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Radiation Research | 2012

Studies of the Mortality of Atomic Bomb Survivors, Report 14, 1950–2003: An Overview of Cancer and Noncancer Diseases

Kotaro Ozasa; Yukiko Shimizu; Akihiko Suyama; Fumiyoshi Kasagi; Midori Soda; Eric J. Grant; Hiromi Sugiyama; Kazunori Kodama

This is the 14th report in a series of periodic general reports on mortality in the Life Span Study (LSS) cohort of atomic bomb survivors followed by the Radiation Effects Research Foundation to investigate the late health effects of the radiation from the atomic bombs. During the period 1950–2003, 58% of the 86,611 LSS cohort members with DS02 dose estimates have died. The 6 years of additional follow-up since the previous report provide substantially more information at longer periods after radiation exposure (17% more cancer deaths), especially among those under age 10 at exposure (58% more deaths). Poisson regression methods were used to investigate the magnitude of the radiation-associated risks, the shape of the dose response, and effect modification by gender, age at exposure, and attained age. The risk of all causes of death was positively associated with radiation dose. Importantly, for solid cancers the additive radiation risk (i.e., excess cancer cases per 104 person-years per Gy) continues to increase throughout life with a linear dose–response relationship. The sex-averaged excess relative risk per Gy was 0.42 [95% confidence interval (CI): 0.32, 0.53] for all solid cancer at age 70 years after exposure at age 30 based on a linear model. The risk increased by about 29% per decade decrease in age at exposure (95% CI: 17%, 41%). The estimated lowest dose range with a significant ERR for all solid cancer was 0 to 0.20 Gy, and a formal dose-threshold analysis indicated no threshold; i.e., zero dose was the best estimate of the threshold. The risk of cancer mortality increased significantly for most major sites, including stomach, lung, liver, colon, breast, gallbladder, esophagus, bladder and ovary, whereas rectum, pancreas, uterus, prostate and kidney parenchyma did not have significantly increased risks. An increased risk of non-neoplastic diseases including the circulatory, respiratory and digestive systems was observed, but whether these are causal relationships requires further investigation. There was no evidence of a radiation effect for infectious or external causes of death.


BMJ | 2010

Radiation exposure and circulatory disease risk: Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bomb survivor data, 1950-2003

Yukiko Shimizu; Kazunori Kodama; Nobuo Nishi; Fumiyoshi Kasagi; Akihiko Suyama; Midori Soda; Eric J. Grant; Hiromi Sugiyama; Ritsu Sakata; Hiroko Moriwaki; Mikiko Hayashi; Manami Konda; Roy E. Shore

Objective To investigate the degree to which ionising radiation confers risk of mortality from heart disease and stroke. Design Prospective cohort study with more than 50 years of follow-up. Setting Atomic bomb survivors in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan. Participants 86 611 Life Span Study cohort members with individually estimated radiation doses from 0 to >3 Gy (86% received <0.2 Gy). Main outcome measures Mortality from stroke or heart disease as the underlying cause of death and dose-response relations with atomic bomb radiation. Results About 9600 participants died of stroke and 8400 died of heart disease between 1950 and 2003. For stroke, the estimated excess relative risk per gray was 9% (95% confidence interval 1% to 17%, P=0.02) on the basis of a linear dose-response model, but an indication of possible upward curvature suggested relatively little risk at low doses. For heart disease, the estimated excess relative risk per gray was 14% (6% to 23%, P<0.001); a linear model provided the best fit, suggesting excess risk even at lower doses. However, the dose-response effect over the restricted dose range of 0 to 0.5 Gy was not significant. Prospective data on smoking, alcohol intake, education, occupation, obesity, and diabetes had almost no impact on the radiation risk estimates for either stroke or heart disease, and misdiagnosis of cancers as circulatory diseases could not account for the associations seen. Conclusion Doses above 0.5 Gy are associated with an elevated risk of both stroke and heart disease, but the degree of risk at lower doses is unclear. Stroke and heart disease together account for about one third as many radiation associated excess deaths as do cancers among atomic bomb survivors.


