TY - JOUR
T1 - Thyroid cancer after childhood exposure to external radiation
T2 - An updated pooled analysis of 12 studies
AU - Veiga, Lene H.S.
AU - Holmberg, Erik
AU - Anderson, Harald
AU - Pottern, Linda
AU - Sadetzki, Siegal
AU - Adams, M. Jacob
AU - Sakata, Ritsu
AU - Schneider, Arthur B.
AU - Inskip, Peter
AU - Bhatti, Parveen
AU - Johansson, Robert
AU - Neta, Gila
AU - Shore, Roy
AU - De Vathaire, Florent
AU - Damber, Lena
AU - Kleinerman, Ruth
AU - Hawkins, Michael M.
AU - Tucker, Margaret
AU - Lundell, Marie
AU - Lubin, Jay H.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 by Radiation Research Society.
PY - 2016/5/1
Y1 - 2016/5/1
N2 - Studies have causally linked external thyroid radiation exposure in childhood with thyroid cancer. In 1995, investigators conducted relative risk analyses of pooled data from seven epidemiologic studies. Doses were mostly <10 Gy, although childhood cancer therapies can result in thyroid doses >50 Gy. We pooled data from 12 studies of thyroid cancer patients who were exposed to radiation in childhood (ages <20 years), more than doubling the data, including 1,070 (927 exposed) thyroid cancers and 5.3 million (3.4 million exposed) person-years. Relative risks increased supralinearly through 2-4 Gy, leveled off between 10-30 Gy and declined thereafter, remaining significantly elevated above 50 Gy. There was a significant relative risk trend for doses <0.10 Gy (P < 0.01), with no departure from linearity (P = 0.36). We observed radiogenic effects for both papillary and nonpapillary tumors. Estimates of excess relative risk per Gy (ERR/Gy) were homogeneous by sex (P = 0.35) and number of radiation treatments (P = 0.84) and increased with decreasing age at the time of exposure. The ERR/Gy estimate was significant within ten years of radiation exposure, 2.76 (95% CI, 0.94-4.98), based on 42 exposed cases, and remained elevated 50 years and more after exposure. Finally, exposure to chemotherapy was significantly associated with thyroid cancer, with results supporting a nonsynergistic (additive) association with radiation.
AB - Studies have causally linked external thyroid radiation exposure in childhood with thyroid cancer. In 1995, investigators conducted relative risk analyses of pooled data from seven epidemiologic studies. Doses were mostly <10 Gy, although childhood cancer therapies can result in thyroid doses >50 Gy. We pooled data from 12 studies of thyroid cancer patients who were exposed to radiation in childhood (ages <20 years), more than doubling the data, including 1,070 (927 exposed) thyroid cancers and 5.3 million (3.4 million exposed) person-years. Relative risks increased supralinearly through 2-4 Gy, leveled off between 10-30 Gy and declined thereafter, remaining significantly elevated above 50 Gy. There was a significant relative risk trend for doses <0.10 Gy (P < 0.01), with no departure from linearity (P = 0.36). We observed radiogenic effects for both papillary and nonpapillary tumors. Estimates of excess relative risk per Gy (ERR/Gy) were homogeneous by sex (P = 0.35) and number of radiation treatments (P = 0.84) and increased with decreasing age at the time of exposure. The ERR/Gy estimate was significant within ten years of radiation exposure, 2.76 (95% CI, 0.94-4.98), based on 42 exposed cases, and remained elevated 50 years and more after exposure. Finally, exposure to chemotherapy was significantly associated with thyroid cancer, with results supporting a nonsynergistic (additive) association with radiation.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84971450011&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1667/RR14213.1
DO - 10.1667/RR14213.1
M3 - Article
C2 - 27128740
AN - SCOPUS:84971450011
SN - 0033-7587
VL - 185
SP - 473
EP - 484
JO - Radiation Research
JF - Radiation Research
IS - 5
ER -