PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

Impact of Uncertainties in Exposure Assessment on Thyroid Cancer Risk among Persons in Belarus Exposed as Children or Adolescents Due to the Chernobyl Accident.

  • Mark P Little,
  • Deukwoo Kwon,
  • Lydia B Zablotska,
  • Alina V Brenner,
  • Elizabeth K Cahoon,
  • Alexander V Rozhko,
  • Olga N Polyanskaya,
  • Victor F Minenko,
  • Ivan Golovanov,
  • André Bouville,
  • Vladimir Drozdovitch

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0139826
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 10
p. e0139826

Abstract

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BackgroundThe excess incidence of thyroid cancer in Ukraine and Belarus observed a few years after the Chernobyl accident is considered to be largely the result of 131I released from the reactor. Although the Belarus thyroid cancer prevalence data has been previously analyzed, no account was taken of dose measurement error.MethodsWe examined dose-response patterns in a thyroid screening prevalence cohort of 11,732 persons aged under 18 at the time of the accident, diagnosed during 1996-2004, who had direct thyroid 131I activity measurement, and were resident in the most radio-actively contaminated regions of Belarus. Three methods of dose-error correction (regression calibration, Monte Carlo maximum likelihood, Bayesian Markov Chain Monte Carlo) were applied.ResultsThere was a statistically significant (p0.2).ConclusionsIn summary, the relatively small contribution of unshared classical dose error in the current study results in comparatively modest effects on the regression parameters.