Radiation Research | 2013

The Incidence of Leukemia, Lymphoma and Multiple Myeloma among Atomic Bomb Survivors: 1950–2001

Wan-Ling Hsu; Dale L. Preston; Midori Soda; Hiromi Sugiyama; Sachiyo Funamoto; Kazunori Kodama; Akiro Kimura; Nanao Kamada; Hiroo Dohy; Masao Tomonaga; Masako Iwanaga; Yasushi Miyazaki; Harry M. Cullings; Akihiko Suyama; Kotaro Ozasa; Roy E. Shore; Kiyohiko Mabuchi

A marked increase in leukemia risks was the first and most striking late effect of radiation exposure seen among the Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bomb survivors. This article presents analyses of radiation effects on leukemia, lymphoma and multiple myeloma incidence in the Life Span Study cohort of atomic bomb survivors updated 14 years since the last comprehensive report on these malignancies. These analyses make use of tumor- and leukemia-registry based incidence data on 113,011 cohort members with 3.6 million person-years of follow-up from late 1950 through the end of 2001. In addition to a detailed analysis of the excess risk for all leukemias other than chronic lymphocytic leukemia or adult T-cell leukemia (neither of which appear to be radiation-related), we present results for the major hematopoietic malignancy types: acute lymphoblastic leukemia, chronic lymphocytic leukemia, acute myeloid leukemia, chronic myeloid leukemia, adult T-cell leukemia, Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin lymphoma and multiple myeloma. Poisson regression methods were used to characterize the shape of the radiation dose-response relationship and, to the extent the data allowed, to investigate variation in the excess risks with gender, attained age, exposure age and time since exposure. In contrast to the previous report that focused on describing excess absolute rates, we considered both excess absolute rate (EAR) and excess relative risk (ERR) models and found that ERR models can often provide equivalent and sometimes more parsimonious descriptions of the excess risk than EAR models. The leukemia results indicated that there was a nonlinear dose response for leukemias other than chronic lymphocytic leukemia or adult T-cell leukemia, which varied markedly with time and age at exposure, with much of the evidence for this nonlinearity arising from the acute myeloid leukemia risks. Although the leukemia excess risks generally declined with attained age or time since exposure, there was evidence that the radiation-associated excess leukemia risks, especially for acute myeloid leukemia, had persisted throughout the follow-up period out to 55 years after the bombings. As in earlier analyses, there was a weak suggestion of a radiation dose response for non-Hodgkin lymphoma among men, with no indication of such an effect among women. There was no evidence of radiation-associated excess risks for either Hodgkin lymphoma or multiple myeloma.


International Journal of Cancer | 2013

Long‐term trend of thyroid cancer risk among Japanese atomic‐bomb survivors: 60 years after exposure

Kyoji Furukawa; Dale L. Preston; Sachiyo Funamoto; Shuji Yonehara; Masahiro Ito; Shoji Tokuoka; Hiromi Sugiyama; Midori Soda; Kotaro Ozasa; Kiyohiko Mabuchi

Thyroid cancer risk following exposure to ionizing radiation in childhood and adolescence is a topic of public concern. To characterize the long‐term temporal trend and age‐at‐exposure variation in the radiation‐induced risk of thyroid cancer, we analyzed thyroid cancer incidence data for the period from 1958 through 2005 among 105,401 members of the Life Span Study cohort of Japanese atomic‐bomb survivors. During the follow‐up period, 371 thyroid cancer cases (excluding those with microcarcinoma with a diameter <10 mm) were identified as a first primary among the eligible subjects. Using a linear dose–response model, the excess relative risk of thyroid cancer at 1 Gy of radiation exposure was estimated as 1.28 (95% confidence interval: 0.59–2.70) at age 60 after acute exposure at age 10. The risk decreased sharply with increasing age‐at‐exposure and there was little evidence of increased thyroid cancer rates for those exposed after age 20. About 36% of the thyroid cancer cases among those exposed before age 20 were estimated to be attributable to radiation exposure. While the magnitude of the excess risk has decreased with increasing attained age or time since exposure, the excess thyroid cancer risk associated with childhood exposure has persisted for >50 years after exposure.


