INTRODUCTION
The long-term health effects of external thyroid irradiation are known to
include excess hypothyroidism, thyroid nodules, and thyroid cancer, and in
this study we attempt to quantitate the relative risk of internal ifrradiation
of the thyroid, for induction of thyroid cancer. The effects of external
irradiation of child thyroids have been summarized in BEIR IIT (1) and by the
NCRP (2). Internal irradiation of the thyroid from a mixture of radionuclides
has occurred in children as a result of accidental exposure to fallout from
nuclear weapons testing.
Larger numbers of persons having received diagnostic
and therapeutic doses from
I used in medical applications. Apart from the
Marshallese, studies of internally irradiated human populations have not
revealed an increased risk of thyroid malignancy (1,2). For example, studies
of a group of children exposed to 90,000 person-rad in Utah, have not revealed
any excess thyroid cancer. The fallout in Utah contained
I and was
reported to deliver up to several hundred rad of absorbed dose to thyroids of
children who were less than 10 years of age (1,2).
There ,gre several studies
which report no carcinogenic effect from large doses of
I (2).
For
example, Holm reported that persons irradiated with
I, with doses ranging
between 6000 and 10,000 rad, exhibited no statistically significant increase
in thyroid cancer (2).
Studies of the children in the Marshall Islands con-

ducted since 1954, on the other hand, do show a statistically significant
increase in thyroid cancer in these irradiated subjects.

Since the Marshall

Islands' children were exposed simltaneously to external and internal

irradiation, we have analyzed the data in an attempt to relate each type of
exposure, internal versus external radiation, to the observed thyroid health
effects.
The mixture of radionuclides, coggributing.to internal dose in the

Marshallese, included mogtly short-Lived

I and

I, and only 10-20% of the

thyroid dose came from
I, thus the radiobiological considerations differ
greatly in these various exposure circumstances.
Estimates of thyroid-absorbed dose were recently reassessed for people
exposed to fallout in the Marshall Islands (3).
The accidental exposure of
people on March 1, 1954, occurred as a result of nuclear weapons testing.

Over the years, several estimates of thyroid-absorbed dose were made (4,5).
The earliest estimate of thyroid dose was reported by Cronkite (4) who indicated a population-averaged thyroid dose. A 1962 study by James (5) listed
the most probable thyroid dose to girls who were 3 to 4 years old at the time
of exposure.

Howsver,

tbs James dose estimate was flawed by pe incorrect

association of 191 and
5} dose relative to the dose from /7!1
The most
Tecent assessment of dose provided detailed informacion on the type of
nuclides in fallout,

the mode of intake,

and the contributions from internal

and external sources. The study of Lessard et al. (3) established greater
absorbed dose to people based upon greater intake of the shorter~lived radiolodines. The thyroid dose ranged from several hundred to five thousand rad,
and the highest doses were assigned to young people.
The revised dose estimates accounted for the radioactivity from all todine isotopes.

Uncertainties with the dose estimates are associated with the amount of
radioactivity measured in the urine of the exposed people, the intake of the
short-lived radiotellurium and radioiodine isotopes and percent of thyroid
uptake as as determined from a physiologic model, errors in estimating the
exact amount of each radioiodine isotope, the dose rate and pattern of energy
distribution from this radioiodine mixture, and the shape and chickness of the
thyroid.
Adams et al.

(6) reported the medical status of the Marshallese acci-

dentally exposed to fallout.
Through March 1985 there were 35 adenomatous
nodules, 5 adenomas, 9 papillary carcinomas, 1 atypical adenoma or follicular
carcinoma, and 2 occult papillary carcinomas. A comparison group of equal

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