VALIDITY OF THYROID CANCER INCIDENCE DATA FOLLOWING THE CHERNOBYL ACCIDENT

被引:5
作者
Jargin, Sergei V. [1 ]
机构
[1] Peoples Friendship Univ Russia, Moscow 115184, Russia
来源
HEALTH PHYSICS | 2011年 / 101卷 / 06期
关键词
cancer; Chernobyl; children; thyroid; POST-CHERNOBYL; OVERESTIMATION; REARRANGEMENTS; CONSEQUENCES; CHILDREN; RISK; CARCINOMAS; DISASTER; UKRAINE; PATTERN;
D O I
10.1097/HP.0b013e3182166780
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
The only clearly demonstrated cancer incidence increase that can be attributed to radiation from the Chernobyl accident is thyroid carcinoma in patients exposed during childhood or adolescence. Significant increases in thyroid disease were observed as soon as 4 y after the accident. The solid/follicular subtype of papillary carcinoma predominated in the early period after the accident. Morphological diagnosis of cancer in such cases, if no infiltrative growth is clearly visible, depends mainly on the nuclear criteria. Outdated equipment and insufficient quality of histological specimens impeded reliable evaluation of the nuclear criteria. Access to foreign professional literature has always been limited in the former Soviet Union. The great number of advanced tumors observed shortly after the accident can be explained by the screening effect (detection of previously neglected cancers) and by the fact that many patients were brought from non-contaminated areas and registered as Chernobyl victims. It is also worth noting that exaggeration of the Chernobyl cancer statistics facilitated the writing of dissertations, financing of research, and assistance from outside the former Soviet Union. "Chernobyl hysteria" impeded nuclear energy production in some countries, thus contributing to higher prices for fossil fuel. The concluding point is that since post-Chernobyl cancers tend on average to be in a later stage of tumor progression, some published data on molecular or immunohistochemical characteristics of Chernobyl-related cancers require reevaluation. Health Phys. 101(6):754-757; 2011
引用
收藏
页码:754 / 757
页数:4
相关论文
共 50 条
[21]   ESTIMATION OF THE THYROID DOSES FOR UKRAINIAN CHILDREN EXPOSED IN UTERO AFTER THE CHERNOBYL ACCIDENT [J].
Likhtarov, I. ;
Kovgan, L. ;
Chepurny, M. ;
Ivanova, O. ;
Boyko, Z. ;
Ratia, G. ;
Masiuk, S. ;
Gerasymenko, V. ;
Drozdovitch, V. ;
Berkovski, V. ;
Hatch, M. ;
Brenner, A. ;
Luckyanov, N. ;
Voilleque, P. ;
Bouville, A. .
HEALTH PHYSICS, 2011, 100 (06) :583-593
[22]   Thyroid examination in highly radiation-exposed workers after the Chernobyl accident [J].
Boehm, Bernhard O. ;
Steinert, Marianna ;
Dietrich, Johannes W. ;
Peter, Ralf U. ;
Belyi, David ;
Wagemaker, Gerald ;
Rosinger, Silke ;
Fliedner, Theodor M. ;
Weiss, Melanie .
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF ENDOCRINOLOGY, 2009, 160 (04) :625-630
[23]   ESTIMATES OF THYROID EQUIVALENT DOSE IN LITHUANIA FOLLOWING THE CHERNOBYL ACCIDENT [J].
NEDVECKAITE, T ;
FILISTOWICZ, W .
HEALTH PHYSICS, 1995, 69 (02) :265-268
[24]   Joint Belarus/Russia/EU/IARC/SMFH case-control studies of thyroid cancer in young people following the Chernobyl accident [J].
Cardis, E ;
Ivanov, VK ;
Kesminiene, A ;
Malakhova, IV ;
Shibata, Y ;
Tenet, V .
CHERNOBYL: MESSAGE FOR THE 21ST CENTURY, 2002, 1234 :105-113
[25]   Comparative Histopathologic Analysis of "Radiogenic" and "Sporadic" Papillary Thyroid Carcinoma: Patients Born Before and After the Chernobyl Accident [J].
Bogdanova, Tetiana I. ;
Saenko, Vladimir A. ;
Brenner, Alina V. ;
Zurnadzhy, Liudmyla Yu. ;
Rogounovitch, Tatiana I. ;
Likhtarov, Ilya A. ;
Masiuk, Sergii V. ;
Kovgan, Leonila M. ;
Shpak, Victor M. ;
Thomas, Geraldine A. ;
Chanock, Stephen J. ;
Mabuchi, Kiyohiko ;
Tronko, Mykola D. ;
Yamashita, Shunichi .
THYROID, 2018, 28 (07) :880-890
[26]   DID CHERNOBYL ACCIDENT CONTRIBUTE TO THE RISE OF THYROID CANCER IN TURKEY? [J].
Kocakusak, A. .
ACTA ENDOCRINOLOGICA-BUCHAREST, 2016, 12 (03) :362-367
[27]   Lessons learned from Chernobyl and Fukushima on thyroid cancer screening and recommendations in case of a future nuclear accident [J].
Clero, Enora ;
Ostroumova, Evgenia ;
Demoury, Claire ;
Grosche, Bernd ;
Kesminiene, Ausrele ;
Liutsko, Liudmila ;
Motreff, Yvon ;
Oughton, Deborah ;
Pirard, Philippe ;
Rogel, Agnes ;
Van Nieuwenhuyse, An ;
Laurier, Dominique ;
Cardis, Elisabeth .
ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL, 2021, 146
[28]   Fallout from the Chernobyl accident and overall cancer incidence in Finland [J].
Kurttio, Paivi ;
Seppa, Karri ;
Pasanen, Kari ;
Patama, Toni ;
Auvinen, Anssi ;
Pukkala, Eero ;
Heinavaara, Sirpa ;
Arvela, Hannu ;
Hakulinen, Timo .
CANCER EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2013, 37 (05) :585-592
[29]   Radiation Risk Modeling of Thyroid Cancer with Special Emphasis on the Chernobyl Epidemiological Data [J].
Walsh, L. ;
Jacob, P. ;
Kaiser, J. C. .
RADIATION RESEARCH, 2009, 172 (04) :509-518
[30]   OVERESTIMATION OF THYROID CANCER INCIDENCE AFTER CHERNOBYL Reply [J].
Ron, Elaine .
HEALTH PHYSICS, 2009, 96 (02) :186-187