Radiation Epidemiology Branch, Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Services, Bethesda, Maryland.
Hirosoft International, Eureka, California.
Radiat Res. 2021 Jan 1;195(1):66-76. doi: 10.1667/RR15481.1.
Epidemiological evidence for a radiation effect on prostate cancer risk has been inconsistent and largely indicative of no or little effect. Here we studied prostate cancer incidence among males of the Life Span Study cohort of atomic bomb survivors in a follow-up from 1958 to 2009, eleven years more than was previously reported. During this period there were 851 incident cases of prostate cancer among 41,544 male subjects, doubling the total number of cases in the cohort. More than 50% of the cases were diagnosed among those who were less than 20 years of age at the time of the bombings and who were at, or near, the ages of heightened prostate cancer risks during the last decade of follow-up. In analyses of the radiation dose response using Poisson regression methods, we used a baseline-rate model that allowed for calendar period effects corresponding to the emergence of prostate-specific antigen screening in the general population as well as effects of attained age and birth cohort. The model also allowed for markedly increased baseline rates among the Adult Health Study participants between 2005 and 2009, a period during which a prostate-specific antigen test was included in Adult Health Study biennial health examinations. We found a significant linear dose response with an estimated excess relative risk (ERR) per Gy of 0.57 (95% CI: 0.21, 1.00, P = 0.001). An estimated 40 of the observed cases were attributed to radiation exposure from the bombings. There was a suggestion of the ERR decreasing with increasing age at exposure (P = 0.09). We found no indication of effects of smoking, alcohol consumption and body mass index on the baseline risk of prostate cancer. The observed dose response strengthens the evidence of a radiation effect on the risk of prostate cancer incidence in the atomic bomb survivors.
有关辐射对前列腺癌风险影响的流行病学证据一直不一致,主要表明没有或几乎没有影响。在这里,我们研究了从 1958 年到 2009 年随访期间,来自原子弹幸存者生命历程研究队列的男性前列腺癌发病率,比之前报道的时间延长了十一年。在此期间,在 41544 名男性受试者中,有 851 例前列腺癌新发病例,使该队列中的病例总数增加了一倍。超过 50%的病例是在爆炸时年龄小于 20 岁且在随访的最后十年中处于前列腺癌风险增加的年龄或接近该年龄的人群中诊断出的。在使用泊松回归方法对辐射剂量反应进行分析时,我们使用了基线率模型,该模型允许考虑到普通人群中前列腺特异性抗原筛查的出现以及获得的年龄和出生队列的影响的日历期效应。该模型还允许 2005 年至 2009 年期间成人健康研究参与者的基线率显著增加,在此期间,前列腺特异性抗原测试被纳入成人健康研究的两年一次健康检查中。我们发现存在明显的线性剂量反应,估计每 Gy 的超额相对风险(ERR)为 0.57(95%CI:0.21,1.00,P = 0.001)。估计观察到的病例中有 40 例归因于爆炸引起的辐射暴露。暴露年龄越大,ERR 呈下降趋势(P = 0.09)。我们没有发现吸烟、饮酒和体重指数对前列腺癌基线风险有影响的迹象。观察到的剂量反应加强了辐射对原子弹幸存者前列腺癌发病率的影响的证据。