Job factors, radiation and cancer mortality at Oak Ridge National Laboratory: follow-up through 1984.

S Wing, C M Shy, J L Wood, S Wolf, D L Cragle, W Tankersley, E L Frome
Author Information
  1. S Wing: Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 27599-7400.

Abstract

A previous study of mortality among white men hired at Oak Ridge National Laboratory between 1943 and 1972 (n = 8,318) revealed an association between low-dose external penetrating ionizing radiation and cancer mortality in follow-up through 1984. The association was not observed in follow-up through 1977. This report considers the role of possible selection and confounding factors not previously studied. Control for hire during the World War II era and employment duration of less than 1 year had little effect on the radiation risk estimates. Risks associated with length of time spent in 15 job categories were considered as proxies for the effects of other occupational carcinogens. Adjustment for employment duration in each job category one at a time produced only small changes in the radiation risk estimate. Adjustment for potential exposures to beryllium, lead, and mercury also had little effect on the radiation risk estimates. These analyses suggest that selection factors and potential for chemical exposure do not account for the previously noted association of external radiation dose with cancer mortality. However, power to detect effects of chemical exposures is limited by a lack of individual exposure measures.

MeSH Term

Confounding Factors, Epidemiologic
Dose-Response Relationship, Radiation
Follow-Up Studies
Humans
Leukemia, Radiation-Induced
Male
Neoplasms
Neoplasms, Radiation-Induced
Occupational Diseases
Radiation, Ionizing
Risk
Tennessee
Time Factors

Word Cloud

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