Possible selection effects for radiation risk estimates in Japanese A-bomb survivors: reanalysis of acute radiation symptoms data

被引:0
|
作者
Nezahat Hunter
Colin R. Muirhead
Wei Zhang
机构
[1] Health Protection Agency,Radiation Protection Division
来源
关键词
Test Group; Acute Injury; Solid Cancer; Multiple Injury; Excess Relative Risk;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
An earlier analysis examined the possibility of bias in the Life Span Study (LSS) cohort by studying Japanese A-bomb survivors with bomb-related acute injuries and those without such injuries (Stewart and Kneale in Int J Epidemiol 29:708–714, 2000). The authors reported significantly higher radiation risks, both for cancers and non-cancers, among those survivors with acute injuries compared with those without. The risks were reported to be particularly large among survivors aged <10 or ≥55 years of age at the time of bombings. The aim of this paper is to examine these findings more closely using the LSS acute effects data. All the analyses were carried out using Poisson regression. Relative risk models were fitted with adjustment for sex and other factors. Significant differences in relative risk between survivors with epilation and burns and those without epilation and burns are found for leukaemia. There is also some evidence for heterogeneity in the leukaemia risk between survivors with two or more acute injuries and those with no injuries, but the evidence is disappeared when survivors with one or more injuries are compared with those without injuries. For solid cancers, cardiovascular disease and all deaths combined, the risks do not differ to a statistically significant extent between survivors with and without injuries. There is no statistically significant heterogeneity in risk across age-at-exposure categories for survivors with injuries. For all deaths combined, relative risk estimates and their uncertainties are significantly higher for survivors exposed at ages <10 years when compared with other exposure ages, but risks are not significantly raised for survivors exposed at ≥55 years of age. With the exception of leukaemia, the findings from the present work are inconsistent with those of Stewart and Kneale.
引用
收藏
页码:17 / 26
页数:9
相关论文
共 43 条
  • [31] A CASE-CONTROL INTERVIEW STUDY OF BREAST-CANCER AMONG JAPANESE A-BOMB SURVIVORS .2. INTERACTIONS WITH RADIATION-DOSE
    LAND, CE
    HAYAKAWA, N
    MACHADO, SG
    YAMADA, Y
    PIKE, MC
    AKIBA, S
    TOKUNAGA, M
    CANCER CAUSES & CONTROL, 1994, 5 (02) : 167 - 176
  • [32] Age-at-exposure effects on risk estimates for non-cancer mortality in the Japanese atomic bomb survivors
    Zhang, W
    Muirhead, CR
    Hunter, N
    JOURNAL OF RADIOLOGICAL PROTECTION, 2005, 25 (04) : 393 - 404
  • [33] Risk of cancer associated with low-dose radiation exposure: comparison of results between the INWORKS nuclear workers study and the A-bomb survivors study
    Leuraud, Klervi
    Richardson, David B.
    Cardis, Elisabeth
    Daniels, Robert D.
    Gillies, Michael
    Haylock, Richard
    Moissonnier, Monika
    Schubauer-Berigan, Mary K.
    Thierry-Chef, Isabelle
    Kesminiene, Ausrele
    Laurier, Dominique
    RADIATION AND ENVIRONMENTAL BIOPHYSICS, 2021, 60 (01) : 23 - 39
  • [34] Risk of cancer associated with low-dose radiation exposure: comparison of results between the INWORKS nuclear workers study and the A-bomb survivors study
    Klervi Leuraud
    David B. Richardson
    Elisabeth Cardis
    Robert D. Daniels
    Michael Gillies
    Richard Haylock
    Monika Moissonnier
    Mary K. Schubauer-Berigan
    Isabelle Thierry-Chef
    Ausrele Kesminiene
    Dominique Laurier
    Radiation and Environmental Biophysics, 2021, 60 : 23 - 39
  • [35] The possible impact of passive smoke exposure on radiation-related risk estimates for lung cancer among women: the life span study of atomic bomb survivors
    Hu, Audrey E.
    French, Benjamin
    Sakata, Ritsu
    Bhatti, Parveen
    Bockwoldt, Brandie
    Grant, Eric J.
    Phipps, Amanda, I
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION BIOLOGY, 2021, 97 (11) : 1548 - 1554
  • [36] Effects of radiation on fatty liver and metabolic coronary risk factors among atomic bomb survivors in Nagasaki
    Akahoshi, M
    Amasaki, Y
    Soda, M
    Hida, A
    Imaizumi, M
    Nakashima, E
    Maeda, R
    Seto, S
    Yano, K
    HYPERTENSION RESEARCH, 2003, 26 (12) : 965 - 970
  • [37] GENETIC EFFECTS OF A-BOMB RADIATION ON STATURE-III - RESULTS OF ANALYSIS OF DATA ON 12 TO 14-YEARS-OLD CHILDREN
    FURUSHO, T
    TANAKA, K
    OTAKE, M
    JAPANESE JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS, 1978, 23 (03): : 306 - 306
  • [38] AN ANALYSIS OF VARIOUS ASPECTS OF ATOMIC-BOMB DOSE ESTIMATION AT RERF USING DATA ON ACUTE RADIATION SYMPTOMS
    GILBERT, ES
    OHARA, JL
    RADIATION RESEARCH, 1984, 100 (01) : 124 - 138
  • [39] Radiation cancer risk at different dose rates: new dose-rate effectiveness factors derived from revised A-bomb radiation dosimetry data and non-tumor doses
    Tanooka, Hiroshi
    JOURNAL OF RADIATION RESEARCH, 2022, 63 (01) : 1 - 7