Sex-specific lung cancer risk among radiation workers in the million-person study and patients TB-Fluoroscopy.
John D BoiceElizabeth Dupree EllisAshley P GoldenLydia B ZablotskaMichael T MummaSarah S CohenPublished in: International journal of radiation biology (2019)
There was little evidence that chronic or fractionated exposures increased the risk of lung cancer. There were no differences in the risks of lung cancer between men and women. However, the sex-specific analyses are limited because of small numbers of women and relatively low doses. A more definitive study is ongoing of medical radiation workers which include 85,000 women and 85,000 men (overall mean dose 82 mGy, max 1,140 mGy). Additional understanding will come from the ongoing follow-up of the CFCS.