Completed Projects
Russian Health Studies Program
Completed Direction 1 Population Studies
Project 1.2a: Data Preservation and Scanning
Principal Investigators:
R.F.: Nikolai Startsev, Urals Research Center for
Radiation Medicine
U.S.: Donna Cragle, Oak Ridge Institute for Science
and Education
Description: This was a data preservation/records management project focused on establishing a document imaging system at URCRM for preserving valuable medical records of residents of the Southern Urals region exposed to radiation due to the operations at Mayak and environmental releases from there. These documents contain information from 1951 to the present with details on medical examinations, individual dose measurements, addresses, causes of death, and other data necessary for epidemiologic studies and dose reconstruction.
Results: Computer scanning equipment was installed. Scanning, verification, indexing, and creation of a computer database of the scanned documents were completed.
Date completed: September 2005.
Completed Direction 2 Worker Studies
Project 2.1: Metabolism and Dosimetry of Plutonium
Industrial Compounds
Principal Investigators:
R.F.: Valentin
Khokhryakov, Southern Urals Biophysics Institute
U.S.: Ronald
E. Filipy, Washington State University Tri-Cities
Brief Description: : This project was the first collaborative dosimetric project between scientists of the two countries. The project began as a one-year feasibility study to compare the two autopsy programs and progressed to a five-year project with the objective of combining and jointly analyzing the actinide metabolism data collected by the two registries: the Dosimetric Registry of the Mayak Production Association (DRMPA) and the United States Transuranium and Uranium Registries (USTUR). The first priority task of the feasibility study involved a series of sample exchanges to verify that no systematic differences were present in the analytical results obtained by both Registries. The results of the laboratory intercomparisons led to the conclusion that the data accumulated by both registries are reliable, correct, and can be used in joint investigations of actinide metabolism in humans. The primary objective of Phase 2 of Project 2.1 was to combine the data accumulated by both registries, create a joint database, and perform a mutual analysis of the unique information regarding the metabolism and dosimetry of plutonium and americium in the human body.
Results to date: High priority tasks involving the metabolism study and biokinetic modeling were begun during the project. The first important dosimetric finding was made regarding the systemic distribution of plutonium and 241-Am in humans: liver diseases were shown to affect the distribution of plutonium in the body, suggesting a translocation of the actinides from the liver to the skeleton. A comparative analysis of the SUBI lung model used at Mayak for dose assessment with the ICRP 66 model showed an advantage of the SUBI dosimetric lung model after long periods (10 and more years) of inhalation. The SUBI laboratory has since obtained modern instrumentation and reagents and updated radiochemical methods. The whole body counter from the Rocky Flats Plant became operational for measurements of actinides body burden in the Mayak workers.
Date completed: March 2000
Project 2.3: The Deterministic Effects of Occupational Exposure (Funded by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission)
Principal Investigators:
R.F.: Nadezda
Okladnikova, Southern Urals Biophysics Institute
U.S.: Niel Wald,
University of Pittsburgh
Brief Description: The main aim of this project was to validate the current dose-response models for acute exposure and develop new dose-response models for chronic exposure to external gamma rays and/or incorporated Pu-239.
Results to date: The study resulted in the development and establishment of the clinical-dosimetry database for 591 Mayak workers. This database included demographic, medical, and dosimetry information for 60 cases of acute radiation syndrome (ARS), 207 cases of chronic radiation sickness (CRS), 121 cases of plutonium pneumosclerosis, and 209 workers, who were not diagnosed with an occupational disease (control group). The procedure of performing quality control of the database was developed and carried out to compare the completeness and correspondence of the primary data with the information contained in the database. A code book containing the guidance for coding the primary data was prepared. A library, including "clear" standard data sets, was created. A data access agreement was developed. The database includes data for more than 17,500 person-years of follow-up and consists of more than 3.5 million individual data points. Vital status is known for 90.4% of the workers. Individually measured external gamma doses are available for 93.7% of the workers, and doses of internal exposure are available for 32.5% of the workers who were exposed to Pu-239 aerosols.
- Claycamp HG, Sussman NB, Okladnikova ND, Azizova
TV, Pesternikova VS, Sumina MV, Teplyakov II.
