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      Potential for adult-based epidemiological studies to characterize overall cancer risks associated with a lifetime of CT scans.

      1 , ,
      Radiation research

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          Abstract

          Recent epidemiological studies have suggested that radiation exposure from pediatric CT scanning is associated with small excess cancer risks. However, the majority of CT scans are performed on adults, and most radiation-induced cancers appear during middle or old age, in the same age range as background cancers. Consequently, a logical next step is to investigate the effects of CT scanning in adulthood on lifetime cancer risks by conducting adult-based, appropriately designed epidemiological studies. Here we estimate the sample size required for such studies to detect CT-associated risks. This was achieved by incorporating different age-, sex-, time- and cancer type-dependent models of radiation carcinogenesis into an in silico simulation of a population-based cohort study. This approach simulated individual histories of chest and abdominal CT exposures, deaths and cancer diagnoses. The resultant sample sizes suggest that epidemiological studies of realistically sized cohorts can detect excess lifetime cancer risks from adult CT exposures. For example, retrospective analysis of CT exposure and cancer incidence data from a population-based cohort of 0.4 to 1.3 million (depending on the carcinogenic model) CT-exposed UK adults, aged 25-65 in 1980 and followed until 2015, provides 80% power for detecting cancer risks from chest and abdominal CT scans.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Radiat. Res.
          Radiation research
          1938-5404
          0033-7587
          Jun 2014
          : 181
          : 6
          Affiliations
          [1 ] a  Center for Radiological Research, Columbia University Medical Center, New York, New York; and.
          Article
          NIHMS602563
          10.1667/RR13622.1
          24828111
          4a1d61d2-be42-42d1-b578-0224aa3fae4a
          History

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