nuclear workers
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Author(s):  
Aleksey N. Koterov ◽  
Liliya N. Ushenkova ◽  
Mariya V. Kalinina ◽  
Aleksandr P. Biryukov

The purpose of the study is to compare the excess relative risk (ERR per 1 Sv) of solid cancer mortality in acute - catastrophic or emergency, and occupational - fractionated or chronic exposure. Materials and research methods. A maintained database (database of sources) on nuclear workers from about 40 countries, on the basis of it a combined data analysis was carried out to determine the integral ERR value per 1 Gy for cancer mortality for comparison with parameters of cohorts exposed to catastrophic and emergency exposure: the LSS cohort victims of the atomic bombings in Japan, residents of the Techa River (radioactive contamination due to emissions from the Mayak plant) and Russian liquidators of the Chernobyl accident. Results. Comparison of the ERR per 1 Sv for cancer mortality for workers in the global nuclear industry (combining analysis of data from 37 studies) with the parameters of the LSS cohort, residents on the Techa River and liquidators of the Chernobyl accident showed the absence of logical and principial differences, and the risks for the last two cohorts were the highest. Although the data obtained partly confirm the approach of recent years by the United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation, according to which the carcinogenic effects of acute, accidental, and fractionated or chronic radiation exposure do not depend on the dose rate factor (DDREF), nevertheless, taking into account biological mechanisms and data radiobiological experiments, this issue cannot be considered unambiguously resolved. Conclusion. Based on the ERR per 1 Sv, the average external dose, and the annual background cancer mortality in Russia and the United States, the expected increase in cancer mortality for 100,000 nuclear workers will average 32-69 people over 10 years (0.032-0.069% of the group). Such risks, due to the many carcinogenic non-radiation factors of life and work, as well as fluctuations in the background value, cannot be taken into account in the practice of medicine and health care.


2021 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 560-568
Author(s):  
E. V. Bragin ◽  
T. V. Azizova ◽  
M. V. Bannikova ◽  
A. G. Grinyov

Objective: The study was aimed to estimate primary glaucoma incidence in a cohort of nuclear workers occupationally exposed to ionizing radiation over prolonged periods.Materials and methods. The cohort considered in the study included workers of the Mayak Production Association. All glaucoma cases that were reported in the study worker cohort regardless of its type were identified using the medical and dosimetry database ‘Clinic’. Statistical analyses were performed to estimate non-standardized (crude) and standardized incidence rates for primary glaucoma. Standardization was carried out indirectly using age distribution for the whole cohort as an internal reference. Incidence rates were estimated per 1000 person-years in accordance with conventional medical statistics.Results. At the end of the follow-up period, 476 primary glaucoma cases were reported in the study worker cohort over 482,217 person-years of the follow-up. The standardized primary glaucoma incidence was estimated to be 1.00 ± 0.05 in males and 0.70 ± 0.07 in females. Crude primary glaucoma estimates in both males and females increased with the increasing attained age of the workers. Crude incidence rates in males were significantly higher than in females for age 50–69. The standardized primary glaucoma incidence in males was also significantly increased compared to females. The standardized primary glaucoma incidence rates were increasing throughout the period from 1960s to the end of the follow-up.


2021 ◽  
pp. 014664532110153
Author(s):  
T. Ogawa ◽  
T. Ueno ◽  
T. Asano ◽  
A. Suzuki ◽  
A. Ito

After the accident at Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant on 11 March 2011, radioactive materials were released into the atmosphere resulting in environmental contamination. Following the implementation of environmental decontamination efforts, the Radiation Dose Registration Centre of the Radiation Effects Association established the radiation dose registration system for decontamination and related workers to consolidate and prevent the loss of radiation records. This article presents statistics on the radiation doses of decontamination and related workers using official records. Since approximately 10 years have passed since the accident in Fukushima, the types of work conducted in the affected restricted areas have changed over time. Therefore, changes in radiation dose for each type of work and comparisons with nuclear workers are presented.


