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Dive into the research topics where Marie Lundell is active.

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Featured researches published by Marie Lundell.


BMJ | 2004

Effect of low doses of ionising radiation in infancy on cognitive function in adulthood: Swedish population based cohort study

Per Hall; Hans-Olov Adami; Dimitrios Trichopoulos; Nancy L. Pedersen; Pagona Lagiou; Anders Ekbom; Martin Ingvar; Marie Lundell; Fredrik Granath

Abstract Objective To determine whether exposure to low doses of ionising radiation in infancy affects cognitive function in adulthood. Design Population based cohort study. Setting Sweden. Participants 3094 men who had received radiation for cutaneous haemangioma before age 18 months during 1930-59. Main outcome measures Radiation dose to frontal and posterior parts of the brain, and association between dose and intellectual capacity at age 18 or 19 years based on cognitive tests (learning ability, logical reasoning, spatial recognition) and high school attendance. Results The proportion of boys who attended high school decreased with increasing doses of radiation to both the frontal and the posterior parts of the brain from about 32% among those not exposed to around 17% in those who received > 250 mGy. For the frontal dose, the multivariate odds ratio was 0.47 (95% confidence interval 0.26 to 0.85, P for trend 0.0003) and for the posterior dose it was 0.59 (0.23 to 1.47, 0.0005). A negative dose-response relation was also evident for the three cognitive tests for learning ability and logical reasoning but not for the test of spatial recognition. Conclusions Low doses of ionising radiation to the brain in infancy influence cognitive abilities in adulthood.


Radiation Research | 1998

Intracranial tumors after exposure to ionizing radiation during infancy: a pooled analysis of two Swedish cohorts of 28,008 infants with skin hemangioma.

Per Karlsson; Erik Holmberg; Marie Lundell; Anders Mattsson; Lars-Erik Holm; Arne Wallgren

The risk of intracranial tumors after exposure to ionizing radiation during infancy has been studied in a pooled analysis of two Swedish hemangioma cohorts (n = 28,008). The mean absorbed intracranial dose was low (7 cGy, range 0-11.5 Gy). The cohorts were followed up in the Swedish Cancer Register for incident intracranial tumors during the period 1958-1993. Eighty-eight tumors were found in 86 individuals compared to 60.72 expected [standardized incidence ratio (SIR) 1.42, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.13-1.75]. The SIR increased significantly in ascending dose categories (P = 0.02). Dose-response analyses were performed with Poisson regression methods. There was a significant effect of dose, and the dose-effect relationship was negatively modified by age at first treatment. This indicates a higher risk for those exposed earlier in life. A linear dose-response model modified by age at first treatment resulted in the best fit. The excess relative risk (ERR) was 2.7/Gy (95% CI 1.0-5.6). The ERR/Gy was 4.5 if the treatment was given before 5 months of age, 1.5 if it was given at 5-7 months and 0.4 if it was given later. The study thus strongly indicates that there exists a dose-response relationship between absorbed dose in the brain and the subsequent risk of developing an intracranial tumor and that the risk is higher among infants exposed at younger ages.


