4.5 Article

Sex-specific lung cancer risk among radiation workers in the million-person study and patients TB-Fluoroscopy

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION BIOLOGY
Volume 98, Issue 4, Pages 769-780

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09553002.2018.1547441

Keywords

Epidemiology; lung cancer; radiation dose; risk coefficients; occupation; tuberculosis

Funding

  1. U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission [NRCHQ-60-14-G-0011]
  2. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [5UE1EH000989, 5NUE1EH001315]
  3. National Aeronautics and Space Administration [DE-AU0000042, DEAU0000046]
  4. U.S. Department of Energy [DE-AU0000042, DEAU0000046, DE-SC0008944]
  5. National Cancer Institute [U01 CA137026]
  6. Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center [404-357-9682]
  7. Office of Radiation and Indoor Air, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency [1824 S581-A1, DE-AC05-00OR22725]
  8. UT-Battelle
  9. Oak Ridge Associated Universities from the U.S. Department of Energy [DE-SC0014664]
  10. National Cancer Institute and National Institutes of Health [R01CA197422]

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The study found that the risk of radiation-induced lung cancer is nearly three times higher for women than for men. However, no similar gender differences were found among populations exposed to chronic or fractionated radiation. The analysis of various occupational cohorts showed little difference in gender-specific lung cancer risks.
Background The study of Japanese atomic bomb survivors, exposed briefly to radiation, finds the risk of radiation-induced lung cancer to be nearly three times greater for women than for men. Because protection standards for astronauts are based on individual lifetime risk projections, this sex-specific difference limits the time women can spend in space. Populations exposed to chronic or fractionated radiation were evaluated to learn whether similar differences exist when exposures occur gradually over years. Methods and materials Five occupational cohorts within the Million Person Study of Low-Dose Health Effects (MPS) and a Canadian Fluoroscopy Cohort Study (CFCS) of tuberculosis patients who underwent frequent chest fluoroscopic examinations are evaluated. Included are male and female workers at the Mound nuclear facility, nuclear power plants (NPP), and industrial radiographers (IR). Workers at the Mallinckrodt Chemical Works and military participants at aboveground nuclear weapons tests provide information on the risk among males. Cox proportional hazards and Poisson regression models were used to estimate sex-specific radiation risks for lung cancer and to compare any differences. Results Overall, 15,065 lung cancers occurred among the 443,684 subjects studied: 50,111 women and 395,573 men. The mean cumulative dose to the lung was 166.3 mGy (range 6 to 1,055 mGy) with the highest among the TB-fluoroscopy patients (mean 1,055 mGy). Mean lung dose for women in the worker cohorts was generally 4 times lower than for men. Of the 12 estimates of radiation-related risk, only one, for male IRs, showed a significant elevation (ERR 0.09; 95% CI 0.02-0.16, at 100 mGy). In contrast, the dose response for male NPP workers was negative (ERR -0.05; 95% CI -0.10, 0.01, at 100 mGy). Combined, these two cohorts provided little evidence for a radiation effect among males (ERR 0.01; 95% CI -0.04, 0.06, at 100 mGy). There was no significant dose-response among females within any cohort. There was no difference in the sex-specific estimates of lung cancer risk. Conclusions There was little evidence that chronic or fractionated exposures increased the risk of lung cancer. There were no differences in the risks of lung cancer between men and women. However, the sex-specific analyses are limited because of small numbers of women and relatively low doses. A more definitive study is ongoing of medical radiation workers which include 85,000 women and 85,000 men (overall mean dose 82 mGy, max 1,140 mGy). Additional understanding will come from the ongoing follow-up of the CFCS.

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