| Literature DB >> 31273231 |
Robert J Reynolds1, Igor V Bukhtiyarov2, Galina I Tikhonova2, Steven M Day3, Igor B Ushakov4, Tatyana Y U Gorchakova2.
Abstract
Space travelers are exposed to unique forms of ionizing radiation that pose potentially serious health hazards. Prior analyses have attempted to quantify excess mortality risk for astronauts exposed to space radiation, but low statistical power has frustrated inferences. If exposure to deep space radiation were causally linked to deaths due to two particular causes, e.g., cancer and cardiovascular disease, then those cause-specific deaths would not be statistically independent. In this case, a Kaplan-Meier survival curve for a specific cause that treats deaths due to competing causes as uninformative censored events would result in biased estimates of survival probabilities. Here we look for evidence of a deleterious effect of historical exposure to space radiation by assessing whether or not there is evidence for such bias in Kaplan-Meier estimates of survival probabilities for cardiovascular disease and cancer. Evidence of such bias may implicate space radiation as a common causal link to these two disease processes. An absence of such evidence would be evidence that no such common causal link to radiation exposure during space travel exists. We found that survival estimates from the Kaplan-Meier curves were largely congruent with those of competing risk methods, suggesting that if ionizing radiation is impacting the risk of death due to cancer and cardiovascular disease, the effect is not dramatic.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31273231 PMCID: PMC6609703 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-44858-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Astronaut and cosmonaut group characteristics.
| Astronauts | Cosmonauts | |
|---|---|---|
| N | 301 | 117 |
| Age at first flight, mean (sd) | 40.7 (4.7) | 38.3 (5.1) |
|
| ||
| Total | 7,295.8 | 2,966.8 |
| Mean (sd) | 24.2 (12.4) | 25.4 (14.1) |
| Maximum | 54.8 | 54.9 |
|
| ||
| All causes | 53 (100.0) | 36 (100.0) |
| Cancer | 16 (30.2) | 10 (28.0) |
| CVD | 8 (15.1) | 18 (50.0) |
| Other natural | 6 (11.3) | 2 (6.0) |
| External | 20 (37.7) | 6 (17.0) |
| Unknown | 3 (5.7) | 0 (0.0) |
Figure 1Cumulative incidence and survival curves for specific causes of death among US astronauts, 1959–2018. The upper panel shows the cumulative incidence from multiple causes when computed from naïve K-M survival estimates. The four middle panels provide naïve K-M and properly computed competing risk survival curves by cause. The bottom panel shows cumulative incidence curves by cause derived from competing risk survival curves.
AUCs, AUC differences, and AUC ratios by cause of death category for K-M and competing risk survival curves for astronauts.
| Cause of Death | AUC | Difference | Ratio | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| K-M | CR | |||
| Cancer | 51.06 | 51.58 | 0.52 | 0.990 |
| CVD | 52.64 | 53.14 | 0.50 | 0.991 |
| Other natural | 51.79 | 52.60 | 0.81 | 0.985 |
| External | 51.15 | 51.21 | 0.06 | 0.999 |
Figure 2Cumulative incidence and survival curves for specific causes of death among Soviet and Russian cosmonauts, 1960–2017. The upper panel shows the cumulative incidence from multiple causes when computed from naïve K-M survival estimates. The four middle panels provide naïve K-M and properly computed competing risk survival curves by cause. The bottom panel shows cumulative incidence curves by cause derived from competing risk survival curves.
AUCs, AUC differences, and AUC ratios by cause of death category for K-M and competing risk survival curves for cosmonauts.
| Cause of Death | AUC | Difference | Ratio | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| K-M | CR | |||
| Cancer | 49.48 | 50.29 | 0.81 | 0.984 |
| CVD | 44.99 | 46.95 | 1.96 | 0.958 |
| Other nat/unk | 53.64 | 53.68 | 0.04 | 0.999 |
| External | 51.80 | 51.84 | 0.04 | 0.999 |