2 results match your criteria: "Republican Scientific Centre for Radiation Medicine and Human Ecology[Affiliation]"

Background: The increase of papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) rate among children who were exposed to post-Chernobyl 131-I release was reported only four years after the accident, first in Belarus where the heaviest fallout happened. The evolution of the occurrence of thyroid carcinoma based on the age-period-cohort analysis and the effects of age, period, and birth cohort on time trends aimed to reveal if post-Chernobyl follicular cells irradiation still has been impacting on incidence rate of papillary thyroid carcinoma nowadays.

Methods: The Belarusian Cancer Registry was used to identify patients with PTC diagnosed during the years 1980-2019.

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Comparative pathological characteristics of papillary thyroid carcinoma with second primary non-thyroid malignancies in the region affected by the Chernobyl accident.

Pathol Res Pract

December 2021

School of Medicine and Dentistry, Griffith University, Gold Coast, QLD 4222, Australia; Faculty of Medicine, The University of Queensland, Herston, QLD 4006, Australia; Pathology Queensland, Gold Coast University Hospital, Southport, QLD 4215, Australia. Electronic address:

The aim was to study the pathological features of papillary thyroid carcinoma diagnosed with or before second primary malignancy in patients exposed to post-Chernobyl exposure. The patients selected (n = 6559) were those exposed to radiation at the age of ≤ 18 years old and developed papillary thyroid carcinoma during the years 1990-2020. Of these, 2.

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