Author:
McConnell Robert J.,Kamysh Olga,O'Kane Patrick L.,Greenebaum Ellen,Rozhko Alexander V.,Yauseyenka Vasilina V.,Minenko Victor F.,Drozdovitch Vladimir,Yarets Yuliya,Kukhta Tatiana,Mabuchi Kiyohiko,Little Mark P.,Cahoon Elizabeth K.,Zablotska Lydia B.
Abstract
<b><i>Introduction:</i></b> The Chernobyl nuclear accident exposed residents of contaminated territories to substantial quantities of radioiodines and was followed by an increase in thyroid cancer, primarily papillary thyroid cancer (PTC), among exposed children and adolescents. Although thyroid biopsy is an essential component of screening programs following accidental exposure to radioiodines, it is unknown whether the predictive value of biopsy is affected by different levels of environmental exposure. <b><i>Methods:</i></b> A cohort of 11,732 Belarusians aged ≤18 years at the time of the Chernobyl accident with individual thyroid radiation dose estimates was screened at least once 11–22 years later. Paired cytologic conclusions and histopathologic diagnoses were possible for 258 thyroid nodules from 238 cohort members. Cytologic conclusions were divided into five reporting categories, with all follicular lesion aspirates combined into a single indeterminate category. Standard performance indicators, risk of malignancy (ROM), and odds ratios for a correct cytologic conclusion were calculated, both overall and according to quintile of thyroid radiation dose. <b><i>Results:</i></b> The arithmetic mean thyroid dose estimate for the study group was 1.73 Gy (range: 0.00–23.64 Gy). The final histopathologic diagnosis was cancer for 136 of 258 biopsies (52.7%; 135 papillary and 1 follicular). The overall ROM was 96.7% for cytologies definite for PTC, 83.7% for suspicious for PTC, 33.0% for indeterminate, 8.1% for benign, and 31.0% for non-diagnostic. The ROM showed little change according to level of radiation exposure. Overall, there was no association between thyroid radiation dose and the odds ratio for a correct cytologic conclusion (<i>p</i> = 0.24). When analyzed according to dose quintile, the odds ratio for a correct conclusion increased two-fold at 0.10–0.29 Gy compared to a dose of 0.00–0.09 Gy and decreased at doses of 0.3–24 Gy (<i>p</i> value for linear trend = 0.99). <b><i>Conclusions:</i></b> At radiation doses received by a cohort of young Belarusians exposed to radioiodines by the Chernobyl accident, the predictive value of thyroid biopsy for diagnosing PTC was not significantly affected by level of radiation exposure.