Classification of Chronic radiation sickness cases
using neural networks and classification trees.
Health Phys. 2001 Nov; 81(5): 522-529
- Claycamp HG, Sussman NB, Okladnikova ND, Azizova
TV, Pesternikova VS, Sumina MV, Teplyakov II.
Classification of Chronic radiation sickness cases
using neural networks and classification trees.
Health Phys. 2001 Nov; 81(5): 522-529
- Scott BR, Lyzlov AF, Osovets SV. Evaluating the
risk of death via the hematopoietic syndrome mode
for prolonged exposure of nuclear workers to
radiation delivered at very low rates.
Health Phys.
1998 May; 74(5): 545-53
- Okladnikova ND, Pesternikova VS, Sumina MV,
Doshchenko VN. Occupational diseases from radiation
exposure at the first nuclear plant in the USSR.
Sci
Total Environ. 1994 Mar 1; 142(1-2): 9-17
- Okladnikova ND, Claycamp HG, Azizova TV, Belyaeva
ZD, Pesternikova VS, Scott BR, Sumina MV, Teplyakov
II, Boecker BB, Vasilenko EK, Khokhryakov VF,
Fevralyov AN, Schekhter-Levin S, Wald N.
Deterministic effects
of occupational radiation exposures in some workers
of the first atomic plant. Medical Radiology and
Radiation Safety, 2001; 46(6): 84-93
Date completed: May 2002.
Project 2.5: Improved Plutonium Dose Assessment
Methods in Mayak Workers
Principal Investigators:
R.F.: Sergey Romanov, Southern Urals Biophysics Institute
U.S.: Raymond Guilmette, Los Alamos National Laboratory
Brief Description: In phase III, researchers
developed and implemented an effective, improved modeling
approach for estimating organ doses to individual Mayak
workers and linked best central estimates of dose with
quantitative measures of uncertainty in the doses. In
addition, investigators used Monte Carlo computational
methods to calculate alpha particle radiation dose and
dose rate patterns in the parenchymal regions of the
lung so as to evaluate the extent and magnitude of non-uniformity
of radiation dose delivered to this region of the lung.
The main objective of phase IV of Project 2.5 was to
obtain new knowledge and implement additional tools
to facilitate the development of a new harmonized plutonium
dosimetry system, which was intended to replace the
Mayak Worker Doses 2005 dosimetry system in Project
2.4, Mayak Worker Dosimetry. This included: 1) experimentally
addressing several issues that are crucial for lung
dosimetry modeling, i.e., assessing the dose contribution
from submicron alpha-emitting aerosols in the air of
Mayak workplaces; further validating the fixed plutonium
compartment and its incorporation into the physiologically
realistic plutonium biokinetic model for lung; and evaluating
the rapid absorption of plutonium from the lungs into
the blood; 2) combining plutonium dose estimates with
the uncertainties for individual Mayak workers by using
available urine bioassay and/or postmortem tissue data
together with the Bayesian approach implemented as the
LANL/SUBI IMPDOS III computer code for individual dose
assessment; and 3) applying the probability distributions
for intake and biokinetic model parameters to assess
the dose for workers monitored for plutonium to Mayak
worker cohort members for whom little or no plutonium
monitoring data are available.
In FY 2010, Project 2.5 was merged into Project 2.4
Results to date: This project provided valuable
insights into the radiobiology and dosimetry of plutonium
sequestered for decades in the lungs of Mayak workers.
It was the first study to demonstrate in humans that
inhaled plutonium is sequestered in the lung parenchyma.
This information is being used to modify the human respiratory
tract dosimetry models for improved lung dosimetry.
In Phase II, microscopic analyses of the distribution
of plutonium in the lungs of 24 Mayak workers showed
that there was significantly more plutonium retained
in the parenchymal regions of the lung than was predicted
using either ICRP 66 or ICRP 30 respiratory tract dosimetry
models. This long-term retention occurred for both allegedly
more soluble and less soluble forms of the inhaled plutonium
aerosol. Although in some cases, the fraction of plutonium
remaining in lung was a small fraction of the plutonium
body burden at death, this portion still contributed
a significant amount of the total radiation dose to
lung because of its very long retention time, i.e.,
decades after exposure. The consequence of underestimating
the lung dose is that it leads to overestimating the
risk coefficient per unit dose for radiation-induced
lung diseases in epidemiological studies. Thus, using
models that do not accurately represent the central
values of dose for a population of measured data will
introduce bias into the dose and risk assessment.
