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Risk of cancer after low doses of ionising radiation: retrospective cohort study in 15 countries.
Authors
Cardis-E; Vrijheid-M; Blettner-M; Gilbert-E; Hakama-M; Hill-C; Howe-G; Kaldor-J; Muirhead-CR; Schubauer-Berigan-M; Yoshimura-T; Bermann-F; Cowper-G; Fix-J; Hacker-C; Heinmiller-B; Marshall-M; Thierry-Chef-I; Utterback-D; Ahn-Y-O; Amoros-E; Ashmore-P; Auvinen-A; Bae-J-M; Bernar Solano-J; Biau-A; Combalot-E; Deboodt-P; Diez Sacristan-A; Eklof-M; Engels-H; Engholm-G; Gulis-G; Habib-R; Holan-K; Hyvonen-H; Kerekes-A; Kurtinaitis-J; Malker-H; Martuzzi-M; Mastauskas-A; Monnet-A; Moser-M; Pearce-MS; Richardson-DB; Rodriguez-Artalejo-F; Rogel-A; Tardy-H; Telle-Lamberton-M; Turai-I; Usel-M; Veress-K
Source
Br Med J 2005 Jun; 331(7508):77
Link
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.38499.599861.E0 
NIOSHTIC No.
20027687 
Abstract
To provide direct estimates of risk of cancer after protracted low doses of ionising radiation and to strengthen the scientific basis of radiation protection standards for environmental, occupational, and medical diagnostic exposures. Multinational retrospective cohort study of cancer mortality. Cohorts of workers in the nuclear industry in 15 countries. 407 391 workers individually monitored for external radiation with a total follow-up of 5.2 million person years. Estimates of excess relative risks per sievert (Sv) of radiation dose for mortality from cancers other than leukaemia and from leukaemia excluding chronic lymphocytic leukaemia, the main causes of death considered by radiation protection authorities. The excess relative risk for cancers other than leukaemia was 0.97 per Sv, 95% confidence interval 0.14 to 1.97. Analyses of causes of death related or unrelated to smoking indicate that, although confounding by smoking may be present, it is unlikely to explain all of this increased risk. The excess relative risk for leukaemia excluding chronic lymphocytic leukaemia was 1.93 per Sv (< 0 to 8.47). On the basis of these estimates, 1-2% of deaths from cancer among workers in this cohort may be attributable to radiation. These estimates, from the largest study of nuclear workers ever conducted, are higher than, but statistically compatible with, the risk estimates used for current radiation protection standards. The results suggest that there is a small excess risk of cancer, even at the low doses and dose rates typically received by nuclear workers in this study.
Keywords
Cancer; Risk-factors; Risk-analysis; Ionizing-radiation; Radiation; Occupational-exposure; Environmental-exposure; Radiation-protection; Mortality-data; Mortality-rates; Workers; Radiation-exposure
Contact
International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), Lyons, France
CODEN
BMJOAE
Publication Date
20050629
Document Type
Journal Article
Email Address
cardis@iarc.fr
Funding Type
Cooperative Agreement
Fiscal Year
2005
NTIS Accession No.
NTIS Price
Identifying No.
Cooperative-Agreement-Number-U50-CCU-011778
Issue of Publication
7508
ISSN
0959-8138
NIOSH Division
DSHEFS
Source Name
British Medical Journal
State
OH; MD; NC; NY; WA
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