4.5 Review

Dosimetry and uncertainty approaches for the million person study of low-dose radiation health effects: overview of the recommendations in NCRP Report No. 178

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION BIOLOGY
Volume 98, Issue 4, Pages 600-609

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09553002.2018.1536299

Keywords

NCRP; dosimetry; epidemiology; radiation

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy [DE-AU0000042, DE-SC0008944]
  2. U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission [NRC-HQ-60-14-G-0011]
  3. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [5UE1EH000989, 5NUE1EH001315]
  4. National Aeronautics and Space Administration [NNX15AU88G, 80NSSC17M0016]
  5. U.S. Department of Defense/Defense Threat Reduction Agency
  6. U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs

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The NCRP's Scientific Committee 6-9 was established to provide guidance on organ doses and their uncertainty in the Million Person Study of Low-Dose Radiation Health Effects (MPS). Their report, NCRP Report No. 178, focuses on dosimetry and uncertainty approaches for different cohorts in the MPS, providing guidelines for estimating organ doses and uncertainties in epidemiologic studies.
Purpose Scientific Committee 6-9 was established by the National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements (NCRP), charged to provide guidance in the derivation of organ doses and their uncertainty, and produced a report, NCRP Report No. 178, Deriving Organ Doses and their Uncertainty for Epidemiologic Studies with a focus on the Million Person Study of Low-Dose Radiation Health Effects (MPS). This review summarizes the conclusions and recommendations of NCRP Report No. 178, with a concentration on and overview of the dosimetry and uncertainty approaches for the cohorts in the MPS, along with guidelines regarding the essential approaches used to estimate organ doses and their uncertainties (from external and internal sources) within the framework of an epidemiologic study. Conclusions The success of the MPS is tied to the validity of the dose reconstruction approaches to provide realistic estimates of organ-specific radiation absorbed doses that are as accurate and precise as possible and to properly evaluate their accompanying uncertainties. The dosimetry aspects for the MPS are challenging in that they address diverse exposure scenarios for diverse occupational groups being studied over a period of up to 70 y. Specific dosimetric reconstruction issues differ among the varied exposed populations that are considered: atomic veterans, U.S. Department of Energy workers exposed to both penetrating radiation and intakes of radionuclides, nuclear power plant workers, medical radiation workers, and industrial radiographers. While a major source of radiation exposure to the study population comes from external gamma- or x-ray sources, for some of the study groups, there is also a meaningful component of radionuclide intakes that requires internal radiation dosimetry assessments.

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