1. Radiation exposure and leukaemia risk among cohorts of persons exposed to low and moderate doses of external ionising radiation in childhood.
- Author
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Little, Mark, Wakeford, Richard, Zablotska, Lydia, Borrego, David, Griffin, Keith, Allodji, Rodrigue, de Vathaire, Florent, Lee, Choonsik, Brenner, Alina, Miller, Jeremy, Campbell, David, Pearce, Mark, Sadetzki, Siegal, Doody, Michele, Holmberg, Erik, Lundell, Marie, French, Benjamin, Adams, Michael, Berrington de González, Amy, and Linet, Martha
- Subjects
Humans ,Risk Factors ,Leukemia ,Radiation Exposure ,Incidence ,Leukemia ,Lymphocytic ,Chronic ,B-Cell ,Radiation ,Ionizing ,Neoplasms ,Radiation-Induced ,Radiation Dosage - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many high-dose groups demonstrate increased leukaemia risks, with risk greatest following childhood exposure; risks at low/moderate doses are less clear. METHODS: We conducted a pooled analysis of the major radiation-associated leukaemias (acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) with/without the inclusion of myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML), acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL)) in ten childhood-exposed groups, including Japanese atomic bomb survivors, four therapeutically irradiated and five diagnostically exposed cohorts, a mixture of incidence and mortality data. Relative/absolute risk Poisson regression models were fitted. RESULTS: Of 365 cases/deaths of leukaemias excluding chronic lymphocytic leukaemia, there were 272 AML/CML/ALL among 310,905 persons (7,641,362 person-years), with mean active bone marrow (ABM) dose of 0.11 Gy (range 0-5.95). We estimated significant (P
- Published
- 2023