FEATURE ARTICLE
Fallout from Nuclear Weapons Tests and Cancer Risks
Exposures 50 years ago still have health implications today that will continue into the future
Steven Simon, André Bouville, Charles Land
Fallout—What We've Learned
Over the more than five decades since radioactive fallout was first
recognized as a potential public-health risk, it has stimulated
interdisciplinary research in areas of science as diverse as nuclear
and radiation physics, chemistry, statistics, ecology, meteorology,
genetics, cell biology, physiology, exposure and risk assessment,
and epidemiology.
Individual radionuclides in fallout were recognized early on as
opportune tracers by which the kinetic behavior of elements could be
studied, both among components of ecosystems and in their transport
to people. The phenomenon of fallout, while contributing only
modestly to our overall understanding of radiation risks, has taught
us much about pathways of exposure and about cancer risks to the
public in settings outside the medical and occupational arenas. And
in particular, fallout studies helped increase our understanding of
health risks from specific radionuclides, for example, I-131. This
has made possible the development of the National Cancer Institute's
thyroid dose and risk calculator (see "Estimating Your
Thyroid Cancer Risk," below).
In the U.S., it took a number of years for the differences in dose
and cancer risk from regional and global fallout to be understood.
We have learned that the internal doses from global fallout were
considerably smaller for the thyroid, but greater for the red bone
marrow, than those from Nevada fallout, whereas the doses from
external irradiation were similar for Nevada and for global fallout.
We estimate that in the U.S. the primary cancer risks from past
exposure to radioactive fallout are thyroid cancer and leukemia,
whereas in a very few cases—for example, the Marshall
Islands—large internal doses as a result of ingestion of
radionuclides have led to significant risks of cancers in the
stomach and colon. Our research has quantified the likely number of
cancer cases to be expected in the U.S. from Nevada exposures and
has contributed to the assessment of risk at other worldwide locations.
Nuclear testing in the atmosphere began 60 years ago. It ended in
1980, in part because of public concerns about involuntary exposure
to fallout. By that time, increased cancer risk had been established
as the principal late health effect of radiation exposure, based
primarily on studies of populations exposed to medical x rays, to
radium and radon decay products from the manufacture of luminescent
(radium) watch dials and in uranium mining, and to direct radiation
from the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Since then,
organ-specific dose-response relationships for radiation-related
risks of malignant and more recently benign disease (for example,
cardiovascular disease and benign neoplasms of various organs) have
been increasingly well quantified with further follow up of these
and other populations, and it is increasingly clear that
radiation-related risk may persist throughout life. Fallout studies
have substantially clarified the consequences of exposure to
specific organs from internal contamination with radioactive
materials—for example, I-131 in the thyroid gland—and
there is every reason to believe that, on a dose-specific basis,
increased risks from fallout should be similar to those from other
radiation sources. Our improved understanding of individual
radionuclides, radiation dose and related health risk is due in part
to decades of study of fallout from nuclear testing; that same
understanding today makes us better prepared to respond to
nuclear terrorism, accidents or other events that could disperse
radioactive materials in the atmosphere.
Bibliography
- Bouville, A., S. L. Simon, C. W. Miller, H. L. Beck, L.
R. Anspaugh and B. G. Bennett. 2002. Estimates of doses from
global fallout. Health Physics 82:690-705.
- Cardis, E., et al. 2005. Risk of thyroid
cancer after exposure to 131I in childhood.
Journal of the National Cancer Institute
97:724-732.
- Church, B. W., D. L. Wheeler, C.
M. Campbell, R. V. Nutley and L. R. Anspaugh. 1990. Overview of
the Department of Energy's Off-Site Radiation Exposure Review
Project (ORERP). Health Physics 59:503-510.
- Department of Health and Human Services. 2005. A
Feasibility Study of the Health Consequences to the American
Population from Nuclear Weapons Tests Conducted by the
United States and Other Nations. See http://www.cdc.gov/nceh/radiation/fallout/default.htm
- Gilbert, E. S., C. E. Land and S. L Simon. 2002.
Health effects from fallout. Health Physics 82:
727-735.
- Gilbert, E. S., R. Tarone, A.
Bouville and E. Ron. 1998. Thyroid cancer rates and I-131 doses
from Nevada atmospheric nuclear bomb tests. Journal of the
National Cancer Institute 90:1654-1660.
- Glasstone, S., and P. J. Dolan. 1977. The Effects
of Nuclear Weapons. 3rd ed. Washington, D.C.: U.S.
Dept. of Defense and Energy Research and Development
Administration.
- Health Physics. 2002. 50
years of fallout research. Health Physics
82(5):573-748.
- Kerber, R. A., J. E. Till, S.
L. Simon, J. L. Lyon, D. C. Thomas, S. Preston-Martin, M. L.
Rallison, R. D. Lloyd and W. Stevens. 1993. A cohort study of
thyroid disease in relation to fallout from nuclear weapons
testing. Journal of the American Medical Association
270:2076-2082.
- Knapp, H. A. 1963.
Iodine-131 in Fresh Milk and Human Thyroids Following a
Single Deposition of Nuclear Test Fallout. U.S. Atomic
Energy Commission, Division of Biology and Medicine, TID-19266.
Washington, D.C.: Atomic Energy Commission. Available from the
DOE/NV Nuclear Testing Archive, P.O. Box 98521, Las Vegas,
NV
- National Cancer Institute. 1997.
Estimated Exposure and Thyroid Doses Received by the
American People from Iodine-131 Fallout Following Nevada
Atmospheric Nuclear Bomb Tests. Washington, D.C.: U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services, National Institutes of
Health, National Cancer Institute. http://rex.nci.nih.gov/massmedia/Fallout/index.html
- National Cancer Institute. 2004. Estimation of
the Baseline Number of Cancers Among Marshallese and the
Number of Cancers Attributable to Exposure to Fallout from
Nuclear Weapons Testing Conducted in the Marshall
Islands. http://dceg.cancer.gov/RMIdocs/9-28Response_appendix.pdf
- National Council on Radiation Protection and
Measurements (NCRP). 2001. Management of Terrorist Events
Involving Radioactive Material, NCRP Report No.
138, Bethesda, Md.: NCRP.
- National
Research Council. 2005. Health Risks from Exposure to Low
Levels of Ionizing Radiation: BEIR VII Phase 2.
Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press.
- Simon, S. L., and A. Bouville A. 2002. Radiation
doses to local populations near nuclear weapons test sites
worldwide. Health Physics 82:706-725.
- Simon, S. L., A. Bouville and H. L. Beck. 2004. The
geographic distribution of radionuclide deposition across the
continental U.S. from atmospheric nuclear testing. Journal
of Environmental Radioactivity 74:91-105.
- Stevens, W., D. C. Thomas, J. L. Lyon, J. E. Till, R.
Kerber, S. L. Simon, R. D. Lloyd and S. Preston-Martin. 1990.
Leukemia in Utah and radioactive fallout from the Nevada Test
Site—a case-control study. Journal of the American
Medical Association 264:585-591.
- VanMiddlesworth, L. 1956. Radioactivity in thyroid
glands following nuclear weapons tests. Science
123:982-983.
- Whicker, F. W., T. B. Kirchner,
L. R. Anspaugh and Y. C. Ng. 1996. Ingestion of Nevada Test Site
fallout: internal dose estimates. Health Physics
71:477-486.
» Post Comment