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Press Room > Press Release
Press Room
June 21, 2002
Contact: CDC, Media Relations
(404) 639-3286
Press Release
CDC Releases Hanford Thyroid Disease Study Final
Report
Data Show Risks of Thyroid Disease About the Same
Regardless of Radiation Dose from Hanford
Findings announced from the Hanford Thyroid Disease
Study (HTDS) Final Report show that the risks of thyroid disease in
study participants were about the same regardless of the radiation dose
they received from radioactive iodine-131 from the Hanford Nuclear
Weapons Production Facility in Washington State between 1944 and 1957. While thyroid disease was found, researchers determined that
rates of the disease in the study participants were about the same as
rates in other populations.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) and the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center released the
findings of the 13-year study at a community meeting in Richland,
Washington.
“We
used the best scientific methods available, and we did not find an
increased risk of thyroid disease in study participants from exposure to
Hanford’s iodine-131,” said Paul
Garbe, D.V.M, epidemiologist and CDC’s scientific advisor for the study.
“If there is an increased
risk of thyroid disease, it is too small to observe.”
The HTDS research team studied all types of thyroid
diseases and examined how the rates varied in relation to participants’
estimated radiation doses from Hanford’s iodine-131.
“On the basis of a study population of 3,440
people, we found that people with higher doses of radiation had about
the same amount of thyroid disease as people with lower doses,” said
Scott Davis, PhD, Fred Hutchinson’s principal investigator for the HTDS. “We analyzed the data a number of ways, and the results were
the same.”
The research team also found that the rates of
thyroid disease in the people who participated in the HTDS were
generally consistent with the rates of disease in other populations in
the United States, based on a review of published scientific literature
conducted after the release of the HTDS Draft Report in 1999.
“Thyroid disease is
fairly common in other populations across the country, especially among
older people and women,” Garbe said.
“However, we understand the concern that people in the Hanford
region have about thyroid disease, given their exposure to iodine-131,
and we want to provide as much detail as possible about our findings and
what they mean.”
The HTDS focused on a group of people who were
young children when they were exposed to iodine-131 from Hanford between
1944 and 1957. Iodine-131
accounted for most of the radiation dose to the people exposed to
Hanford’s radiation.
Scientists believe that young children receive a higher dose to the
thyroid gland than adolescents and adults for the same level of exposure
and that the thyroid gland in young children may be more sensitive to
the effects of radiation.
The HTDS study population represents a sampling of
people born between 1940 and 1946 to mothers who lived in seven counties
in Washington State:
Benton, Franklin, Adams, Walla Walla, Okanogan, Ferry, and Stevens.
Each participant underwent a complete evaluation for thyroid
disease as part of the study.
Detailed information about what participants ate and where they
lived were also collected as a part of the study.
Study participants had a wide range of possible doses to the
thyroid gland, from very high to very low doses.
This range enabled researchers to compare groups of people who
have similar characteristics (such as birth, diet and lifestyle) but
different levels of exposure.
This approach of studying a single population comprising
individuals with different levels of exposure has been used extensively
in assessing the effects of radiation exposure in human populations.
A committee of the National Academy of Sciences evaluated the HTDS at
three stages in the study.
Other independent scientists and members of the public provided input to
the HTDS research throughout the study.
Congress mandated the HTDS in 1988 after the U.S.
Department of Energy made public documents revealing that large
quantities of radioactive materials were released from the Hanford
Nuclear Weapons Plant in the 1940s and 1950s, especially in 1945.
CDC protects people’s health and safety by
preventing and controlling diseases and injuries; enhances health
decisions by providing credible information on critical health issues;
and promotes healthy living through strong partnerships with local,
national, and international organizations.
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