Carpenter L, Higgins C, Douglas A, Fraser P, Beral V, Smith P
Department of Public Health and Primary Care, University of Oxford, Radcliffe Infirmary, United Kingdom.
Radiat Res. 1994 May;138(2):224-38.
Mortality during 1946-1988 has been analyzed in 75,006 employees of the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority, the Atomic Weapons Establishment and the Sellafield plant of British Nuclear Fuels. All-cause mortality was 19% lower than national rates among workers monitored for external radiation exposure and 18% lower among nonmonitored workers. Cancer mortality was also lower than national rates and was similar in the two groups of workers [rate ratio (RR) = 0.96]. Of 29 specific cancer sites examined, only for cancers of the pleura and uterus were there statistically significant excesses of mortality in monitored workers relative to nonmonitored workers [RR = 7.08, two-sided P (2P) = 0.008 and RR = 3.02, 2P = 0.003, respectively]. There was little association between cumulative external radiation and risk of death from all cancers combined 10 or more years after exposure [z for trend = +0.11, one-sided P (1P) = 0.5]. A positive association was observed for leukemia (assuming a 2-year lag between external radiation and increasing risk of death) (1P = 0.009) but not for other cancers associated with external radiation in previous analyses (lung, uterus, prostate and multiple myeloma, all 1P > or = 0.1). Positive associations (1P < or = 0.05) were also observed for melanoma and other skin cancers (1P = 0.03) and ill-defined and secondary cancers (1P = 0.04), but these results are difficult to interpret and, given the number of associations examined, may be chance findings. Estimates of excess relative risk per sievert were -0.02 (95% CI = -0.5-+0.6) for all cancers except leukemia and +4.18 for leukemia (95% CI = +0.4-+13.4). The positive estimates for leukemia contrast with negative values found for workers in the United States, although the confidence intervals obtained in the two studies overlap. While our estimates of risk are compatible with those derived from studies of A-bomb survivors, the statistical uncertainty associated with them is such that the data are consistent with risks ranging from no additional risk to twice the risk for cancers other than leukemia and, for leukemia, from one-fifth to three times the risk in A-bomb survivors.
对英国原子能管理局、原子武器机构以及英国核燃料公司塞拉菲尔德工厂的75006名员工在1946年至1988年期间的死亡率进行了分析。在接受外部辐射暴露监测的工人中,全因死亡率比全国水平低19%,在未接受监测的工人中低18%。癌症死亡率也低于全国水平,且两组工人的癌症死亡率相似[率比(RR)=0.96]。在检查的29个特定癌症部位中,只有胸膜癌和子宫癌在接受监测的工人中相对于未接受监测的工人有统计学上显著的死亡超额[RR = 7.08,双侧P(2P)= 0.008;RR = 3.02,2P = 0.003]。累积外部辐射与暴露10年或更久后所有癌症合并的死亡风险之间几乎没有关联[趋势z值 = +0.11,单侧P(1P)= 0.5]。观察到白血病存在正相关(假设外部辐射与死亡风险增加之间有2年的延迟)(1P = 0.009),但在先前分析中与外部辐射相关的其他癌症(肺癌、子宫癌、前列腺癌和多发性骨髓瘤,所有1P≥0.1)不存在正相关。黑色素瘤和其他皮肤癌(1P = 0.03)以及不明和继发性癌症(1P = 0.04)也观察到正相关(1P≤0.05),但这些结果难以解释,并且鉴于所检查的关联数量,可能是偶然发现。除白血病外,所有癌症每西弗特的超额相对风险估计值为-0.02(95%置信区间 = -0.5至+0.6),白血病为+4.18(95%置信区间 = +0.4至+13.4)。白血病的正估计值与美国工人的负值形成对比,尽管两项研究获得的置信区间有重叠。虽然我们的风险估计值与原子弹幸存者研究得出的结果一致,但与之相关的统计不确定性使得数据与以下风险范围一致:除白血病外的癌症无额外风险至两倍风险,对于白血病,为原子弹幸存者风险的五分之一至三倍。