The potential for adverse health effects from internal exposure to Plutonium has been recognised since its discovery in the 1940s. However, in the absence of specific information, potential risks from Plutonium exposure have always largely been controlled through knowledge of radiation exposure risks in general, much of which comes from external radiation exposures. To try to obtain more direct estimates of potential internal exposure risks, epidemiological studies of Plutonium workers need to be conducted. Such epidemiological analyses require individual Plutonium exposure estimates that are as accurate and unbiased as possible. The UK Sellafield workforce includes one of the world's largest cohorts of Plutonium workers, which constitutes, by some considerable margin, the group of workers most comprehensively monitored for internal exposure to this alpha-particle-emitter. However, for several hundred workers employed at the start of Plutonium work at the facility, during the period from 1952 through to 1963, the historical urinalysis results available cannot provide sufficiently accurate and unbiased exposure assessments needed for use in epidemiological studies. Consequently, these early workers have had to be excluded from epidemiological analyses and this has significantly reduced the power of these studies. A promising quantitative methodology to overcome the issue of missing or deficient exposure data, is to use exposure data from other sources to estimate the average exposure a 'typical worker' would have received, and to collate this information for specific occupations and years. This approach is called a Job-Exposure Matrix (JEM). Work on a pilot study to construct a population-specific quantitative JEM for the early Plutonium workers at Sellafield during 1952-1963, for whom reliable urinalysis results do not exist, has shown the potential for a JEM approach to produce more reliable and useful exposure estimates for epidemiological research.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1361-6498/ab1168 | DOI Listing |
J Radiol Prot
December 2024
Department of Medical Physics, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, New York, UNITED STATES.
Since 1968, the United States Transuranium and Uranium Registries (USTUR) has studied the biokinetics and tissue dosimetry of uranium and transuranium elements in nuclear workers. As part of the USTUR collaboration with the Million Person Study (MPS) of Low-Dose Health Effects, radiation dose to different parts of the human heart is being estimated for workers with documented intakes of 239Pu or 226Ra. The study may be expanded for workers with intakes of 238U and other radionuclides.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Radiol Prot
November 2024
Clinical department, Southern Urals Biophysics Institute, Ozyorsk, Chelyabinsk region, RUSSIAN FEDERATION.
The information about the radiation risk of non-cancer respiratory diseases is inconsistent and mainly corresponds to mortality. Previously, an increased risk of chronic bronchitis incidence was demonstrated in the cohort of workers employed at the first Russian nuclear facility Mayak Production Association who had been chronically exposed to gamma rays (externally) and to alpha-active plutonium aerosols (internally). Within this retrospective study, we performed analyses of incidence of and mortality from chronic bronchitis and bronchial asthma using improved estimates of radiation doses provided by the "Mayak Worker Dosimetry System (MWDS) - 2013".
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRadiat Prot Dosimetry
December 2024
Radiation Safety Systems Division, Bhabha Atomic Research Centre, Mumbai 400085, India.
Chronic inhalation intake of radionuclides is possible for radiation workers in the nuclear industry. The International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) provides organ retention fractions as well as daily urinary and fecal excretion for chronic intake of various radionuclides. In this study, organ retention fractions and daily urinary excretion for chronic intake were estimated for constant chronic intake (CCI) and realistic chronic intake (RCI) scenarios.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAppl Radiat Isot
December 2024
Radiation Safety Systems Division, Bhabha Atomic Research Centre, Mumbai, 400085, India.
Bioassay of radiation workers handling actinides in powder form is carried out annually under routine monitoring program. In case of routine monitoring, as the day of intake is unknown, it is assumed that intake has occurred at the midpoint of monitoring interval. However, an uncertainty is introduced in intake estimation due to this assumption.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
July 2024
Clinical Department, Southern Urals Biophysics Institute Affiliated to the Federal Medical Biological Agency, Ozyorsk, Russian Federation, 456780.
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