The 15-Country Collaborative Study of Cancer Risk among Radiation Workers in the Nuclear Industry: Study of Errors in Dosimetry
- 1 April 2007
- journal article
- Published by Radiation Research Society in Radiation Research
- Vol. 167 (4) , 380-395
- https://doi.org/10.1667/rr0552.1
Abstract
To provide direct estimates of cancer risk after low-dose protracted exposure to ionizing radiation, a large-scale epidemiological study of nuclear industry workers was conducted in 15 countries. As part of this study, identification and quantification of errors in historical recorded doses was conducted based on a review of dosimetric practices and technologies in participating facilities. The main sources of errors on doses from "high-energy" photons (100-3000 keV) were identified as the response of dosimeters in workplace exposure conditions and historical calibration practices. Errors related to dosimetry technology and radiation fields were quantified to derive period- and facility-specific estimates of bias and uncertainties in recorded doses. This was based on (1) an evaluation of predominant workplace radiation from measurement studies and dosimetry expert assessment and (2) an estimation of the energy and geometry response of dosimeters used historically in study facilities. Coefficients were derived to convert recorded doses to H(p) (10) and organ dose, taking into account different aspects of the calibration procedures. A parametric, lognormal error structure model was developed to describe errors in doses as a function of facility and time period. Doses from other radiation types, particularly neutrons and radionuclide intake, could not be adequately reconstructed in the framework of the 15-Country Study. Workers with substantial doses from these radiation types were therefore identified and excluded from analyses. Doses from "lower-energy" photons (3 MeV) were estimated to be small.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- The 15-Country Collaborative Study of Cancer Risk among Radiation Workers in the Nuclear Industry: Design, Epidemiological Methods and Descriptive ResultsRadiation Research, 2007
- Some Statistical Implications of Dose Uncertainty in Radiation Dose–Response AnalysesRadiation Research, 2006
- Risk of cancer after low doses of ionising radiation: retrospective cohort study in 15 countriesBMJ, 2005
- Power and Uncertainty Analysis of Epidemiological Studies of Radiation-Related Disease Risk in which Dose Estimates are Based on a Complex Dosimetry System: Some ObservationsRadiation Research, 2003
- Study of a Selection of 10 Historical Types of Dosemeter: Variation of the Response to Hp(10) with Photon Energy and Geometry of ExposureRadiation Protection Dosimetry, 2002
- Studies of Workers Exposed to External RadiationHealth Physics, 1998
- A Retrospective Evaluation of the Dosimetry Employed in an International Combined Epidemiological StudyRadiation Protection Dosimetry, 1997
- An Approach to Evaluating Bias and Uncertainty in Estimates of External Dose Obtained from Personal DosimetersHealth Physics, 1996
- Direct estimates of cancer mortality due to low doses of ionising radiation: an international study*1The Lancet, 1994
- THE EFFECTS OF MEASUREMENT ERRORS ON RELATWE RISK REGRESSIONSAmerican Journal of Epidemiology, 1990