Radiation Exposure and Mortality from Cardiovascular Disease and Cancer in Early NASA Astronauts

Understanding space radiation health effects is critical due to potential increased morbidity and mortality following spaceflight. We evaluated whether there is evidence for excess cardiovascular disease or cancer mortality in early NASA astronauts and if a correlation exists between space radiation...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientific reports 2018-05, Vol.8 (1), p.8480-9, Article 8480
Hauptverfasser: Elgart, S. Robin, Little, Mark P., Chappell, Lori J., Milder, Caitlin M., Shavers, Mark R., Huff, Janice L., Patel, Zarana S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Understanding space radiation health effects is critical due to potential increased morbidity and mortality following spaceflight. We evaluated whether there is evidence for excess cardiovascular disease or cancer mortality in early NASA astronauts and if a correlation exists between space radiation exposure and mortality. Astronauts selected from 1959–1969 were included and followed until death or February 2017, with 39 of 73 individuals still alive at that time. Calculated standardized mortality rates for tested outcomes were significantly below U.S. white male population rates, including all-cardiovascular disease (n = 7, SMR = 33; 95% CI, 14–65) and all-cancer (n = 7, SMR = 43; 95% CI, 18–83), as anticipated in a healthy worker population. Space radiation doses for cohort members ranged from 0–78 mGy. No significant associations between space radiation dose and mortality were found using logistic regression with an internal reference group, adjusting for medical radiation. Statistical power of the logistic regression was
ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/s41598-018-25467-9