4.6 Article

Congenital Malformations and Perinatal Deaths Among the Children of Atomic Bomb Survivors: A Reappraisal

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
Volume 190, Issue 11, Pages 2323-2333

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/aje/kwab099

Keywords

atomic bomb; congenital malformations; genetics; nuclear weapons; perinatal mortality; pregnancy outcomes; radiation effects

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The study found a potential link between parental radiation exposure and increased risk of major congenital malformations and perinatal death among children of atomic bomb survivors. However, the estimates were not precise or statistically significant, leading to uncertainty when applying these findings to populations outside of atomic bomb survivors.
From 1948 to 1954, the Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission conducted a study of pregnancy outcomes among births to atomic bomb survivors (Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan) who had received radiation doses ranging from 0Gy to near-lethal levels. Past reports (1956, 1981, and 1990) on the cohort did not identify significant associations of radiation exposure with untoward pregnancy outcomes, such as major congenital malformations, stillbirths, or neonatal deaths, individually or in aggregate. We reexamined the risk of major congenital malformations and perinatal deaths in the children of atomic bomb survivors (n = 71,603) using fully reconstructed data to minimize the potential for bias, using refined estimates of the gonadal dose from Dosimetry System 2002 and refined analytical methods for characterizing dose-response relationships. The analyses showed that parental exposure to radiation was associated with increased risk of major congenital malformations and perinatal death, but the estimates were imprecise for direct radiation effects, and most were not statistically significant. Nonetheless, the uniformly positive estimates for untoward pregnancy outcomes among children of both maternal and paternal survivors are useful for risk assessment purposes, although extending them to populations other than the atomic bomb survivors comes with uncertainty as to generalizability.

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