Moon, Mars and Minds: Evaluating Parkinson’s disease mortality among U.S. radiation workers and veterans in the million person study of low-dose effects

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS
Lawrence T. Dauer , Linda Walsh , Michael T. Mumma , Sarah S. Cohen , Ashley P. Golden , Sara C. Howard , Grace E. Roemer , John D. Boice Jr
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Abstract

Background

Radiation is one of the most important stressors related to missions in space beyond Earth’s orbit. Epidemiologic studies of exposed workers have reported elevated rates of Parkinson’s disease. The importance of cognitive dysfunction related to low-dose rate radiation in humans is not defined. A meta-analysis was conducted of six cohorts in the Million Person Study (MPS) of low-dose health effects to learn whether there is consistent evidence that Parkinson’s disease is associated with radiation dose to brain.

Materials and methods

The MPS evaluates all causes of death among U.S. radiation workers and veterans, including Parkinson’s disease. Systematic and consistent methods are applied to study all categories of workers including medical radiation workers, industrial radiographers, nuclear power plant workers, atomic veterans, and Manhattan Projects workers at the Los Alamos National Laboratory and at Rocky Flats. Consistent methods for all cohorts are used to estimate organ-specific doses and to obtain vital status and cause of death.

Results

The meta-analysis include 6 cohorts within the MPS, consisting of 517,608 workers and 17,219,001 person-years of observation. The mean dose to brain ranged from 6.9 to 47.6 mGy and the maximum dose from 0.76 to 2.7 Gy. Five of the 6 cohorts revealed positive associations with Parkinson’s disease. The overall summary estimate from the meta-analysis was statistically significant based on 1573 deaths due to Parkinson’s disease. The summary excess relative risk at 100 mGy was 0.17 (95% CI: 0.05; 0.29).

Conclusions

Parkinson’s disease was positively associated with radiation in the MPS cohorts indicating the need for careful evaluation as to causality in other studies, delineation of possible mechanisms, and assessing possible implications for space travel as well as radiation protection guidance for terrestrial workers.

月亮、火星和心灵:在百万人低剂量效应研究中评估美国辐射工作者和退伍军人的帕金森病死亡率。
背景:辐射是与地球轨道以外的太空任务有关的最重要的压力源之一。对受到辐射的工作人员进行的流行病学研究报告了帕金森病的高发率。与低剂量辐射率有关的认知功能障碍对人类的重要性尚不明确。我们对低剂量健康影响的百万人研究(MPS)中的六个队列进行了荟萃分析,以了解是否有一致的证据表明帕金森病与大脑受到的辐射剂量有关:MPS 评估了美国辐射工作者和退伍军人的所有死因,包括帕金森病。采用系统和一致的方法对所有类别的工作人员进行研究,包括医疗辐射工作人员、工业放射技师、核电厂工作人员、原子弹退伍军人以及洛斯阿拉莫斯国家实验室和洛基弗拉特斯的曼哈顿项目工作人员。所有队列都采用了一致的方法来估算器官特异性剂量,并获得生命状态和死亡原因:荟萃分析包括 MPS 中的 6 个队列,其中包括 517,608 名工人和 17,219,001 人年的观察。脑部的平均剂量为 6.9 至 47.6 mGy,最大剂量为 0.76 至 2.7 Gy。在 6 个队列中,有 5 个队列显示与帕金森病呈正相关。根据帕金森病导致的 1573 例死亡,荟萃分析得出的总体估计值具有统计学意义。100毫戈瑞的超额相对风险总值为0.17(95% CI:0.05;0.29):帕金森病与 MPS 队列中的辐射呈正相关,这表明有必要在其他研究中仔细评估因果关系,确定可能的机制,并评估对太空旅行的可能影响以及对地面工作人员的辐射防护指导。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
2.10%
发文量
464
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