Radiation Research | 2009

Ionizing Radiation and Leukemia Mortality among Japanese Atomic Bomb Survivors, 1950–2000

David B. Richardson; Hiromi Sugiyama; Nobuo Nishi; Ritsu Sakata; Yukiko Shimizu; Eric J. Grant; Midori Soda; Wan Ling Hsu; Akihiko Suyama; Kazunori Kodama; Fumiyoshi Kasagi

Abstract This paper provides the first comprehensive report on mortality by type of leukemia among the Japanese atomic bomb survivors in the Life Span Study (LSS). Analyses include 310 deaths due to leukemia during the period 1950–2000 among 86,611 people in the LSS. Poisson regression methods were used to evaluate associations between estimated bone marrow dose and leukemia mortality. Attention was given to variation in the radiation dose–leukemia mortality association by time since exposure, age at exposure, city and sex. The excess relative rate per gray of acute myeloid leukemia was best described by a quadratic dose–response function that peaked approximately 10 years after exposure. Acute lymphatic leukemia and chronic myeloid leukemia mortality were best described by a linear dose–response function that did not vary with time since exposure. Adult T-cell leukemia was not associated with estimated bone marrow dose. Overall, 103 of the 310 observed leukemia deaths were estimated to be excess deaths due to radiation exposure. In the most recent decade of observation (1991–2000), the estimated attributable fraction of leukemia deaths among those survivors exposed to >0.005 Gy was 0.34, suggesting that the effect of the atomic bombings on leukemia mortality has persisted in this cohort for more than five decades.


Radiation Research | 2017

Solid Cancer Incidence among the Life Span Study of Atomic Bomb Survivors: 1958-2009

Eric J. Grant; Alina V. Brenner; Hiromi Sugiyama; Ritsu Sakata; Atsuko Sadakane; Mai Utada; Elizabeth K. Cahoon; Caitlin M. Milder; Midori Soda; Harry M. Cullings; Dale L. Preston; Kiyohiko Mabuchi; Kotaro Ozasa

This is the third analysis of solid cancer incidence among the Life Span Study (LSS) cohort of atomic bomb survivors in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, adding eleven years of follow-up data since the previously reported analysis. For this analysis, several changes and improvements were implemented, including updated dose estimates (DS02R1) and adjustment for smoking. Here, we focus on all solid cancers in aggregate. The eligible cohort included 105,444 subjects who were alive and had no known history of cancer at the start of follow-up. A total of 80,205 subjects had individual dose estimates and 25,239 were not in either city at the time of the bombings. The follow-up period was 1958–2009, providing 3,079,484 person-years of follow-up. Cases were identified by linkage with population-based Hiroshima and Nagasaki Cancer Registries. Poisson regression methods were used to elucidate the nature of the radiation-associated risks per Gy of weighted absorbed colon dose using both excess relative risk (ERR) and excess absolute risk (EAR) models adjusted for smoking. Risk estimates were reported for a person exposed at age 30 years with attained age of 70 years. In this study, 22,538 incident first primary solid cancer cases were identified, of which 992 were associated with radiation exposure. There were 5,918 cases (26%) that occurred in the 11 years (1999–2009) since the previously reported study. For females, the dose response was consistent with linearity with an estimated ERR of 0.64 per Gy (95% CI: 0.52 to 0.77). For males, significant upward curvature over the full dose range as well as restricted dose ranges was observed and therefore, a linear-quadratic model was used, which resulted in an ERR of 0.20 (95% CI: 0.12 to 0.28) at 1 Gy and an ERR of 0.010 (95% CI: −0.0003 to 0.021) at 0.1 Gy. The shape of the ERR dose response was significantly different among males and females (P = 0.02). While there was a significant decrease in the ERR with increasing attained age, this decrease was more rapid in males compared to females. The lowest dose range that showed a statistically significant dose response using the sex-averaged, linear ERR model was 0–100 mGy (P = 0.038). In conclusion, this analysis demonstrates that solid cancer risks remain elevated more than 60 years after exposure. Sex-averaged upward curvature was observed in the dose response independent of adjustment for smoking. Findings from the current analysis regarding the dose-response shape were not fully consistent with those previously reported, raising unresolved questions. At this time, uncertainties in the shape of the dose response preclude definitive conclusions to confidently guide radiation protection policies. Upcoming results from a series of analyses focusing on the radiation risks for specific organs or organ families, as well as continued follow-up are needed to fully understand the nature of radiation-related cancer risk and its public health significance. Data and analysis scripts are available for download at: http://www.rerf.or.jp.