Date Merged into Project 2.4: September 2009.
Project 2.6: Molecular Markers of Lung Cancer in
Mayak Workers
Principal Investigators:
R.F.: Vitaliy
Telnov, Southern Urals Biophysics Institute
U.S.: Steve Belinsky, Lovelace Respiratory Research
Institute
Brief Description: This molecular epidemiology
study tested for existence of early molecular markers
of lung cancer due from radiation exposure following
the inhalation of airborne plutonium. The first working
hypothesis was that the frequency of methylation of
the CpG islets of MGMT, p16, DAP-kinase, RASSF1A, and
other genes in adenocarcinomas and squamous cell carcinomas
was higher in plutonium-exposed workers than in unexposed
subjects. The second working hypothesis was that the
abnormal methylation of critical regulatory genes of
carcinogenesis served as a biomarker for the pre-clinical
diagnosis of lung cancer in living plutonium-exposed
workers.
Results to date: The original project demonstrated
that plutonium plant workers with adenocarcinoma of
the lung, when compared to controls and after adjustment
for age and gender, had a statistically significant
increased risk of methylation of the p16 tumor suppressor
gene. This means that the gene designed to prevent lung
cancer was inactivated by the exposure to inhaled plutonium.
The final phase of the research examined methylation
profiles in both adenocarcinomas and squamous cell carcinomas
of the lung.
Date Completed: September 2008.
Project 2.7: Radiation Biomarkers
Principal Investigators:
R.F.: Tamara Azizova, Southern Urals Biophysics Institute
U.S.: David Brenner, Columbia University
Brief Description: This molecular epidemiology
study developed a new biological dosimetry test using
blood samples to determine internal and external radiation
exposures. More specifically, by analyzing heritable
changes in chromosomes in blood samples from Mayak workers
exposed to different combinations of external and internal
radiation for many years, the investigators successfully
developed a calibrated test that provided an estimate
of both the internal and external ionizing radiation
doses. Such a biomarker could significantly increase
the power of epidemiologic studies of individuals exposed
to densely-ionizing radiations, such as alpha particles,
e.g., radon, plutonium workers, or neutrons, e.g., DOE/NRC
workers, airline personnel.
Results to date: This study was the first to
demonstrate a statistically significant dose-response
between plutonium exposure and intra-arm chromosomal
aberrations from worker blood samples. In fact, the
test was sensitive enough to distinguish internal from
external exposures. The researchers successfully developed
a dosimetry test capable of calibrating both internal
and external ionizing radiation doses with the effects.
Date Completed: September 2008.
Project 2.9: Database Integration
Principal Investigators:
R.F.: Sergey Romanov, Southern Urals Biophysics Institute
and Evgeny Vasilenko, Mayak
U.S.: Eric Grant, Radiation Effects Research Foundation
Brief Description: The fundamental goal of
this project was to improve the quality and accessibility
of the data needed for studies of radiation health effects
and dosimetry in Mayak workers and the Ozersk population
carried out by SUBI researchers and their collaborators.
This project was developed to combine databases located
in four different laboratories of two Russian organizations
so as to facilitate researcher access to data. Much
of this work has been accomplished through the creation
of a unified relational database that serves as the
source of primary data required for the radiation effects
research studies along with the development of easy-to-use
tools for accessing these data in formats needed by
researchers. Efforts included:
- The continued development of the data access tools
with particular emphasis on implementing requested
features based on user feedback;
- Incorporation of additional data that has been identified
for inclusion into the unified database;
- Development of quality assurance and quality control
procedures for data contained in the unified database;
and
- Technical support and administration of the existing
database.
Results to date: Prior to the development of the
unified database, each of the four Russian laboratories
involved in studies of the Mayak worker and offspring
cohorts independently collected and organized their data
in a manner unsuited for joint studies. This project has
led to significant progress toward creating a unified,
shared database in which each participating group contributes
and takes responsibility for the maintenance and documentation
for those data for which they have particular expertise.
Date Completed: September 2005.
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