- Zablotska, Lydia B;
- Nadyrov, Eldar A;
- Rozhko, Alexander V;
- Gong, Zhihong;
- Polyanskaya, Olga N;
- McConnell, Robert J;
- O'Kane, Patrick;
- Brenner, Alina V;
- Little, Mark P;
- Ostroumova, Evgenia;
- Bouville, Andre;
- Drozdovitch, Vladimir;
- Minenko, Viktor;
- Demidchik, Yuri;
- Nerovnya, Alexander;
- Yauseyenka, Vassilina;
- Savasteeva, Irina;
- Nikonovich, Sergey;
- Mabuchi, Kiyohiko;
- Hatch, Maureen
Background
Recent studies of children and adolescents who were exposed to radioactive iodine-131 (I-131) after the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear accident in Ukraine exhibited a significant dose-related increase in the risk of thyroid cancer, but the association of radiation doses with tumor histologic and morphologic features is not clear.Methods
A cohort of 11,664 individuals in Belarus who were aged ≤18 years at the time of the accident underwent 3 cycles of thyroid screening during 1997 to 2008. I-131 thyroid doses were estimated from individual thyroid activity measurements taken within 2 months after the accident and from dosimetric questionnaire data. Demographic, clinical, and tumor pathologic characteristics of the patients with thyroid cancer were analyzed using 1-way analysis of variance, chi-square tests or Fisher exact tests, and logistic regression.Results
In total, 158 thyroid cancers were identified as a result of screening. The majority of patients had T1a and T1b tumors (93.7%), with many positive regional lymph nodes (N1; 60.6%) but few distant metastases (M1; <1%). Higher I-131 doses were associated with higher frequency of solid and diffuse sclerosing variants of thyroid cancer (P < .01) and histologic features of cancer aggressiveness, such as lymphatic vessel invasion, intrathyroidal infiltration, and multifocality (all P < .03). Latency was not correlated with radiation dose. Fifty-two patients with self-reported thyroid cancers which were diagnosed before 1997 were younger at the time of the accident and had a higher percentage of solid variant cancers compared with patients who had screening-detected thyroid cancers (all P < .0001).Conclusions
I-131 thyroid radiation doses were associated with a significantly greater frequency of solid and diffuse sclerosing variants of thyroid cancer and various features of tumor aggressiveness.