Title: Environmental and Health Consequences of the Chernobyl accident
1Environmental and Health Consequences of the
Chernobyl accident
- Cancer effects of radiation exposure from the
Chernobyl accident - E. Cardis, IARC, Lyon
2Composition of EGH 1 and 2
3The WHO Expert Groups on Health
- Many reports on health effects in 20 years
- Expert groups reviewed
- UNSCEAR 2000 report
- More recent peer-reviewed scientific literature
and scientific meeting presentations - Reports and statistics prepared by National
authorities - Outcome
- Scientific consensus on health impact from
radiation to date - Identification of research gaps
- Recommendations for health care programmes
4Assessing the health impact of the accident
- Requirements for studies to provide information
about radiation risks - Large populations
- Follow-up non-differential, complete, accurate
diagnosis - Dose-estimates individual, accurate, precise
- particularly important when relatively small
doses and hence, a priori relatively small impact
on global burden of diseases - The situation
- Very large exposed populations
- Difficulties in conducting complete follow-up
- Decreases in lifespan in affected countries
(both contaminated and non-contaminated areas) - Individual dose estimates not available for most
exposed persons
5Reports/studies reviewed
- Many insufficient numbers of subjects to allow
conclusion - Some insufficient methodological information to
allow conclusion - Most no information on other potentially much
more important risk factors for the diseases such
as tobacco and alcohol - many reports reviewed few are informative to
assess the health impact of the accident
6The exposed population
7Distribution of thyroid dose from I131
8Increase in thyroid cancer incidence in young
people
Courtesy Yu. E. Demidchik
9Thyroid cancer in young people after Chernobyl
- Major increase in risk
- 4000 cases among those who were below 18 at the
time of the accident (1992-2002) - 3000 among those who were below 15 !
- Many epidemiological studies
- Confirm increased risk
- Provide estimates of risk per Gy
- Most cases attributable to radiation from the
accident - Prognosis very good
- 9 deaths to date among those exposed in childhood
10Thyroid cancer risk
- Uncertainties
- Pattern over time no information
- increased risk likely to continue for many more
years - Effect of large scale screening efforts in
contaminated areas - important implications for public health and
risk estimation - Stable iodine status
- Iodine deficiency appears to increase risk per Gy
- Dietary iodine supplements appear to reduce
radiation related risk - potentially important implications need
confirmation - Effect of exposure as an adult - unclear
11Leukaemia
- Associated with radiation exposure in a-bomb
survivors and other exposed populations - Appears early (2-5 years after exposure)
- Risk per Gy is high in those exposed as children
- Marker of radiation effect
- Exposure in utero and in children
- ECLIS, Belarus, Russia, Sweden, Finland, Germany,
Greece - No consistent increase
- Limited statistical power of studies
12Leukaemia (contd)
- Exposure as an adult
- Liquidators
- Large-scale studies two-fold increase in most
highly exposed group - Dose estimates uncertain
- More precise risk estimates expected from
on-going studies - General population
- Increases in incidence reported, but not related
to contamination levels - Methodological limitations /little power
- Difficult to conclude
13Cancers other than thyroid
- Ionising radiation associated with risk of cancer
at many sites in a-bomb survivors and other
populations - Chernobyl risk for all solid cancers combined
- Liquidators (Russia, Belarus, Ukraine)
- No consistent increase overall in the incidence
of all cancers - Slight non-significant increase per Gy
- Population in contaminated regions
- Incidence of all cancers not significantly
different from general population - Unclear trend over time
14Standardized incidence ratios for all solid
cancers in Russian liquidators compared to the
general Russian population 1990-2001. (Ivanov et
al)
Dynamics of SIR for all solid cancer among
residents of 5 rayons of Bryansk oblast (Ivanov
et al).
15Incidence of specific types of cancer
- Increases in incidence of specific cancer types
reported periodically - No information about dose level difficult to
conclude about radiation effects - Breast cancer incidence
- Increases in Belarus and Ukraine
- Ecological study (Belarus and Ukraine)
- Describe spatial and temporal trends
- Evaluate whether the reported increases correlate
with radiation exposure
16Breast cancer incidence (Pukkala et al,
submitted)
17Breast cancer incidence (Pukkala et al,
submitted)
Time trend in breast cancer RR by average
cumulative dose category in territories of
Belarus and Ukraine most contaminated by the
Chernobyl accident (doses lagged by 5 years age
at exposure lt45)
18Conclusions - solid cancers other than thyroid
- Lack of evidence of any clearly demonstrated
effect of Chernobyl radiation exposures on
leukaemia or solid cancers (except thyroid
cancer) - But
- Studies of these effects are few and
methodologically limited - Doses to most organs (except thyroid) tended to
be low - Minimum latent period is likely to be much higher
than that for leukaemia or thyroid cancer of
the order of 10 to 15 years or more and it may
therefore be too early - Need careful epidemiological studies with
individual dose reconstruction to evaluate, in
particular - leukaemia/cancer risk among liquidators
- breast cancer in young women in most contaminated
areas
19What is the cancer burden from Chernobyl today?
- no clearly demonstrated increased cancer risk
- does not imply that no increase in risk has
occurred. - it is expected that the low to moderate doses
received will have led to a small increase in the
relative risk of cancer - a small increase in the relative risk could
mean many cancer cases, given the large number of
individuals exposed
20What will be the cancer burden from Chernobyl?
- At present, must rely on experience of other
exposed populations to predict cancer risk - But many uncertainties
- Transfer of risk across populations
- Projection over time
- Effect of low dose rate chronic exposures
- Effect of mixture of external and internal
exposures - Any prediction must be interpreted with caution
and only gives an order of magnitude estimation
21Predictions of background and excess deaths from
leukaemia
About 700 extra leukaemia deaths over life among
5.6 million people- about 300 among the 600 000
most exposed -
From Cardis et al., 1996
22Predictions of background and excess deaths from
solid cancers
About 8 250 extra cancer deaths over life among
5.6 million people - about 3650 among the 600
000 most exposed -
From Cardis et al., 1996
23Conclusions 20 years after
- No clearly demonstrated increase in the incidence
of cancers (other than thyroid) that can be
attributed to radiation from the accident - Increases in incidence of cancers have been
reported, but no association with radiation dose
much of the increase appears to be due to
other factors, including improvements in
diagnosis, reporting and registration - Recent findings indicate a possible doubling of
leukaemia risk among Chernobyl liquidators above
100 mGy and an increase in the incidence of
pre-menopausal breast cancer in the very most
contaminated districts, which appear to be
related to radiation dose. These need to be
further investigated
24Conclusions contd
- No demonstrated increase does not mean no risk!
- Based on experience of other populations, a small
increase in relative risk is expected - Power of existing studies is low and
methodological limitations - Predictions based on other populations are very
uncertain but provide an estimate of the order of
magnitude of the risk - About 9 000 deaths from all cancers and leukaemia
expected in the main exposed populations - About 4 000 of these among the most exposed
liquidators, evacuees and residents of SCZs - Careful studies needed to study the real effect