Breast cancer mortality between 1950 and 1987 after exposure to fractionated moderate-dose-rate ionizing radiation in the Canadian Fluoroscopy Cohort Study and a comparison with breast cancer mortality in the Atomic Bomb Survivors Study

被引:167
|
作者
Howe, GR [1 ]
McLaughlin, J [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV TORONTO,NATL CANC INST CANADA,EPIDEMIOL UNIT,TORONTO,ON M5S 1A8,CANADA
关键词
D O I
10.2307/3579360
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
The relationship between exposure to low-linear energy transfer ionizing radiation and subsequent breast cancer mortality risk is reported based on a further 7 years of follow-up in the Canadian fluoroscopy study. Amongst 31,917 women first treated for tuberculosis in a Canadian institution between 1930 and 1952, a total of 688 breast cancer deaths were observed between 1950 and 1987. There is a strong linear trend of increasing risk with increasing dose (P < 0.0001), with the excess relative risk per sievert decreasing with age at exposure (P = 0.0003). The excess relative risk is approximately constant between 5 and 39 years after exposure, with a suggestion of a decrease between 40 and 57 years after exposure, though this could be a chance effect (P = 0.22). Combined analyses of the Canadian fluoroscopy data and the data for the atomic bomb survivors with respect to breast cancer mortality are also reported. In general the two studies are reasonably consistent, the only distinct difference being the much greater excess relative risk per sievert amongst women exposed to very high doses in the province of Nova Scotia (P, heterogeneity <0.0001). Based on the combined data sets a simple relative risk (RR) model for the effect of a dose of D sieverts at age A years is developed: RR(D) = 1.0 + 0.52D exp[-0.10(A - 15)]. This model fits the combined data well, and is used to predict excess lifetime risks of breast cancer mortality after radiation exposure from routine annual mammography. (C) 1996 by Radiation Research Society
引用
收藏
页码:694 / 707
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [2] Leukemia mortality after fractionated moderate-dose-rate ionizing radiation in the Canadian fluoroscopy cohort
    Zablotska, LB
    Howe, GR
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2005, 161 (11) : S20 - S20
  • [3] Comparison of breast cancer incidence in the Massachusetts tuberculosis fluoroscopy cohort and in the Japanese atomic bomb survivors
    Little, MP
    Boice, JD
    RADIATION RESEARCH, 1999, 151 (02) : 218 - 224
  • [4] Biologically based analysis of lung cancer incidence in a large Canadian occupational cohort with low-dose ionizing radiation exposure, and comparison with Japanese atomic bomb survivors
    Hazelton, WD
    Moolgavkar, SH
    Curtis, SB
    Zielinski, JM
    Ashmore, JP
    Krewski, D
    JOURNAL OF TOXICOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH-PART A-CURRENT ISSUES, 2006, 69 (11): : 1013 - 1038
  • [5] Low dose radiation and cancer in A-bomb survivors: latency and non-linear dose-response in the 1950–90 mortality cohort
    Greg Dropkin
    Environmental Health, 6
  • [6] Site-specific Solid Cancer Mortality After Exposure to Ionizing Radiation: A Cohort Study of Workers (INWORKS)
    Richardson, David B.
    Cardis, Elisabeth
    Daniels, Robert D.
    Gillies, Michael
    Haylock, Richard
    Leuraud, Klervi
    Laurier, Dominique
    Moissonnier, Monika
    Schubauer-Berigan, Mary K.
    Thierry-Chef, Isabelle
    Kesminiene, Ausrele
    EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2018, 29 (01) : 31 - 40
  • [7] Mortality after second malignancy in breast cancer survivors compared to a first primary cancer: a nationwide longitudinal cohort study
    Zhengyi Deng
    Miranda R. Jones
    Mei-Cheng Wang
    Kala Visvanathan
    npj Breast Cancer, 8
  • [8] Mortality after second malignancy in breast cancer survivors compared to a first primary cancer: a nationwide longitudinal cohort study
    Deng, Zhengyi
    Jones, Miranda R.
    Wang, Mei-Cheng
    Visvanathan, Kala
    NPJ BREAST CANCER, 2022, 8 (01)
  • [9] LOW DOSE IONIZING RADIATION EXPOSURE AND CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE MORTALITY: COHORT STUDY BASED ON CANADIAN NATIONAL DOSE REGISTRY OF RADIATION WORKERS
    Zielinski, Jan M.
    Ashmore, Patrick J.
    Band, Pierre R.
    Jiang, Huixia
    Shilnikova, Natalia S.
    Tait, Valerie K.
    Krewski, Daniel
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL MEDICINE AND ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH, 2009, 22 (01) : 27 - 33
  • [10] Relationship between anthropometric factors, radiation exposure, and colon cancer incidence in the Life Span Study cohort of atomic bomb survivors
    Semmens, Erin O.
    Kopecky, Kenneth J.
    Grant, Eric
    Mathes, Robert W.
    Nishi, Nobuo
    Sugiyama, Hiromi
    Moriwaki, Hiroko
    Sakata, Ritsu
    Soda, Midori
    Kasagi, Fumiyoshi
    Yamada, Michiko
    Fujiwara, Saeko
    Akahoshi, Masazumi
    Davis, Scott
    Kodama, Kazunori
    Li, Christopher I.
    CANCER CAUSES & CONTROL, 2013, 24 (01) : 27 - 37