-7feel that cancer induction is not proportional to dose, but that a certain

If such
"threshold" level must be exceeded before cancers can be induced.
a threshold exists and if the doses fall below this level, no induced cancers
will appear.

It is possible that no cancers will result from the Utah

exposures.
The number of radiation-induced thyroid cancers will now be predicted

for each of the following 3 assumptions:

(A) a linear dose response with

(31 srradiation equally as effective as x-irradiation, (B) a linear dose
response, but I23? irradiation only 1/10 as effective as x-irradiation, and
(C) a high threshold.

Assumption (A) probably sets an upper limit, for it

Assumption (C) certainly

is unlikely that 23? is more effective than x-rays.
sets the lower limit:

the number of induced cancers cannot be less than zero!

Assumption (B), while between the upper and lower limits is not necessarily
the best estimate, but it yields reasonable values for planning the experi-

mental search for thyroid cancer.

Predicted thyroid cancers in the 250,000

irradiated Utah children are shown in Table 3.
Table 3

PREDICTED THYROID CANCERS
IN THE 250,000 IRRADIATED UTAH CHILDREN

AVERAGE DOSE
(1.3 rad - 10 rad)

ASSUMPTION
A) [ 2 Thyroid Cancers
10° Infants given l rad

(Effect of x-rays; Beach & Dolphin)

B) 1/10 of x-ray effect

(P33 /x-ray RBE in rats; Doniach)

ll

-

88

1

-

9

C) High Threshold

0

"NATURAL" INCIDENCE BY 15 YEARS AGE
(from Mustacchi & Cutler)

6

Similarly, it is instructive to predict the expected number of thyroid
cancers in the 565 infants in Washington county, Utah, exposed to higher

thyroid doses estimated at 120-440 rads (3) following the "Harry" shot of
19 May, 1953.

These predictions are shown in Table 4.

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