24 results match your criteria: "National Cancer Institute (Retired)[Affiliation]"

Protocol for a systematic review and individual participant data meta-analysis for risk factors for lung cancer in individuals with lung nodules identified by low-dose CT screening.

BMJ Open

January 2025

Centre for Cancer Screening, Prevention and Early Diagnosis, Wolfson Institute of Population Health, Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry, Queen Mary University of London, London, UK.

Background: Worldwide, lung cancer (LC) is the second most frequent cancer and the leading cause of cancer related mortality. Low-dose CT (LDCT) screening reduced LC mortality by 20-24% in randomised trials of high-risk populations. A significant proportion of those screened have nodules detected that are found to be benign.

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Article Synopsis
  • - French Polynesia (FP) has a high incidence of differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC), and this study examined the genetic factors contributing to DTC risk in the native population, particularly due to past nuclear tests from 1966-1974.
  • - Researchers analyzed over 300,000 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 283 DTC cases and 418 controls, discovering genetic links associated with DTC at three specific regions on chromosomes 6, 10, and 17, indicating an increased risk.
  • - The findings suggest that these genetic loci could influence DTC risk, but the study recommends further investigation using whole genome sequencing to better understand these factors, as the current methods may not fully capture the
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The Evidence for Excess Risk of Cancer and Non-Cancer Disease at Low Doses and Dose Rates.

Radiat Res

December 2022

Radiation Epidemiology Branch, Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-9778.

The question of whether there are excess radiation-associated health risks at low dose is controversial. We present evidence of excess cancer risks in a number of (largely pediatrically or in utero exposed) groups exposed to low doses of radiation (<0.1 Gy).

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Evaluation of I transfer in the environment based on the available measurements made in Belarus after the Chernobyl accident.

J Environ Radioact

September 2022

Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, NIH, DHHS, 9609 Medical Center Drive, MSC 9778, Bethesda, MD 20892, 9778, USA. Electronic address:

This study evaluates the I transfer from ground deposition to the human thyroid gland after the Chernobyl accident using measurements of I concentrations in 1,252 soil, 124 grass, and 136 cow's milk samples as well as I thyroid activity measured in 3,100 individuals included in the Belarusian-American cohort. The following parameters of an I environmental transfer model used to calculate thyroid doses were evaluated in this study: (i) the interception factor of I by pasture grass, which was described by a purely empirical equation, (ii) the removal rate of I from pasture grass due to weathering and growth dilution, estimated to be 0.0676 d (half-life of 10.

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Background: Recent shifts to telemedicine and remote patient monitoring demonstrate the potential for new technology to transform health systems; yet, methods to design for inclusion and resilience are lacking.

Objective: The aim of this study is to design and implement a participatory framework to produce effective health care solutions through co-design with diverse stakeholders.

Methods: We developed a design framework to cocreate solutions to locally prioritized health and communication problems focused on cancer care.

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This paper describes a relatively simple model developed from observations of local fallout from US and USSR nuclear tests that allows reasonable estimates to be made of the deposition density (activity per unit area) on both the ground and on vegetation for each radionuclide of interest produced in a nuclear fission detonation as a function of location and time after the explosion. In addition to accounting for decay rate and in-growth of radionuclides, the model accounts for the fractionation (modification of the relative activity of various fission and activation products in fallout relative to that produced in the explosion) that results from differences in the condensation temperatures of the various fission and activation products produced in the explosion. The proposed methodology can be used to estimate the deposition density of all fallout radionuclides produced in a low yield, low altitude fission detonation that contribute significantly to dose.

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Objective: There has been steady progress in reducing cancer mortality in the United States; however, this progress hasn't been evenly distributed across regions. This paper assesses trends in cancer mortality salience (CMS), that is, agreeing that getting cancer is a death sentence, over time in the United States and examines correlates of CMS.

Methods: Data from three administrations of the Health Information National Trends Survey (HINTS), gathered in 2008, 2013, and 2017, were merged, resulting in a total sample of 10,063 respondents.

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Accounting for Unfissioned Plutonium from the Trinity Atomic Bomb Test.

Health Phys

October 2020

Centre for Medical Radiation Physics, School of Physics, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, NSW, Australia.

The Trinity test device contained about 6 kg of plutonium as its fission source, resulting in a fission yield of 21 kT. However, only about 15% of the Pu actually underwent fission. The remaining unfissioned plutonium eventually was vaporized in the fireball and after cooling, was deposited downwind from the test site along with the various fission and activation products produced in the explosion.

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Activity concentrations of I and other radionuclides in cow's milk in Belarus during the first month following the Chernobyl accident.

