Genetic effects of radiotherapy for childhood cancer: Gonadal dose reconstruction

To estimate the doses of radiation to organs of interest during treatment of childhood cancer for use in an epidemiologic study of possible heritable diseases, including birth defects, chromosomal abnormalities, cancer, stillbirth, and neonatal and premature death. The study population was composed...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of radiation oncology, biology, physics biology, physics, 2004-10, Vol.60 (2), p.542-552
Hauptverfasser: Stovall, Marilyn, Donaldson, Sarah S., Weathers, Rita E., Robison, Leslie L., Mertens, Ann C., Winther, Jeanette Falck, Olsen, Jorgen H., Boice, John D.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:To estimate the doses of radiation to organs of interest during treatment of childhood cancer for use in an epidemiologic study of possible heritable diseases, including birth defects, chromosomal abnormalities, cancer, stillbirth, and neonatal and premature death. The study population was composed of more than 25,000 patients with cancer in Denmark and the United States who were survivors of childhood cancer and subsequently had nearly 6,500 children of their own. Radiation therapy records were sought for the survivors who parented offspring who had adverse pregnancy outcomes (>300 offspring), and for a sample of all survivors in a case-cohort design. The records were imaged and centrally abstracted. Water phantom measurements were made to estimate doses for a wide range of treatments. Mathematical phantoms were used to apply measured results to estimate doses to ovaries, uterus, testes, and pituitary for patients ranging in age from newborn to 25 years. Gonadal shielding, ovarian pinning (oophoropexy), and field blocking were taken into account. Testicular radiation doses ranged from 10 cGy and 16% were >100 cGy. Sufficient radiation therapy data exist as far back as 1943 to enable computation of gonadal doses administered for curative therapy for childhood cancer. The range of gonadal doses is broad, and for many cancer survivors, is high and just below the threshold for infertility. Accordingly, the epidemiologic study has >90% power to detect a 1.3-fold risk of an adverse pregnancy outcome associated with radiation exposure to the gonads. This study should provide important information on the genetic consequences of radiation exposure to humans.
ISSN:0360-3016
1879-355X
DOI:10.1016/j.ijrobp.2004.03.017