ye a

ace eae Bye

De

-10-

When the head and neck are exposed to X-rays, up to 5 percent of exposed
rats may develop thyroid cancer. Parabiont rats develop cancer of many
organs readily when one of the pair is given 1000 rads of X-ray, but cancer
of the thyroid is rare,
Whole-body doses of X-rays that readily induce leukemia in most strains
of mice very rarely produce thyroid cancer. Jodine-131 given to mice in
large doses (delivering thousands of rads to the thyroid) will heavily
damage the thyroid without causing cancer there, perhaps because of the
many thyroid cells destroyed. However, this may produce adenomas or cancers
of the pituitary gland, which is not itself significantly irradiated but is
assumed to be stimulated to abnormal activity and hyperplasia by the absence
of normal feedback from a functionally impaired thyroid.
The animal data are inadequate to permit firm conclusions, but available information suggests that cancers of the thyroid are not easily induced
by radiation and that radiation from iodine-131, largely restricted to the
thyroid, is an even less efficient carcinogen in laboratory animals than

are X-rays.

CONCLUSIONS
1.

Therapeutic doses of X-rays to the thyroid region of children have
been followed after some years by the development of thyroid neoplasms. Whereas the percent of cases of malignant neoplasms is
small, the proportion of persons irradiated who develop nodular

thyroid disease can be extremely high. The incidence of radiationinduced thyroid disease is strongly dose dependent above 100 rads
(thyroid dose). The shape of the response curve below 100 rads is
unknown.
2.

X-rays are probably as effective if not more so than iodine-131 in
producing thyroid lesions for equal, average absorbed doses delivered to the gland at similar rates. An apparent greater effectiveness ot X-ray irradiation may be due to the higher dose rate
used,

3.

Whereas it was formerly believed that the induction of thyroid
tumors was enhanced by irradiation of tissues other than the
thyroid itself, it now seems possible to explain variability in
tumor induction in children on the basis of whether or not the
gland was in the primary X-ray beam.

4.

Radioactive iodine in amounts sufficient to deliver several hundred
rads to the thyroid of the infant or young child has been shown to

produce a high incidence of thyroid nodules.

Radioactive iodine

has been shown to be carcinogenic in some animals. No case of
thyroid cancer clearly ascribable to it has been reported in man.

DOE ARCHIVES

Select target paragraph3