Health & Environmental Research Online (HERO)


Print Feedback Export to File
1424595 
Journal Article 
Review 
Chronic lymphocytic leukaemia and radiation: findings among workers at five US nuclear facilities and a review of the recent literature 
Schubauer-Berigan, MK; Daniels, RD; Fleming, DA; Markey, AM; Couch, JR; Ahrenholz, SH; Burphy, JS; Anderson, JL; Tseng, CY 
2007 
Yes 
British Journal of Haematology
ISSN: 0007-1048
EISSN: 1365-2141 
139 
799-808 
English 
The aetiology of chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) is largely unknown. Despite compelling evidence for ionising radiation as a cause of most forms of leukaemia, CLL was not found to be radiogenic in early studies. Herein we describe the recent evidence for causation of CLL by ionising and non-ionising radiation, including a nested case-control study conducted within a cohort of 94 517 US workers at four nuclear weapons facilities and a nuclear naval shipyard. Forty-three cases of CLL deaths and 172 age-matched controls were identified with follow-up up to between 1990 and 1996. Radiation exposure from external sources and plutonium (lagged 10 years) was assessed for each worker, based on monitoring records. The excess relative rate (ERR) was estimated for workers receiving elevated doses compared to unexposed workers, controlling for possible risk factors. The ERR per 10 mSv was -0.020 (95% confidence interval: <0, 0.14) based on all exposed workers. However, for workers receiving <100 mSv, the ERR per 10 mSv was 0.20 (-0.035, 0.96). Recent studies of uranium miners and other populations have shown elevations of CLL possibly associated with ionising and non-ionising radiation. New studies should use incident cases and sufficient latency to account for the expected lengthy induction period for CLL. 
chronic lymphocytic leukaemia; aetiology; epidemiology 
IRIS
• Uranium
     Pubmed
     WOS
     Merged reference set
     Secondary Refinement
          Retained for manual screening
     Additional Resource
          Reviews/editorials