4.3 Article

RADRUE METHOD FOR RECONSTRUCTION OF EXTERNAL PHOTON DOSES FOR CHERNOBYL LIQUIDATORS IN EPIDEMIOLOGICAL STUDIES

Journal

HEALTH PHYSICS
Volume 97, Issue 4, Pages 275-298

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/HP.0b013e3181ac9306

Keywords

bone marrow; Chernobyl; dosimetry, external; thyroid

Funding

  1. U.S. National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health
  2. Department of Health and Human Services
  3. International Agency for Research on Cancer
  4. U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [1R01CCR015763-02]
  5. European Union [F14C-CT96-0011, ERBIC15-CT96-0317]
  6. U.S. Department of Energy
  7. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (U.S.)
  8. National Cancer Institute [Y2-Al-5077]
  9. NCI [Y3-CO-5117]

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Between 1986 and 1990, several hundred thousand workers, called liquidators or clean-up workers, took part in decontamination and recovery activities within the 30-km zone around the Chernobyl nuclear power plant in Ukraine, where a major accident occurred in April 1986. The Chernobyl liquidators were mainly exposed to external ionizing radiation levels that depended primarily on their work locations and the time after the accident when the work was performed. Because individual doses were often monitored inadequately or were not monitored at all for the majority of liquidators, a new method of photon (i.e., gamma and x rays) dose assessment, called RADRUE (Realistic Analytical Dose Reconstruction with Uncertainty Estimation), was developed to obtain unbiased and reasonably accurate estimates for use in three epidemiologic studies of hematological malignancies and thyroid cancer among liquidators. The RADRUE program implements a time-and-motion dose-reconstruction method that is flexible and conceptually easy to understand. It includes a large exposure rate database and interpolation and extrapolation techniques to calculate exposure rates at places where liquidators lived and worked within similar to 70 km of the destroyed reactor. The RADRUE technique relies on data collected from subjects' interviews conducted by trained interviewers, and on expert dosimetrists to interpret the information and provide supplementary information, when necessary, based upon their own Chernobyl experience. The RADRUE technique was used to estimate doses from external irradiation, as well as uncertainties, to the bone marrow for 929 subjects and to the thyroid gland for 530 subjects enrolled in epidemiologic studies. Individual bone marrow dose estimates were found to range from less than one mu Gy to 3,300 mGy, with an arithmetic mean of 71 mGy. Individual thyroid dose estimates were lower and ranged from 20 mu Gy to 507 mGy, with an arithmetic mean of 29 mGy. The uncertainties, expressed in terms of geometric standard deviations, ranged from 1.1 to 5.8, with an arithmetic mean of 1.9. Health Phys. 97(4):275-298; 2009

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