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2021, Volume 37, Number 1, Page(s) 001-006
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DOI: 10.5146/tjpath.2020.01489 |
Thyroid Cancer After Chernobyl: Re-Evaluation Needed |
Sergei JARGIN |
Department of Pathological Anatomy, Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia, MOSCOW, RUSSIAN FEDERATION |
Keywords:
Ionizing radiation, Chernobyl, Cancer risk, Thyroid cancer |
Thyroid carcinoma in people exposed to radiation during their childhood and adolescence is the only solid cancer for which the incidence
increase as a result of the Chernobyl accident is regarded to be proven. The main evidence in favor of a cause-effect relationship between
radiation and thyroid cancer incidence increase comes from epidemiologic studies. Bias in some studies was caused by the screening effect,
improved diagnostics after the accident, overdiagnosis, registration of patients from non-contaminated territories as Chernobyl victims, recall
bias, dose-dependent selection and self-selection. Prior to the accident, the registered incidence of pediatric thyroid carcinoma was lower in the
former Soviet Union than in other industrialized countries i.e. there were undiagnosed cases in the population. The screening found not only
small nodules but also late-stage tumors interpreted as radiogenic cancers developing after a short latency. Pediatric thyroid cancers detected
during first 10 years after the accident were larger than those detected later on average, many tumors being poorly differentiated and metastatic.
The relationship of thyroid cancer and Chernobyl exposures is not denied here; however, it is argued that the quantity of radiogenic cases has
been overestimated according to the mechanisms discussed in this paper. In addition, it is suggested that results of some Chernobyl-related
molecular-genetic and other studies should be re-evaluated, considering that many tumors detected by the screening or brought from
non-contaminated areas and registered as exposed to the fallout were advanced cancers.
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