Moon, mars and minds: Evaluating Parkinson's disease mortality among U.S. radiation workers and veterans in the million person study of low-dose effects Journal Article


Authors: Dauer, L. T.; Walsh, L.; Mumma, M. T.; Cohen, S. S.; Golden, A. P.; Howard, S. C.; Roemer, G. E.; Boice, J. D. Jr
Article Title: Moon, mars and minds: Evaluating Parkinson's disease mortality among U.S. radiation workers and veterans in the million person study of low-dose effects
Abstract: Background: Radiation is one of the most important stressors related to missions in space beyond Earth's orbit. Epidemiologic studies of exposed workers have reported elevated rates of Parkinson's disease. The importance of cognitive dysfunction related to low-dose rate radiation in humans is not defined. A meta-analysis was conducted of six cohorts in the Million Person Study (MPS) of low-dose health effects to learn whether there is consistent evidence that Parkinson's disease is associated with radiation dose to brain. Materials and methods: The MPS evaluates all causes of death among U.S. radiation workers and veterans, including Parkinson's disease. Systematic and consistent methods are applied to study all categories of workers including medical radiation workers, industrial radiographers, nuclear power plant workers, atomic veterans, and Manhattan Projects workers at the Los Alamos National Laboratory and at Rocky Flats. Consistent methods for all cohorts are used to estimate organ-specific doses and to obtain vital status and cause of death. Results: The meta-analysis include 6 cohorts within the MPS, consisting of 517,608 workers and 17,219,001 person-years of observation. The mean dose to brain ranged from 6.9 to 47.6 mGy and the maximum dose from 0.76 to 2.7 Gy. Five of the 6 cohorts revealed positive associations with Parkinson's disease. The overall summary estimate from the meta-analysis was statistically significant based on 1573 deaths due to Parkinson's disease. The summary excess relative risk at 100 mGy was 0.17 (95% CI: 0.05; 0.29). Conclusions: Parkinson's disease was positively associated with radiation in the MPS cohorts indicating the need for careful evaluation as to causality in other studies, delineation of possible mechanisms, and assessing possible implications for space travel as well as radiation protection guidance for terrestrial workers. © 2023 The Author(s)
Keywords: mortality; united states; radiation dose; cohort analysis; radiation exposure; radiation response; cause of death; dementia; parkinson disease; low energy radiation; meta analysis; alzheimer disease; veteran; radiation epidemiology; x ray; radiation protection; occupational exposure; gamma radiation; procedures; motor neuron disease; veterans; parkinson's disease; humans; human; article; standardized mortality ratio; mortality risk; worker; radiation dose response; medical radiation worker; radiographer; million person study; nuclear power plant worker; moon
Journal Title: Zeitschrift fur Medizinische Physik
Volume: 34
Issue: 1
ISSN: 0939-3889
Publisher: Elsevier Ltd  
Date Published: 2024-02-01
Start Page: 100
End Page: 110
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/j.zemedi.2023.07.002
PUBMED: 37537100
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC10919963
DOI/URL:
Notes: The MSK Cancer Center Support Grant (P30 CA008748) is acknowledged in the PDF. Corresponding MSK author is Lawrence T. Dauer -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. Lawrence Dauer
    170 Dauer
  2. Grace E. Roemer
    2 Roemer