2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 8-15
Author(s):  
Mikhail Osipov ◽  
Mikhail Sokolnikov

This paper describes the results of epidemiological analysis of a cohort of nuclear workers hired at the main facilities of “Mayak” Production Association located in the city of Ozyorsk in Southern Urals of the Russian Federation. Previous malignancy as a risk factor for second cancer in a cohort of 22,373 workers occupationally exposed to ionizing radiation has been analyzed in a retrospective study with more than 60 years of follow-up. Information on main radiation and non-radiation risk factors (attained age, sex, tobacco smoking), as well as the dose of exposure to occupational ionizing radiation has been obtained for the analysis using the data from cancer register as well as other main population registries created in Epidemiological Laboratory of Southern Urals Biophysics Institute. Poisson’s regression realized in the “Amfit” module of “Epicure” statistical package has been applied for risk analysis. Excess relative risk per 1 Gy of absorbed dose of external gamma radiation and internal alpha radiation has been calculated using linear model. Among the 2,471 cancer cases accumulated in the study cohort to the end of follow-up 6.4% of second cancer cases have been diagnosed among workers occupationally exposed to protracted external gamma- and internal alpha radiation. The relative risk of second cancer (except for non-melanoma skin cancer) among nuclear workers with previously diagnosed cancer was about 4 times higher after a decade compared with those cancer patients who had single cancer only. The results showed that previous malignancy along with main non-radiation factors is statistically significant carcinogenic risk factor among nuclear workers exposed to protracted occupational radiation. Doi: 10.28991/SciMedJ-2021-0301-2 Full Text: PDF


2021 ◽  
Vol 60 (1) ◽  
pp. 23-39
Author(s):  
Klervi Leuraud ◽  
David B. Richardson ◽  
Elisabeth Cardis ◽  
Robert D. Daniels ◽  
Michael Gillies ◽  
...  

AbstractThe Life Span Study (LSS) of Japanese atomic bomb survivors has served as the primary basis for estimates of radiation-related disease risks that inform radiation protection standards. The long-term follow-up of radiation-monitored nuclear workers provides estimates of radiation-cancer associations that complement findings from the LSS. Here, a comparison of radiation-cancer mortality risk estimates derived from the LSS and INWORKS, a large international nuclear worker study, is presented. Restrictions were made, so that the two study populations were similar with respect to ages and periods of exposure, leading to selection of 45,625 A-bomb survivors and 259,350 nuclear workers. For solid cancer, excess relative rates (ERR) per gray (Gy) were 0.28 (90% CI 0.18; 0.38) in the LSS, and 0.29 (90% CI 0.07; 0.53) in INWORKS. A joint analysis of the data allowed for a formal assessment of heterogeneity of the ERR per Gy across the two studies (P = 0.909), with minimal evidence of curvature or of a modifying effect of attained age, age at exposure, or sex in either study. There was evidence in both cohorts of modification of the excess absolute risk (EAR) of solid cancer by attained age, with a trend of increasing EAR per Gy with attained age. For leukemia, under a simple linear model, the ERR per Gy was 2.75 (90% CI 1.73; 4.21) in the LSS and 3.15 (90% CI 1.12; 5.72) in INWORKS, with evidence of curvature in the association across the range of dose observed in the LSS but not in INWORKS; the EAR per Gy was 3.54 (90% CI 2.30; 5.05) in the LSS and 2.03 (90% CI 0.36; 4.07) in INWORKS. These findings from different study populations may help understanding of radiation risks, with INWORKS contributing information derived from cohorts of workers with protracted low dose-rate exposures.


Author(s):  
T.V. Azizova ◽  
◽  
M.B. Moseeva ◽  
E.S. Grigoryeva ◽  
G.V. Zhuntova ◽  
...  

The registry of plutonium-induced lung fibrosis cases (PuLF) diagnosed in members of a cohort of the first Russian nuclear industry facility Mayak Production Association was established in the clinical department of the Southern Urals Biophysics Institute of the Federal Medical-Biological Agency (SUBI). The registry includes 188 plutonium-induced lung fibrosis diagnoses: 117 (62.23%) in males and 71 (37.77%) in females. This paper describes the structure and detailed characteristics of the registry. The number of PuLF cases was shown to have no association with cumulative lung absorbed dose from external gamma rays as of the date of diagnosis. On the contrary, the PuLF rate was shown to be associated with cumulative lung absorbed dose from in-corporated alpha particles and to increase significantly with increasing dose from internal radia-tion exposure. This paper discusses potential applications of the registry to scientific investiga-tions in the future.


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