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Tatham
Population exposures to I-131 releases from Hanford Nuclear Reservation and preterm birth, infant mortality, and fetal deaths.Tatham LM, Bove FJ, Kaye WE, Spengler RF. Int J Hyg Environ Health. 2002 Mar;205(1-2):41-8. [abstract only]
"Communities
surrounding the Hanford Nuclear Reservation in southeastern
Washington were exposed to radionuclides, particularly
iodine-131, released during the period 1945 to 1951. This study
evaluated whether estimated iodine-131 exposures were risk
factors for infant mortality, fetal death, and preterm birth in
the years of highest releases, 1945 and 1946. Data on births,
fetal deaths, and infant deaths, during the period 1940 to 1950,
were abstracted from vital records for an eight county area
surrounding the Hanford facility. The analysis included 56,320
births, 1,656 infant deaths, and 806 fetal deaths. The Hanford
Environmental Dose Reconstruction project provided iodine-131
dose estimates for the 1,102 grid areas in the study area. The
grid areas were collapsed into 4 exposure groups using estimated
exposure to iodine-131 during 1945. Each birth and death record
was assigned to one of the four grid groups based on mother's
residence at the time of birth. Comparisons of preterm birth,
infant death, and fetal death rates were made among the grid
groupings for the primary exposure period (1945 to 1946) and for
other years of the study period (i.e., 1940 to 1944 and 1947 to
1950). In the grid group with the highest estimated iodine-131
exposures, the mother's residence during the latter part of
pregnancy was associated with preterm birth (OR = 1.74, 95% CI =
1.09-2.72). An association with infant mortality (OR = 1.26, 95%
CI = 0.79-1.97) was suggested. No association was found for fetal
deaths. This study found that iodine-131 exposure was associated
with increased risk of preterm birth. This finding is
biologically plausible because other studies have found that: (1)
iodine-131 exposure can cause hypothyroidism, and (2) overt or
subclinical hypothyroidism during pregnancy can increase a
mother's risk of a preterm delivery." |
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