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A review of studies of childhood cancer and natural background radiation.

Gerald M KendallMark P LittleRichard Wakeford
Published in: International journal of radiation biology (2021)
Many such studies have been undertaken, but most were too small to have a realistic chance of detecting the small effects expected from such low doses, based on risk projections from higher exposures. Case-control or cohort studies are to be preferred methodologically to ecological studies but can be prone to problems of registration/participation bias. Interview-based studies of the requisite size would be prohibitively expensive and would undoubtedly also run into problems of participation bias. Register-based studies can be very large and are free of participation bias. However, they need to estimate the radiation exposure of study subjects using models rather than individual measurements in the homes of those concerned. At present, no firm conclusions can be drawn from the studies that have been published to date. Further data and perhaps pooled studies offer a way forward.
Keyphrases
  • case control
  • physical activity
  • randomized controlled trial
  • young adults
  • childhood cancer
  • radiation therapy
  • deep learning
  • electronic health record
  • radiation induced