Circulatory disease in French nuclear fuel cycle workers chronically exposed to uranium A nested case-control study

Archive ouverte

Zhivin, S. | Guseva Canu, I. | Davesne, E. | Blanchardon, E. | Garsi, J.-P. | Samson, E. | Niogret, C. | Zablotska, L.B. | Laurier, D.

Edité par CCSD ; BMJ Publishing Group -

International audience. Objectives There is growing evidence of an association between low-dose external γ-radiation and circulatory system diseases (CSDs), yet sparse data exist about an association with chronic internal uranium exposure and the role of non-radiation risk factors. We conducted a nested case-control study of French AREVA NC Pierrelatte nuclear workers employed between 1960 and 2005 to estimate CSD risks adjusting for major CSD risk factors (smoking, blood pressure, body mass index, total cholesterol and glycaemia) and external γ-radiation dose. Methods The study included 102 cases of death from CSD and 416 controls individually matched on age, gender, birth cohort and socio-professional status. Information on CSD risk factors was collected from occupational medical records. Organ-specific absorbed doses were estimated using biomonitoring data, taking into account exposure regime and uranium physicochemical properties. External γ-radiation was measured by individual dosimeter badges. Analysis was conducted with conditional logistic regression. Results Workers were exposed to very low radiation doses (mean γ-radiation dose 2 and lung uranium dose 1 mGy). A positive but imprecise association was observed (excess OR per mGy 0.2, 95% CI 0.004 to 0.5). Results obtained after adjustment suggest that uranium exposure might be an independent CSD risk factor. Conclusions Our results suggest that a positive association might exist between internal uranium exposure and CSD mortality, not confounded by CSD risk factors. Future work should focus on numerous uncertainties associated with internal uranium dose estimation and on understanding biological pathway of CSD after protracted low-dose internal radiation exposure. © 2018 Article author(s).

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Half-century archives of occupational medical data on French nuclear workers A dusty warehouse or gold mine for epidemiological research?

Archive ouverte | Garsi, J.-P. | CCSD

International audience. This article discusses the availability and completeness of medical data on workers from the AREVA NC Pierrelatte nuclear plant and their possible use in epidemiological research on cardiovas...

Effects of chronic uranium internal exposure on mortality Results of a pilot study among French nuclear workers. Effets de la contamination chronique à l'uranium sur la mortalité Bilan d'une étude-pilote chez les travailleurs de l'industrie nucléaire en France

Archive ouverte | Guseva Canu, I. | CCSD

National audience. Background This article presents the mortality data compiled among a cohort of workers at risk of internal uranium exposure and discusses the extent to which this exposure might differentiate them...

Concerted Uranium Research in Europe (CURE): Toward a collaborative project integrating dosimetry, epidemiology and radiobiology to study the effects of occupational uranium exposure

Archive ouverte | Cardis, E. | CCSD

International audience. The potential health impacts of chronic exposures to uranium, as they occur in occupational settings, are not well characterized. Most epidemiological studies have been limited by small sampl...

Chargement des enrichissements...