Milder Cato M, Cahoon Elizabeth K, Schonfeld Sara J, Preston Dale L, Alexander Bruce H, Linet Martha S, Kitahara Cari M
Radiation Epidemiology Branch, Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Rockville, MD, United States.
Hirosoft International, Eureka, CA, United States.
J Natl Cancer Inst. 2025 Jul 1;117(7):1429-1437. doi: 10.1093/jnci/djaf064.
The Life Span Study of Japanese atomic bomb survivors estimated greater risks of radiation-associated lung cancer among females than males, with direct implications for occupational radiation safety policy. To evaluate replicability of these findings in radiation workers, we assessed sex-specific radiation-associated risks of lung cancer mortality in a large cohort of US radiological technologists.
Using data from 4 questionnaires (1983-2013), we reconstructed lifetime smoking history for 83 715 female and 26 650 male technologists. We estimated individual lung occupational radiation doses using badge dose and questionnaire data. We used Poisson regression to investigate joint radiation-smoking effects on sex-averaged and sex-specific lung cancer mortality risk.
For 1243 female and 607 male technologists who died from lung cancer, median cumulative lung dose was 16.2 mGy (non-cases: 7.7 mGy) and 24.5 mGy (non-cases: 10.1 mGy), respectively. Excess risk of lung cancer increased with increasing radiation dose. However, smoking modified this effect: the radiation effect at 100 mGy increased until 16 cigarettes/day, after which it declined. Excess relative risk (ERR) per 100 mGy was greater among males (never smoking additive ERR = 1.98; 95% CI = 0.34 to 6.25) than females (never smoking additive ERR = 0.40; 95% CI = -0.02 to 1.21); sex differences persisted up to ∼40 cigarettes/day.
Our results indicated radiation-associated risks of lung cancer mortality were stronger in males than females, in contrast to the Life Span Study. However, both studies found radiation-associated risks were highest in workers with light-to-moderate smoking intensity. Altogether, these findings reinforce the importance of rigorous radiation protection measures for all radiation workers, regardless of sex, alongside interventions to support smoking cessation.
日本原子弹幸存者寿命研究估计,女性辐射相关肺癌风险高于男性,这对职业辐射安全政策有直接影响。为评估这些发现在辐射工作者中的可重复性,我们在美国一大群放射技师中评估了肺癌死亡率的性别特异性辐射相关风险。
利用4份调查问卷(1983 - 2013年)的数据,我们重建了83715名女性和26650名男性技师的终生吸烟史。我们使用徽章剂量和调查问卷数据估计个体肺部职业辐射剂量。我们使用泊松回归研究辐射与吸烟对性别平均和性别特异性肺癌死亡风险的联合影响。
对于1243名死于肺癌的女性技师和607名男性技师,肺部累积剂量中位数分别为16.2毫戈瑞(非病例:7.7毫戈瑞)和24.5毫戈瑞(非病例:10.1毫戈瑞)。肺癌超额风险随辐射剂量增加而增加。然而,吸烟改变了这种影响:100毫戈瑞时的辐射效应在每天吸烟量增加到16支之前增加,之后下降。每100毫戈瑞的超额相对风险(ERR)在男性(从不吸烟时相加ERR = 1.98;95%置信区间 = 0.34至6.25)中高于女性(从不吸烟时相加ERR = 0.40;95%置信区间 = -0.02至1.21);性别差异一直持续到每天约40支香烟。
我们的结果表明,与寿命研究相反,男性肺癌死亡率的辐射相关风险比女性更强。然而,两项研究均发现,辐射相关风险在轻度至中度吸烟强度的工作者中最高。总之,这些发现强化了对所有辐射工作者采取严格辐射防护措施的重要性,无论性别如何,同时也强调了支持戒烟的干预措施的重要性。