|
|
Ionizing radiation and leukemia mortality among Japanese atomic bomb survivors,
1950-2000
Richardson D, Sugiyama H, Nishi N, Sakata R, Shimizu Y, Grant EJ, Soda
M, Hsu WL, Suyama A, Kodama K, Kasagi F
Radiat Res 172(3):368-82, 2009 |
Summary
This paper provides the first comprehensive report on mortality by type
of leukemia among the Japanese atomic bomb survivors in the Life Span Study
(LSS). Analyses include 310 deaths due to leukemia during the period 1950-2000
among 86,611 people in the LSS. Poisson regression methods were used to
evaluate associations between estimated bone marrow dose and leukemia mortality.
Attention was given to variation in the radiation dose-leukemia mortality
association by time since exposure, age at exposure, city and sex. The
excess relative rate per gray of acute myeloid leukemia was best described
by a quadratic dose-response function that peaked approximately 10 years
after exposure. Acute lymphatic leukemia and chronic myeloid leukemia mortality
were best described by a linear dose-response function that did not vary
with time since exposure. Adult T-cell leukemia was not associated with
estimated bone marrow dose. Overall, 103 of the 310 observed leukemia deaths
were estimated to be excess deaths due to radiation exposure. In the most
recent decade of observation (1991-2000), the estimated attributable fraction
of leukemia deaths among those survivors exposed to >0.005 Gy was 0.34,
suggesting that the effect of the atomic bombings on leukemia mortality
has persisted in this cohort for more than five decades. |
 |
|