J Environ Radioact

September 2020

Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, NIH, DHHS, 9609 Medical Center Drive, MSC 9778, Bethesda, MD, 20892-9778, USA. Electronic address:

The accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant (NPP) in Ukraine on April 26, 1986 led to a considerable release of radioactive material resulting in environmental contamination over vast areas of Belarus, Ukraine and western Russian Federation. The major health effect of the Chernobyl accident was an increase in thyroid cancer incidence in people exposed as children and adolescents, so much attention was paid to the thyroid doses resulting from intakes of I. Because cow's milk consumption was the main source of I intake by people, it was important to measure the I activity concentrations in cow's milk to calculate, or to validate, the thyroid doses to the exposed population.

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Introduction: Although some persistent organic pollutants (POPs) are considered human carcinogens, results from studies evaluating exposures and breast cancer risk have been inconsistent, potentially related to varying ages at exposure. Additionally, few studies evaluated the association between POPs exposure and mammographic breast density (MBD), an intermediate biomarker of breast cancer risk. We carried out a cross-sectional study to investigate associations between serum POPs concentrations and MBD measured in 1998 in female residents of Triana, Alabama, in a predominately African American population with high POPs exposures, particularly to p,p'-DDT (1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethane).

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Behavior and Food Consumption Pattern of the French Polynesian Population in the 1960s -1970s.

Asian Pac J Cancer Prev

December 2019

National Institute for Health and Medical Research, Center for Research in Epidemiology and Population Health (CESP), INSERM U1018, Radiation Epidemiology Group, Villejuif, France.

Background: Reconstruction of radiation doses to the thyroid for a case-control study of thyroid cancer in French Polynesians exposed to radioactive fallout from atmospheric nuclear weapons tests during childhood and adolescence faced a major limitation on very little availability of information on lifestyle of French Polynesians in the 1960s-1970s.

Method: We use the focus group discussion and key informant interview methodology to collect historical, for the 1960s-1970s, data on behavior and food consumption for French Polynesia population exposed to radioactive fallout from nuclear weapons tests conducted between 1966 and 1974.

Results: We obtained archipelago-specific data on food consumptions by children of different ages and by pregnant and lactating women during pregnancy and breastfeeding and behaviour, including time spent outdoors and type and construction materials of residences.

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This paper describes the calculation of the response of the most common types of radiation detectors that were used within the first few weeks after the Chernobyl accident to determine the activity of I in the thyroids of Belarusian subjects of an epidemiologic study of thyroid cancer. The radiation detectors, which were placed against the necks of the subjects, measured the exposure rates due to the emission of gamma rays resulting from the radioactive decay of I in their thyroids. Because of the external and internal radioactive contamination of the monitored subjects, gamma radiation from many radionuclides in various locations contributed to the exposure rates recorded by the detectors.

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The estimation of the thyroid doses received in Belarus after the Chernobyl accident is based on the analysis of exposure-rate measurements performed with radiation detectors placed against the necks of about 130,000 residents. The purpose of these measurements was to estimate the I activity contents of the thyroids of the subjects. However, because the radiation detectors were not equipped with collimators and because the subjects usually wore contaminated clothes, among other factors, the radiation signal included, in addition to the gamma rays emitted during the decay of the I activity present in the thyroid, contributions from external contamination of the skin and clothes and internal contamination of organs other than the thyroid by various radionuclides.

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Purpose: Scientific Committee 6-9 was established by the National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements (NCRP), charged to provide guidance in the derivation of organ doses and their uncertainty, and produced a report, NCRP Report No. 178, Deriving Organ Doses and their Uncertainty for Epidemiologic Studies with a focus on the Million Person Study of Low-Dose Radiation Health Effects (MPS). This review summarizes the conclusions and recommendations of NCRP Report No.

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Reliability of Questionnaire Data in the Distant Past: Relevance for Radiation Exposure Assessment.

Health Phys

January 2016

*Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, NIH, DHHS, 9609 Medical Center Drive, Bethesda, MD 20892; †United Institute of Informatics Problems, Minsk, Belarus; ‡Research Institute for Nuclear Problems, Minsk, Belarus; §U.S. National Cancer Institute (retired).

Interviews with questionnaires are often employed to provide information that may be used for exposure assessment, although the reliability of such information is largely unknown. In this work, the consistency of individual behavior and dietary data collected by means of personal interviews during two study screenings was evaluated. Data were collected for a cohort of about 11,000 persons exposed to 131I in childhood and adolescence shortly after the Chernobyl accident.

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Designing a broad-spectrum integrative approach for cancer prevention and treatment.

Semin Cancer Biol

December 2015

Centro di Ingegneria Genetica e Biotecnologia Avanzate, Naples, Italy; Department of Molecular Medicine and Medical Biotechnology, Federico II, Via Pansini 5, 80131 Naples, Italy.

