Wing S, Richardson D, Armstrong D, Crawford-Brown D
Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 27599-7400, USA.
Environ Health Perspect. 1997 Jan;105(1):52-7. doi: 10.1289/ehp.9710552.
Previous studies concluded that there was no evidence that the 1979 nuclear accident at Three Mile Island (TMI) affected cancer incidence in the surrounding area; however, there were logical and methodological problems in earlier reports that led us to reconsider data previously collected. A 10-mile area around TMI was divided into 69 study tracts, which were assigned radiation dose estimates based on radiation reading and models of atmospheric dispersion. Incident cancers from 1975 to 1985 were ascertained from hospital records and assigned to study tracts. Associations between accident doses and incidence rates of leukemia, lung cancer, and all cancer were assessed using relative dose estimates calculated by the earlier investigators. Adjustments were made for age, sex, socioeconomic characteristics, and preaccident variation in incidence. Considering a 2-year latency, the estimated percent increase per dose unit +/- standard error was 0.020 +/- 0.012 for all cancer, 0.082 +/- 0.032 for lung cancer, and 0.116 +/- 0.067 for leukemia. Adjustment for socioeconomic variables increased the estimates to 0.034 +/- 0.013, 0.103 +/- 0.035, and 0.139 +/- 0.073 for all cancer, lung cancer, and leukemia, respectively. Associations were generally larger considering a 5-year latency, but were based on smaller numbers of cases. Results support the hypothesis that radiation doses are related to increased cancer incidence around TMI. The analysis avoids medical detection bias, but suffers from inaccurate dose classification; therefore, results may underestimate the magnitude of the association between radiation and cancer incidence. These associations would not be expected, based on previous estimates of near-background levels of radiation exposure following the accident.
先前的研究得出结论,没有证据表明1979年三里岛(TMI)核事故影响了周边地区的癌症发病率;然而,早期报告存在逻辑和方法上的问题,这促使我们重新审视之前收集的数据。TMI周围10英里的区域被划分为69个研究区域,根据辐射读数和大气扩散模型为这些区域分配辐射剂量估计值。从医院记录中确定了1975年至1985年期间的癌症病例,并将其分配到各个研究区域。使用早期研究人员计算的相对剂量估计值,评估事故剂量与白血病、肺癌和所有癌症发病率之间的关联。对年龄、性别、社会经济特征以及事故前发病率的变化进行了调整。考虑到2年的潜伏期,每剂量单位估计的增加百分比±标准误差为:所有癌症为0.020±0.012,肺癌为0.082±0.032,白血病为0.116±0.067。对社会经济变量进行调整后,所有癌症、肺癌和白血病的估计值分别增加到0.034±0.013、0.103±0.035和0.139±0.073。考虑到5年的潜伏期,关联通常更大,但基于的病例数较少。结果支持辐射剂量与TMI周围癌症发病率增加相关的假设。该分析避免了医学检测偏差,但存在剂量分类不准确的问题;因此,结果可能低估了辐射与癌症发病率之间关联的程度。根据事故后对接近背景辐射水平的先前估计,这些关联是出乎意料的。