National Cancer Institute
		 
EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE
1:00 p.m. EDT
Friday, August 1, 1997
		 
FOR RESPONSE TO INQUIRIES
NCI Press Office
(301) 496-6641
Press Release
		 
		 
NCI Releases Results of Nationwide Study
of Radioactive Fallout from Nuclear Tests
		 
The National Cancer Institute (NCI) today
released summary results from a study to assess
Americans' exposures to radioactive iodine-131
fallout from atmospheric nuclear bomb tests
carried out at the Nevada Test Site in the 1950s
and 1960s. A full report is to follow. Depending
on their age at the time of the tests, where they
lived, and what foods they consumed, particularly
milk, Americans were exposed to varying levels
of I-131 for about two months following each of
the 90 tests. Because I-131 accumulates in the
thyroid gland, concerns have been raised that the
fallout could cause thyroid cancer in people who
were exposed to it as children.
		 
The average cumulative thyroid dose to the
approximately 160 million people in the country
at the time was about 2 rads. (By comparison, a
routine I-131 diagnostic thyroid scan of a child in
the 1950s gave approximately 200 to 300 rads
to the thyroid. Today, a thyroid scan would give
about 0.4 to 4 rads to the thyroid, depending on
the radionuclide used.)
		 
NCI urges caution in interpreting the results,
particularly because the study does not directly
address the question of cancer risk from the
fallout. NCI and the Department of Health and
Human Services have enlisted the help of the
foremost radiation experts in the country to fully
evaluate the risk and develop an appropriate
public health response.
		 
The Department has requested that the National
Academy of Sciences' Institute of Medicine
(IOM) review the data to assess whether risks
can be determined, and to recommend to
physicians how to identify, evaluate, and treat
persons who might be at risk of disease because
of their exposure to radioactive iodine. In the
meantime, persons concerned about fallout
exposure should consult a health professional.
		 
The IOM review -- which will be comprehensive
and public as are all IOM studies -- is expected
to take about six months after final arrangements
are made. IOM is expected to establish a diverse
expert panel. In addition, the administration will
establish an interdepartmental group to look at
broader policy issues.
		 
Persons living in heavy fallout areas, children, and
persons who drank large quantities of milk might
have received higher doses. In general, those
living in Western states to the north and east of
the test site had the highest doses. Most children
aged 3 months to 5 years probably received
three to seven times the average dose for the
population in their county, because in general
they drank more milk than adults, and because
their thyroids were smaller. By contrast, most
adults probably received two to four times less
than the average county dose.
		 
An executive summary and a technical summary
of the report are being released today. The
executive summary describes the results in
nontechnical language, and lists the 24 U.S.
counties with the highest average cumulative
exposures from all 90 tests combined. The
technical summary includes descriptions of the
methods and formulas used in data collection and
analysis. Also being released today is a list of
estimated average thyroid dose levels for each
county in the 48 contiguous states. These
documents are all available on NCI's World
Wide Web site http://rex.nci.nih.gov, in the
"What's New" link.
		 
A narrative summary of the data, about 1,000
pages long, and the full data set, about 100,000
pages long, will be released by Oct. 1. This full
data set contains tables and maps with exposure
data for each of the 90 individual tests and for
persons in 13 age categories, based on four
different scenarios of milk consumption, in each
county.
		 
In 1982, Congress passed legislation calling for
the Department of Health and Human Services to
develop methods to estimate I-131 exposure, to
assess thyroid doses of I-131 received by
individuals across the country from the Nevada
tests, and to assess risks for thyroid cancer from
these exposures. The fallout report fulfills the first
two of these three requirements.
		 
The report was not intended to fulfill the third
requirement, risk assessment. To estimate thyroid
cancer risk, the results of the report will be linked
with findings from relevant epidemiological
studies, including some currently in progress.
		 
The limited data on persons exposed as children
to I-131 from the nuclear test fallout have
provided suggestive but not conclusive evidence
that it is linked to thyroid cancer. The radiation
doses received by young children who lived in
areas with high fallout levels, particularly those
who drank a great deal of milk, may well have
increased the risk of thyroid cancer. The level of
increased risk is highly uncertain.
		 
To provide more accurate information on the risk
of thyroid cancer from radioactive fallout, NCI
investigators are collaborating with other U.S.
government agencies, international organizations,
and governments and scientists in Belarus and
Ukraine to study thyroid cancer among persons
exposed to fallout from the Chernobyl nuclear
accident in 1986. A clear increase in thyroid
cancer has been seen in this population.
		 
In 1997, an estimated 16,100 Americans will be
diagnosed with thyroid cancer and 1,230 will die
from the disease. The incidence rate for women
is more than twice as high as that for men.
Thyroid cancer is highly curable: The 5-year
survival rate is about 95 percent.
		 
 
		 
NOTE: National Cancer Institute scientists will
be available for questions through a media
briefing call, scheduled from 2-3 p.m. Friday,
August 1. The number to call is
1-800-288-8967. This will be similar to a
conference call, in which all callers can hear all
questions and answers. A tape of the call will be
available by calling the same number
(1-800-288-8967) beginning one hour after the
conference call ends. (For example, if the
conference call ends at 3:07 p.m., the tape will
be available beginning at 4:07 p.m.). Callers
should tell the operator they would like to hear
the replay of the Aug. 1 NCI media briefing call.
The tape will be available at that number until
		 
11:59 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 5.
		 
Maps from the fallout study are available in
Macintosh four-color format for unlimited
editorial use via the Digital News Service (DNS).
To download the graphics from the DNS, use
your computer modem to call (800) 467-3992.
The graphics can be found in the Health section
folder. For assistance with the DNS, contact
Steve Alexander at (202) 973-5868.