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Cancer consequences of the Chernobyl accident: 20 years on.
Authors:Elisabeth Cardis  Geoffrey Howe  Elaine Ron  Vladimir Bebeshko  Tetyana Bogdanova  Andre Bouville  Zhanat Carr  Vadim Chumak  Scott Davis  Yuryi Demidchik  Vladimir Drozdovitch  Norman Gentner  Natalya Gudzenko  Maureen Hatch  Victor Ivanov  Peter Jacob  Eleonora Kapitonova  Yakov Kenigsberg  Ausrele Kesminiene  Kenneth J Kopecky  Victor Kryuchkov  Anja Loos  Aldo Pinchera  Christoph Reiners  Michael Repacholi  Yoshisada Shibata  Roy E Shore  Gerry Thomas  Margot Tirmarche  Shunichi Yamashita  Irina Zvonova
Affiliation:International Agency for Research on Cancer, 150 Cours Albert Thomas, 69372 Lyon Cedex 08, France. cardis@iarc.fr
Abstract:26 April 2006 marks the 20th anniversary of the Chernobyl accident. On this occasion, the World Health Organization (WHO), within the UN Chernobyl Forum initiative, convened an Expert Group to evaluate the health impacts of Chernobyl. This paper summarises the findings relating to cancer. A dramatic increase in the incidence of thyroid cancer has been observed among those exposed to radioactive iodines in childhood and adolescence in the most contaminated territories. Iodine deficiency may have increased the risk of developing thyroid cancer following exposure to radioactive iodines, while prolonged stable iodine supplementation in the years after exposure may reduce this risk. Although increases in rates of other cancers have been reported, much of these increases appear to be due to other factors, including improvements in registration, reporting and diagnosis. Studies are few, however, and have methodological limitations. Further, because most radiation-related solid cancers continue to occur decades after exposure and because only 20 years have passed since the accident, it is too early to evaluate the full radiological impact of the accident. Apart from the large increase in thyroid cancer incidence in young people, there are at present no clearly demonstrated radiation-related increases in cancer risk. This should not, however, be interpreted to mean that no increase has in fact occurred: based on the experience of other populations exposed to ionising radiation, a small increase in the relative risk of cancer is expected, even at the low to moderate doses received. Although it is expected that epidemiological studies will have difficulty identifying such a risk, it may nevertheless translate into a substantial number of radiation-related cancer cases in the future, given the very large number of individuals exposed.
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