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"Low Level Revision 1 1.2.6 1.2.6.2
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From the abstract, Black and colleagues,
of the UK National Health Service in Scotland report (1994) that: "Cancer
incidence in the Dalgety Bay area of Fife, Scotland, was examined following the detection
of radium-226 particles by routine radiation monitoring. The study was confounded by rapid
population growth, demographic change and the relatively high socioeconomic status of the
Dalgety Bay population. In the period 1975-90, 211 residents were registered as having
cancer compared with 214.21 expected from Scottish national rates. Of specific cancers
possibly associated with radiation, the incidence of stomach, liver, lung, bone, prostate,
bladder and kidney cancer and lymphoma were lower than expected while colon, rectum,
pancreas, skin, breast and thyroid cancer and multiple myeloma and leukaemia were higher.
There were three cases of childhood leukaemia compared with 1.22 expected. The only
statistically significant differences observed were for pancreas (11 cases, O/E 2.28),
lung (25 cases, O/E 0.65) and non-melanoma skin (36 cases, O/E 1.50). Stomach cancer was
of borderline statistical significance (four cases, O/E 0.40). Adjustments for
socioeconomic factors accounted for the apparently low incidence of stomach and lung
cancer and, to a lesser extent, skin cancer, which remained of borderline statistical
significance. Results in relation to pancreas cancer were unchanged. The observations of
raised incidence of pancreas and skin cancer arose in the context of a survey of 17 cancer
sites, from which the finding of two or more statistically significant results is not
unusual (P=0.21), and the numbers of cases involved were small. The epidemiological
evidence for an association between radiation exposure and pancreas cancer risk is weak.
Stronger evidence exists for an association with skin cancer. In the present study the
anatomical distribution of the 36 cases was similar to that found elsewhere in
Scotland." |
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> 1.2.6 > 1.2.6.2 >
Black 1994
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