Radiation Research | 1994

Breast Cancer after Radiotherapy for Skin Hemangioma in Infancy

Marie Lundell; Anders Mattsson; Timo Hakulinen; Lars-Erik Holm

Between 1920 and 1959, 9675 women were irradiated in infancy for skin hemangioma at Radiumhemmet, Stockholm. They were exposed to low to moderate doses of ionizing radiation. The mean age at first exposure was 6 months and the mean absorbed dose to the breast anlage was 0.39 Gy (range <0.01-35.8 Gy). The breast cancer incidence was analyzed by record linkage with the Swedish Cancer Register for the period 1958-1986. Seventy-five breast cancers were found [standardized incidence ratio = 1.24; 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.98-1.54] after a mean absorbed dose of 1.5 Gy in the breasts with cancer. The analyses showed a significant dose-response relationship with a linear model estimate for the excess relative risk (ERR) of 0.38 at 1 Gy 95% CI 0.09-0.85). This relationship was not modified significantly by age at exposure or by dose to the ovaries. The ERR increased significantly with time after exposure and for > or = 50 years after exposure the ERR at 1 Gy was 2.25 (95% CI 0.59-5.62). The fitted excess absolute risk (EAR) was 22.9 per 10(4) breast-year gray. The breast absorbed dose and time after exposure were important risk determinants for breast cancer excess risk. Forty to 50 years of follow-up was necessary for the excess risk to be expressed. The study confirms previous findings that the breast anlage of female infants is sensitive to ionizing radiation.


Radiation Research | 1999

Lenticular opacities in individuals exposed to ionizing radiation in infancy

Per Hall; Fredrik Granath; Marie Lundell; Kristina Olsson; Lars-Erik Holm

Development of lens opacities and the measures taken to avoid them have clinical relevance in the fields of oncology, radiotherapy and radiation protection. The aim of this study was to correlate the prevalence of lenticular opacities in individuals exposed to ionizing radiation in childhood with radiation dose and other possible risk factors. Between 1920 and 1959, about 16,500 children (age <18 months) with skin hemangiomas were referred to Radiumhemmet, Karolinska University Hospital, 89% of whom were treated with radiotherapy. A total of 484 exposed individuals and 89 nonexposed controls participated in an ophthalmological examination. Lens opacities were found in 357 (37%) of the 953 lenses examined in the exposed persons. In contrast, lens opacities were observed in only 35 (20%) of the 178 lenses examined in the nonexposed control individuals. It is concluded that the increased prevalence of cortical and posterior subcapsular opacities is related to previous radiotherapy. Age at examination was the strongest modifier of risk. Children exposed to a lenticular dose of 1 Gy had a 50% increased risk (odds ratio 1.50; 95% confidence interval 1.10-2.05) of developing a posterior subcapsular opacity and a 35% increased risk of a cortical opacity (odds ratio 1.35; 95% confidence interval 1. 07- 1.69).


Radiation Research | 1999

Breast cancer risk after radiotherapy in infancy: a pooled analysis of two Swedish cohorts of 17,202 infants.

Marie Lundell; Anders Mattsson; Per Karlsson; Erik Holmberg; Agnetha Gustafsson; Lars-Erik Holm

The incidence of breast cancer was studied in a cohort of 17,202 women irradiated for skin hemangioma in infancy at the Radiumhemmet, Stockholm, or the Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Gothenburg. A major part of the cohort had been treated with radium-226 applicators, and the mean absorbed dose to the breasts was 0.29 Gy (range <0.01-35.8 Gy). Two hundred forty-five breast cancers were diagnosed in the cohort during the period 1958-1993, and the standardized incidence ratio (SIR) was 1.20 (95% CI 1.06-1.36). Different dose-response models were tested, and a linear model gave the best fit. Neither age at exposure, breast dose rate, ovarian dose nor time since exposure had any statistically significant modifying effect, and breast dose was the only determinant of risk. The excess relative risk per gray (ERR/Gy) was 0.35 (95% CI 0.18-0.59), which is lower than in most other studies.


Radiation Research | 2012

A Pooled Analysis of Thyroid Cancer Incidence Following Radiotherapy for Childhood Cancer

Lene H. S. Veiga; Jay H. Lubin; Harald Anderson; Florent de Vathaire; Margaret A. Tucker; Parveen Bhatti; Arthur B. Schneider; Robert Johansson; Peter D. Inskip; Ruth A. Kleinerman; Roy E. Shore; Linda Pottern; Erik Holmberg; Mike Hawkins; M. Jacob Adams; Siegal Sadetzki; Marie Lundell; Ritsu Sakata; Lena Damber; Gila Neta; Elaine Ron