Targeted therapies and the consequent adoption of "personalized" oncology have achieved notable successes in some cancers; however, significant problems remain with this approach. Many targeted therapies are highly toxic, costs are extremely high, and most patients experience relapse after a few disease-free months. Relapses arise from genetic heterogeneity in tumors, which harbor therapy-resistant immortalized cells that have adopted alternate and compensatory pathways (i.

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Dosimetic uncertainties, particularly those that are shared among subgroups of a study population, can bias, distort or reduce the slope or significance of a dose response. Exposure estimates in studies of health risks from environmental radiation exposures are generally highly uncertain and thus, susceptible to these methodological limitations. An analysis was published in 2008 concerning radiation-related thyroid nodule prevalence in a study population of 2,994 villagers under the age of 21 years old between August 1949 and September 1962 and who lived downwind from the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site in Kazakhstan.

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Dose reconstruction for the million worker study: status and guidelines.

Health Phys

February 2015

*National Cancer Institute (retired), 9609 Medical Center Drive, Room 7E590, MSC 9778, Rockville, MD 20850; †M. H. Chew & Associates, Oak Ridge, TN; ‡National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements, Bethesda, MD; §U.S. Department of Energy (retired), New York, NY; **Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY; ††Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN; ‡‡Oak Ridge Associated Universities, Oak Ridge, TN; §§International Epidemiology Institute, Rockville, MD; ***Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, WA; †††Clarksburg, MD; ‡‡‡U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC; §§§University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA; ****U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Arlington, TX; ††††Risk Assessment Corporation, Neeses, SC; ‡‡‡‡Landauer, Inc., Glenwood, IL; §§§§Southwest Research Institute, Boulder, CO.

Article Synopsis
  • The Million Worker Study (MWS) investigates the cancer risk associated with long-term radiation exposure among one million U.S. radiation workers and veterans, differing from studies on atomic bomb survivors who experienced immediate exposure.
  • The study aims to evaluate not only cancer mortality but also other health outcomes like cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases, highlighting the importance of accurately estimating radiation doses absorbed by specific organs over a 70-year span.
  • A scientific committee is working on a comprehensive report on organ dose assessment, focusing on uncertainty analysis and applying guidelines to improve the accuracy of the study's dosimetry methods.
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Thyroid cancer study among Ukrainian children exposed to radiation after the Chornobyl accident: improved estimates of the thyroid doses to the cohort members.

Health Phys

March 2014

*State Institution "National Research Centre for Radiation Medicine," National Academy of Medical Sciences of Ukraine, 53 Melnikova Street, 04050 Kyiv, Ukraine; †Institute for Safety Problems of Nuclear Power Plants, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, 12/106 Lysogirska Street, 03028 Kyiv, Ukraine; ‡MJP Risk Assessment, Inc., P.O. Box 200937, Denver, CO 80220-0937; §Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, NIH, DHHS, 9609 Medical Center Drive, Bethesda, MD 20892; **U.S. National Cancer Institute (retired).

In collaboration with the Ukrainian Research Center for Radiation Medicine, the U.S. National Cancer Institute initiated a cohort study of children and adolescents exposed to Chornobyl fallout in Ukraine to better understand the long-term health effects of exposure to radioactive iodines.

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Increased occupational radiation doses: nuclear fuel cycle.

Health Phys

February 2014

*National Cancer Institute (retired), 9609 Medical Drive, Room 7E590, MSC 9778, Rockville, MD 20850; †Federal Medical Biological Agency, Burnasyan Federal Medical Biophysical Center, 46 Zhivopisnaya Street, 123182, Moscow, Russia.

The increased occupational doses resulting from the Chernobyl nuclear reactor accident that occurred in Ukraine in April 1986, the reactor accident of Fukushima that took place in Japan in March 2011, and the early operations of the Mayak Production Association in Russia in the 1940s and 1950s are presented and discussed. For comparison purposes, the occupational doses due to the other two major reactor accidents (Windscale in the United Kingdom in 1957 and Three Mile Island in the United States in 1979) and to the main plutonium-producing facility in the United States (Hanford Works) are also covered but in less detail. Both for the Chernobyl nuclear reactor accident and the routine operations at Mayak, the considerable efforts made to reconstruct individual doses from external irradiation to a large number of workers revealed that the recorded doses had been overestimated by a factor of about two.

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Guidelines for exposure assessment in health risk studies following a nuclear reactor accident.

Environ Health Perspect

January 2014

National Cancer Institute (retired), National Institutes of Health (NIH), Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS), Rockville, Maryland, USA.

Background: Worldwide concerns regarding health effects after the Chernobyl and Fukushima nuclear power plant accidents indicate a clear need to identify short- and long-term health impacts that might result from accidents in the future. Fundamental to addressing this problem are reliable and accurate radiation dose estimates for the affected populations. The available guidance for activities following nuclear accidents is limited with regard to strategies for dose assessment in health risk studies.

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