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Childhood exposure due to the Chernobyl accident and thyroid cancer risk in contaminated areas of Belarus and Russia
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  • Published: 11 June 1999

Childhood exposure due to the Chernobyl accident and thyroid cancer risk in contaminated areas of Belarus and Russia

  • P Jacob1,
  • Y Kenigsberg2,
  • I Zvonova3,
  • G Goulko1,
  • E Buglova2,
  • W F Heidenreich1,
  • A Golovneva2,
  • A A Bratilova3,
  • V Drozdovitch2 nAff6,
  • J Kruk2,
  • G T Pochtennaja5,
  • M Balonov3,
  • E P Demidchik4 &
  • …
  • H G Paretzke1 

British Journal of Cancer volume 80, pages 1461–1469 (1999)Cite this article

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Summary

The thyroid dose due to 131I releases during the Chernobyl accident was reconstructed for children and adolescents in two cities and 2122 settlements in Belarus, and in one city and 607 settlements in the Bryansk district of the Russian Federation. In this area, which covers the two high contamination spots in the two countries following the accident, data on thyroid cancer incidence during the period 1991–1995 were analysed in the light of possible increased thyroid surveillance. Two methods of risk analysis were applied: Poisson regression with results for the single settlements and Monte Carlo (MC) calculations for results in larger areas or sub-populations. Best estimates of both methods agreed well. Poisson regression estimates of 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were considerably smaller than the MC results, which allow for extra-Poisson uncertainties due to reconstructed doses and the background thyroid cancer incidence. The excess absolute risk per unit thyroid dose (EARPD) for the birth cohort 1971–1985 by the MC analysis was 2.1 (95% CI 1.0–4.5) cases per 104 person-year Gy. The point estimate is lower by a factor of two than that observed in a pooled study of thyroid cancer risk after external exposures. The excess relative risk per unit thyroid dose was 23 (95% CI 8.6–82) Gy–1. No significant differences between countries or cities and rural areas were found. In the lowest dose group of the settlements with an average thyroid dose of 0.05 Gy the risk was statistically significantly elevated. Dependencies of risks on age-at-exposure and on gender are consistent with findings after external exposures.

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  • 16 November 2011

    This paper was modified 12 months after initial publication to switch to Creative Commons licence terms, as noted at publication

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Author information

Author notes
  1. V Drozdovitch

    Present address: Institute of Power Engineering Problems, 220109, Minsk, Belarus

Authors and Affiliations

  1. GSF – Institute of Radiation Protection, Neuherberg, D-85764, Germany

    P Jacob, G Goulko, W F Heidenreich & H G Paretzke

  2. Research and Clinical Institute of Radiation Medicine and Endocrinology, Minsk, 220600, Belarus

    Y Kenigsberg, E Buglova, A Golovneva, V Drozdovitch & J Kruk

  3. Research and Technical Center Protection, St Petersburg, 197101, Russia

    I Zvonova, A A Bratilova & M Balonov

  4. Republican Scientific and Practical Center of Thyroid Tumors, Minsk, 220600, Belarus

    E P Demidchik

  5. Regional Oncological Clinic, Bryansk, 241032, Russia

    G T Pochtennaja

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From twelve months after its original publication, this work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/

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Jacob, P., Kenigsberg, Y., Zvonova, I. et al. Childhood exposure due to the Chernobyl accident and thyroid cancer risk in contaminated areas of Belarus and Russia. Br J Cancer 80, 1461–1469 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6690545

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  • Received: 17 September 1998

  • Revised: 30 November 1998

  • Accepted: 28 January 1999

  • Published: 11 June 1999

  • Issue date: July 1999

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6690545

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Keywords

  • Chernobyl
  • dose reconstruction
  • iodine-131
  • radiation risk
  • thyroid cancer

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