| Literature DB >> 35301522 |
Sergii Masiuk1, Mykola Chepurny1, Valentyna Buderatska1, Olga Ivanova1, Zulfira Boiko1, Natalia Zhadan1, Maureen Hatch2, Elizabeth K Cahoon2, Galyna Zamotayeva3, Victor Shpak3, Mykola Tronko3, Vladimir Drozdovitch2.
Abstract
This study revised the thyroid doses for 2582 Ukrainian in utero cohort members exposed to Chornobyl fallout (the Ukrainian in utero cohort) based on revision of: (i) 131I thyroid activity measured in the Ukrainian population, (ii) thyroid dosimetry system for entire Ukraine, and (iii) 131I ground deposition densities in Ukraine. Other major improvements included: (i) assessment of uncertainties in the thyroid doses considering shared and unshared error, and (ii) accounting for intake of short-lived radioisotopes of tellurium and iodine (132Te+132I and 133I). Intake of 131I was the major pathway for thyroid exposure, its median contribution to the thyroid dose was 97.4%. The mean prenatal and postnatal thyroid dose from 131I was 87 mGy (median = 17 mGy), higher than previous deterministic dose of 72 mGy (median = 12 mGy). For 39 individuals (1.5%) the dose exceeded 1.0 Gy, while the highest dose among the cohort members was 2.7 Gy. The geometric standard deviation (GSD) of 1000 individual stochastic doses varied from 1.9 to 5.2 with a mean of 3.1 and a median of 3.2. The lowest uncertainty (mean GSD = 2.3, median GSD = 2.2) was found for the subjects whose mothers were measured for 131I thyroid activity, while for individuals, whose mothers were not measured, the mean and median GSDs were 3.4. Uncertainties in thyroid doses were driven by shared errors associated with the parameters of the ecological model. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Japanese Radiation Research Society and Japanese Society for Radiation Oncology 2022.Entities:
Keywords: Chernobyl; Chornobyl; in utero; radiation exposure; thyroid; uncertainty
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35301522 PMCID: PMC9124623 DOI: 10.1093/jrr/rrac007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Radiat Res ISSN: 0449-3060 Impact factor: 2.438