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    JAMA. 1993 Nov 3;270(17):2076-82.

    A cohort study of thyroid disease in relation to fallout from nuclear weapons testing.

    Source

    Department of Family and Preventive Medicine, University of Utah, Salt Lake City 84132.

    Abstract

    OBJECTIVE:

    To estimate individual radiation doses and current thyroid disease status for a previously identified cohort of 4818 schoolchildren potentially exposed to fallout from detonations of nuclear devices at the Nevada Test Site between 1951 and 1958.

    DESIGN:

    Cohort analytic study.

    SETTING:

    Communities in southwestern Utah, southeastern Nevada, and southeastern Arizona.

    PARTICIPANTS:

    Individuals who were still residing in the three-state area (n = 3122) were reexamined in 1985 and 1986, and information on the subjects' and their mothers' milk and vegetable consumption during the fallout period was obtained by telephone interview (n = 3545). After exclusions to eliminate missing data and confounding factors, 2473 subjects were available for analysis.

    MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES:

    Individual radiation doses to the thyroid were estimated by combining consumption data with radionuclide deposition rates provided by the US Department of Energy and a survey of milk producers. Relative risk models adjusted for age, sex, and state were fitted using maximum likelihood to period prevalence data for thyroid carcinomas, neoplasms, and nodules.

    RESULTS:

    Doses ranged from 0 mGy to 4600 mGy, and averaged 170 mGy in Utah. There was a statistically significant excess of thyroid neoplasms (benign and malignant; n = 19), with an increase in excess relative risk of 0.7% per milligray. A relative risk for thyroid neoplasms of 3.4 was observed among 169 subjects exposed to doses greater than 400 mGy. Positive but nonsignificant dose-response slopes were found for carcinomas and nodules.

    CONCLUSIONS:

    Exposure to Nevada Test Site-generated radioiodines was associated with an excess of thyroid neoplasms. The conclusions are limited by the small number of exposed individuals and the low incidence of thyroid neoplasms.

    PMID:
    8411574
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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