1. Analysis of thyroid malignant pathologic findings identified during 3 rounds of screening (1997-2008) of a cohort of children and adolescents from belarus exposed to radioiodines after the Chernobyl accident
- Author
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Zablotska, LB, Nadyrov, EA, Rozhko, AV, Gong, Z, Polyanskaya, ON, McConnell, RJ, O'Kane, P, Brenner, AV, Little, MP, Ostroumova, E, Bouville, A, Drozdovitch, V, Minenko, V, Demidchik, Y, Nerovnya, A, Yauseyenka, V, Savasteeva, I, Nikonovich, S, Mabuchi, K, and Hatch, M
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Republic of Belarus ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,radiation ,Iodine Radioisotopes ,Cohort Studies ,Young Adult ,Logistic Models ,Radiation-Induced ,Chernobyl nuclear accident ,Neoplasms ,morphology ,Public Health and Health Services ,thyroid cancer ,Humans ,Female ,pathology ,Thyroid Neoplasms ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis ,Child ,papillary carcinoma ,latency - Abstract
© 2014 American Cancer Society. BACKGROUND: Recent studies of children and adolescents who were exposed to radioactive iodine-131 (I-131) after the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear accident in Ukraine exhibited a significant dose-related increase in the risk of thyroid cancer, but the association of radiation doses with tumor histologic and morphologic features is not clear. METHODS: A cohort of 11,664 individuals in Belarus who were aged ≤18 years at the time of the accident underwent 3 cycles of thyroid screening during 1997 to 2008. I-131 thyroid doses were estimated from individual thyroid activity measurements taken within 2 months after the accident and from dosimetric questionnaire data. Demographic, clinical, and tumor pathologic characteristics of the patients with thyroid cancer were analyzed using 1-way analysis of variance, chi-square tests or Fisher exact tests, and logistic regression. RESULTS: In total, 158 thyroid cancers were identified as a result of screening. The majority of patients had T1a and T1b tumors (93.7%), with many positive regional lymph nodes (N1; 60.6%) but few distant metastases (M1
- Published
- 2015