Clinical Trial Service Unit & Epidemiological Studies Unit

CTSU

World pooling of case-control studies of residential radon and lung cancer

Collaborators: login here

The radioactive gas radon is the most important natural source of human exposure to ionising radiation. In most countries the majority of the exposure is received indoors, especially in houses and other dwellings. Radon is known to be a human carcinogen and studies of underground miners exposed occupationally, and usually at very high concentrations, have consistently demonstrated an increased risk of lung cancer in both smokers and non-smokers. Until recently, there had been little direct information on the risk of lung cancer associated with exposure to residential radon. However, case-control studies of lung cancer have now been carried out in a number of different countries ; in which radon concentrations have been measured in both current and former homes of the study subjects and detailed smoking histories have also been collected. None of these studies is large enough on its own to assess the risks with sufficient precision to provide useful estimates, but greater statistical precision can be achieved by combining information from several studies. This cannot be done satisfactorily from published information , and it is necessary to collate the data at the but has to combine information at the individual level . Information from all the studies carried out in Europe have previously been analysed (see below), and similar analyses have been carried out of data from the North American and Chinese studies. These analyses confirm that radon causes lung cancer in ordinary homes and have demonstrated that the risk is much greater in current smokers and ex-smokers than in lifelong non-smokers. At present, data on individual subjects from all 25 major studies that have been carried out worldwide is being collated and analysed. The results of this collaborative analysis will provide more precise estimates of the lung cancer risk that can be attributed to residential radon exposure, which will help in formulating appropriate public health strategies.

Radon in homes and lung cancer risk: Collaborative analysis of individual data from 13 European case-control studies

Lung cancer deaths from indoor radon and the cost-effectiveness and potential of policies to reduce them

Back to projects page.

Last modified 16-10-2009 04:05 PM

Previous Section

Current Section