Childhood cancer five-year survival now exceeds 70–80%. Childhood exposure to radiation is a known thyroid carcinogen; however, data are limited for the evaluation of radiation dose-response at high doses, modifiers of the dose-response relationship and joint effects of radiotherapy and chemotherapy. To address these issues, we pooled two cohort and two nested case-control studies of childhood cancer survivors including 16,757 patients, with 187 developing primary thyroid cancer. Relative risks (RR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI) for thyroid cancer by treatment with alkylating agents, anthracyclines or bleomycin were 3.25 (0.9–14.9), 4.5 (1.4–17.8) and 3.2 (0.8–10.4), respectively, in patients without radiotherapy, and declined with greater radiation dose (RR trends, P = 0.02, 0.12 and 0.01, respectively). Radiation dose-related RRs increased approximately linearly for <10 Gy, leveled off at 10–15-fold for 10–30 Gy and then declined, but remained elevated for doses >50 Gy. The fitted RR at 10 Gy was 13.7 (95% CI: 8.0–24.0). Dose-related excess RRs increased with decreasing age at exposure (P < 0.01), but did not vary with attained age or time-since-exposure, remaining elevated 25+ years after exposure. Gender and number of treatments did not modify radiation effects. Thyroid cancer risks remained elevated many decades following radiotherapy, highlighting the need for continued follow up of childhood cancer survivors.


Acta Oncologica | 2007

Clinical outcome in patients with prostate cancer treated with external beam radiotherapy and high dose-rate iridium 192 brachytherapy boost: A 6-year follow-up

Karl Mikael Kälkner; Thomas Wahlgren; Marianne Ryberg; Gabriella Cohn-Cedermark; Enrique Castellanos; Rolf Zimmerman; Josef Nilsson; Marie Lundell; Jack F. Fowler; Seymour H. Levitt; Magnus Hellström; Sten Nilsson

To report the long-term results for treatment of localized carcinoma of the prostate using high dose rate (HDR) brachytherapy, conformal external beam radiotherapy (3D EBRT) and neo-adjuvant hormonal therapy (TAB). From 1998 through 1999, 154 patients with localized prostate cancer were entered in the trial. Biologically no evidence of disease (bNED) was defined at PSA levels < 2 µg/l. In order to compare the results of this treatment with other treatment modalities, the patients pre-treatment data were used to calculate the estimated 5-year PSA relapse free survival using Kattans nomograms for radical prostatectomy (RP) and 3D EBRT. After 6 years of follow-up, 129 patients remain alive. The actual 5-year relapse-free survival is 84%. None of the patients demonstrated clinical signs of local recurrence. The median PSA at follow-up among the relapse-free patients was 0.05 µg/l. Among the 80 patients who presented with clinical stage T3 tumours, 55 (68%) were relapse-free. The expected 5-year relapse-free survival using nomograms for RP and 3D EBRT was 54% and 70%, respectively. Late rectal toxicity RTOG grade 3 occurred in 1% of the patients. Late urinary tract toxicity RTOG grade 3 developed in 4% of the patients. Combined treatment, utilizing HDR, 3D EBRT and TAB, produces good clinical results. Rectal toxicity is acceptable. Urinary tract toxicity, most likely can be explained by the fact that during the first years of this treatment, no effort was made to localize the urethra, which was assumed to be in the middle of the prostate.


Radiation Research | 2016

Thyroid Cancer after Childhood Exposure to External Radiation: An Updated Pooled Analysis of 12 Studies

Lene H. S. Veiga; Erik Holmberg; Harald Anderson; Linda Pottern; Siegal Sadetzki; M. Jacob Adams; Ritsu Sakata; Arthur B. Schneider; Peter D. Inskip; Parveen Bhatti; Robert Johansson; Gila Neta; Roy E. Shore; Florent de Vathaire; Lena Damber; Ruth A. Kleinerman; Mike Hawkins; Margaret A. Tucker; Marie Lundell; Jay H. Lubin

