.Jinan-gun(412), 3.Yeongwol-gun(335), 4.Jangsu-gun(310), 5.Muju-gun(290), 6.Goseong-gun(288), 7.Hoengseong-gun(285), 8.Pocheon-si(277), 9.Taebaek-si(262), 10.Damyang-gun(258), 11.Hongcheon-gun(255), 12.Wanju_Gun(252), 13.Goheung-gun(244), 14.Inje-gun(241), 15.Cheongsong-gun(235), 16.Geumsan-gun(232), 17.Sunchang-gun(229), 18.Danyang-gun(222), 19.Boeun-gun(222), 20.Nonsan-si(220), 21.Jeongseon-gun(217), 22.Yeongam-gun(216), 23.Mungyeong_si(214), 24.Pyeongchang-gun(214), 25.Gapyeong-gun(211), 26.Sokcho-si(211),…, 247.Seoul Seongdong-gu(58), 248.Inchen Dong-gu(57), 249.Ulsan Nam-gu(46), 250.Ulsan Jung-gu(44). 251.Changwon Seongsan-gu(31)
Fig. 2Number of lung cancer patients per 100,000 persons (females, 2011-2013) throughout 251 administrative districts in Korea. Source: National Health Insurance Corporation in Korea. 1.Hwacheon-gun(562), 2.Jinan-gun(412), 3.Yeongwol-gun(335), 4.Jangsu-gun(310), 5.Muju-gun(290), 6.Goseong-gun(288), 7.Hoengseong-gun(285), 8.Pocheon-si(277), 9.Taebaek-si(262), 10.Damyang-gun(258), 11.Hongcheon-gun(255), 12.Wanju_Gun(252), 13.Goheung-gun(244), 14.Inje-gun(241), 15.Cheongsong-gun(235), 16.Geumsan-gun(232), 17.Sunchang-gun(229), 18.Danyang-gun(222), 19.Boeun-gun(222), 20.Nonsan-si(220), 21.Jeongseon-gun(217), 22.Yeongam-gun(216), 23.Mungyeong_si(214), 24.Pyeongchang-gun(214), 25.Gapyeong-gun(211), 26.Sokcho-si(211),…, 247.Seoul Seongdong-gu(58), 248.Inchen Dong-gu(57), 249.Ulsan Nam-gu(46), 250.Ulsan Jung-gu(44). 251.Changwon Seongsan-gu(31)