International Journal of Cancer | 2011

Nonfilter and filter cigarette consumption and the incidence of lung cancer by histological type in Japan and the United States: analysis of 30-year data from population-based cancer registries.

Hidemi Ito; Keitaro Matsuo; Hideo Tanaka; Devin C. Koestler; Hernando Ombao; John Fulton; Akiko Shibata; Manabu Fujita; Hiromi Sugiyama; Midori Soda; Tomotaka Sobue; Vincent Mor

Shifts in the histologic type of lung cancer accompanying changes in lung cancer incidence have been observed in Japan and the United States. We examined the association between the shift in tobacco design from nonfilter to filter cigarettes with changes in the incidence of adenocarcinoma (AD) and squamous cell carcinoma (SQ) of the lung. We compiled population‐based incidence data from the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results in the United States (1973–2005) and from selected Japanese cancer registries (1975–2003). Trends in age‐standardized rates of lung cancer incidence by histologic type were characterized using joinpoint analyses. A multiple regression framework was used to examine the relationship between tobacco use and incidence by histologic type. We observed that AD has replaced SQ as the most frequent histologic type in males and females in both Japan and the United States. Filter cigarette consumption was positively associated with the incidence of AD, with time lags of 25 and 15 years in Japan and the United States, respectively (


Cancer Research | 2010

Relationship between Radiation Exposure and Risk of Second Primary Cancers among Atomic Bomb Survivors

Christopher I. Li; Nobuo Nishi; Jean A. McDougall; Erin O. Semmens; Hiromi Sugiyama; Midori Soda; Ritsu Sakata; Mikiko Hayashi; Fumiyoshi Kasagi; Akihiko Suyama; Kiyohiko Mabuchi; Scott Davis; Kazunori Kodama; Kenneth J. Kopecky

\hat \beta _2^{{\rm AD}}


American Journal of Epidemiology | 2009

Positive associations between ionizing radiation and lymphoma mortality among men.

David B. Richardson; Hiromi Sugiyama; Steve Wing; Ritsu Sakata; Eric J. Grant; Yukiko Shimizu; Nobuo Nishi; Susan Geyer; Midori Soda; Akihiko Suyama; Fumiyoshi Kasagi; Kazunori Kodama

: 1.946 × 10−3, p < 0.001 and 3.142 × 10−3, p < 0.001). In contrast, nonfilter cigarette consumption was positively associated with the incidence of SQ, with time lags of 30 and 20 years in Japan and the United States, respectively (


Radiation Protection Dosimetry | 2011

Risk of cancer and non-cancer diseases in the atomic bomb survivors

Kotaro Ozasa; Yukiko Shimizu; Ritsu Sakata; Hiromi Sugiyama; Eric J. Grant; Midori Soda; Fumiyoshi Kasagi; Akihiko Suyama

\hat \beta _2^{{\rm SQ}}

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Midori Soda

Radiation Effects Research Foundation

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Ritsu Sakata

Radiation Effects Research Foundation

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Eric J. Grant

Radiation Effects Research Foundation

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Kotaro Ozasa

Radiation Effects Research Foundation

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Fumiyoshi Kasagi

Radiation Effects Research Foundation

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Akihiko Suyama

Radiation Effects Research Foundation

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Kazunori Kodama

Radiation Effects Research Foundation

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Yukiko Shimizu

Radiation Effects Research Foundation

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Nobuo Nishi

Radiation Effects Research Foundation

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Kiyohiko Mabuchi

National Institutes of Health

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