Studies have causally linked external thyroid radiation exposure in childhood with thyroid cancer. In 1995, investigators conducted relative risk analyses of pooled data from seven epidemiologic studies. Doses were mostly <10 Gy, although childhood cancer therapies can result in thyroid doses >50 Gy. We pooled data from 12 studies of thyroid cancer patients who were exposed to radiation in childhood (ages <20 years), more than doubling the data, including 1,070 (927 exposed) thyroid cancers and 5.3 million (3.4 million exposed) person-years. Relative risks increased supralinearly through 2–4 Gy, leveled off between 10–30 Gy and declined thereafter, remaining significantly elevated above 50 Gy. There was a significant relative risk trend for doses <0.10 Gy (P < 0.01), with no departure from linearity (P = 0.36). We observed radiogenic effects for both papillary and nonpapillary tumors. Estimates of excess relative risk per Gy (ERR/Gy) were homogeneous by sex (P = 0.35) and number of radiation treatments (P = 0.84) and increased with decreasing age at the time of exposure. The ERR/Gy estimate was significant within ten years of radiation exposure, 2.76 (95% CI, 0.94–4.98), based on 42 exposed cases, and remained elevated 50 years and more after exposure. Finally, exposure to chemotherapy was significantly associated with thyroid cancer, with results supporting a nonsynergistic (additive) association with radiation.


Acta Oncologica | 1987

Radiation therapy of hemangiomas, 1909-1959: a cohort based on 50 years of clinical practice at Radiumhemmet, Stockholm

C. J. Fürst; Marie Lundell; Lars-Erik Holm

Radium and roentgen therapies for hemangiomas of the skin (mainly strawberry hemangiomas) were used between 1909 and 1959 at Radiumhemmet, Stockholm. The total number of admitted patients with hemangioma of the skin during this period was 20,012. About 90 per cent were treated with irradiation and radium therapy was the most commonly used modality. Needles, tubes and flat applicators containing radium were used. Roentgen therapy was given by using standard machines available at the time. A small number of patients were treated with 32P plaques. Most hemangiomas were located in the head-neck region (47%) and 30 per cent were located on the thorax and upper part of the abdomen. The median age at the first treatment was 6 months and 99 per cent of all patients were younger than 2 years of age at the time of treatment. The purpose of the investigation was to define a cohort, useful for studies on possible late effects following exposure to ionizing radiation in childhood.


Acta Oncologica | 1989

Breast hypoplasia following irradiation of the female breast in infancy and early childhood.

C. J. Fürst; Marie Lundell; S. O. Ahlbäck; Lars-Erik Holm

The occurrence and the degree of breast hypoplasia were studied in 129 women irradiated with ionizing radiation in infancy or childhood for hemangioma located in the breast region. The patients were born between 1934 and 1943 and were treated at Radiumhemmet before 4 years of age. Dosimetry was based on treatment data. The mean absorbed dose to the breast anlage was 2.3 Gy. Breast asymmetry was estimated by a mailed questionnaire to all patients and by a clinical examination of 53 patients living in Stockholm County. Breast hypoplasia on the treated side was reported by 57% of the patients and on the contralateral side by 8%. A breast hypoplasia exceeding 10% was found in 53% of the clinically examined patients on the treated side and in 9% on the contralateral side. The frequency and the severity of impaired breast development increased with the absorbed dose. The possibility of a threshold dose for the occurrence of breast hypoplasia could neither be established nor ruled out.

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Lars-Erik Holm

Karolinska University Hospital

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Erik Holmberg

University of Gothenburg

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Per Karlsson

Karolinska University Hospital

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Josef Nilsson

Karolinska University Hospital

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Karl Mikael Kälkner

Karolinska University Hospital

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Sten Nilsson

Karolinska University Hospital

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Bo Nilsson

Karolinska University Hospital

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Göran Lundell

Karolinska University Hospital

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C. J. Fürst

Karolinska University Hospital

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