On the RET rearrangements in chernobyl-related thyroid cancer

There is a consensus that Chernobyl accident has induced thyroid cancer increase in children and adolescents. The UNSCEAR report concluded that no somatic disorders other than thyroid cancer were caused by radiation exposure due to the accident except for acute radiation sickness occurred to the people within the Power Plant at the time of the accident. A hypothesis is discussed in this paper that the increase of thyroid cancer was caused predominantly by the screening, overdiagnosis, and registration of nonirradiated persons as Chernobyl victims. A mechanism of thyroid cancer overdiagnosis is described that can be active even today, causing hypertherapy. Older neglected tumors found by the screening shortly after the Chernobyl accident or brought from noncontaminated areas were misclassified as aggressive radiation-induced cancers. Therefore, supposed markers of the radiation-induced thyroid cancer, such as the RET rearrangements, are probably associated with disease duration and tumor progression. The screening effect is obviously dependent on the basis level of medical surveillance: the higher the level, the smaller the screening effect. Absence of any significant increase of thyroid cancer after the Fukushima accident in spite of the vigorous screening would certify the high level of health care in Japan especially for children. © 2012 Sergei V. Jargin.

Authors
Language
English
Status
Published
Number
373879
Volume
2012
Year
2012
Organizations
  • 1 Department of Pathology, Peoples' Friendship University of Russia, Clementovski Per 6-82, Moscow 115184, Russian Federation
Keywords
tumor marker; acute radiation syndrome; age distribution; cancer classification; cancer grading; cancer incidence; cancer screening; Chernobyl accident; child health; diagnostic error; disease association; disease duration; electric power plant; Fukushima accident; gene rearrangement; health care distribution; human; Japan; nuclear accident; oncogene ret; periodic medical examination; population research; priority journal; radiation exposure; radiation induced neoplasm; registration; review; thyroid cancer; tumor growth
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