Ve tee atu ~ sor < incidence proportional to dose, they derived a cumulative lifetime incidence of 35 cancers per million infants each receiving one rad. However, they were careful to point out that their analysis did not exclude the possibility of a curved dose-response relation. The data in their figure five can also be interpreted to suggest a "threshold" at perhaps 50-100 rads, below which cancers would not be induced. Perhaps roughly half of the radiation~induced thyroid cancers may appear within the first fifteen years (compare values in Ref. 11 with those in Ref. 12), but this fraction is uncertain. There is some experimental evidence that iodine 131 is less effective than X-rays in inducing cancer, Doniach found that the iodine 131 dose had to be about ten times greater than an abrupt dose of X-rays to cause equal effects in adult rats. However, adult rats are not infant humans and the relative effectiveness of iodine 131 vs. X-rays in children is yet to be established. Perhaps the iodine 131 exposures in Utah could provide information on this point. The dose-response relation is very difficult to establish at very low doses because the incidence of effects is so very small. woome radiobiologists feel that cancer induction is not proportional to dose, but that a certain "threshold" level must be exceeded before any cancers can be induced. If such a threshold exists and if the doses fall below this level, no induced cancers will appear. cancers will result It is entirely possible that no from the Utah exposures. Theoretical estinates of the number of radiationinduced thyroid cancers will now be calculated for each of the following three assumptions: (A) a linear dose-response with iodine 131 irradiation equally as effective as X-irradiation, and causing a lifetine DOE ARCHIVES Uy

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