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DOSE-RESPONSE RELATIONSHIP IN RADIOGENIC BREAST-CANCER - REPLY [Letter]

Shore, RE
ISI:A1978EU53700003
ISSN: 0027-8874
CID: 29837

RADIATION-FACTORS AND HOST-FACTORS IN THYROID TUMORS FOLLOWING THYMUS IRRADIATION [Meeting Abstract]

Shore, R; Hempelmann, L; Pasternack, B; Woodard, E
ISI:A1978FR03800049
ISSN: 0002-9262
CID: 29769

Occupational exposure to chloromethyl ethers. A retrospective cohort mortality study (1948-1972)

Pasternack BS; Shore RE; Albert RE
This industry-wide epidemiologic study to evaluate the human carcinogenicity of the chloromethyl ethers (CME) included 1827 CME-exposed workers and 8870 controls. Duration and relative intensity of exposure were classified by job description in the personnel records. This information permitted assigning relative magnitude of exposure scores for each job category at several plants, with allowance for temporal changes in the plant processes. Social security records were used for the ascertainment of deaths among separated employees. Death certificates were obtained for virtually all known deaths, and hospital pathology reports were obtained where possible for the cancer-related deaths. No differences in noncancer death rates were found. An increased risk of respiratory cancer death in CME-exposed workers was found at only one firm where high exposures are known to have occurred. A clear dose-response relationship with risk ratios exceeding ten for the longest duration and greatest exposure subgroups was demonstrated for this firm.
PMID: 144178
ISSN: 0096-1736
CID: 10304

Breast neoplasms in women treated with x-rays for acute postpartum mastitis

Shore RE; Hempelmann LH; Kowaluk E; Mansur PS; Pasternack BS; Albert RE; Haughie GE
Breast cancer has been studied by mail survey up to 34 years in 571 of 606 women treated with x-rays for acute postpartum mastitis. The incidence of neoplasms was compared with that of three nonirradiated control groups--nonirradiated sisters of the treated women, women with acute postpartum mastitis not treated with X-rays, and their nonirradiated sisters. For the irradiated group, with mean dose of 247 rads to both breasts, the overall relative risk of breast cancer was 2.2 for years 10-34 post irradiation and 3.6 for years 20-34. The dose response for malignant and benign breast neoplasms was compatible with a linear fit. For comparable total doses, fractionation of exposure did not reduce carcinogenic action. Women over age 30 years at radiation treatment had as great an excess risk of breast cancer as did younger women. The overall excess risk of developing breast cancer was about 8-10 cases per million women per rad per year, an increase of about 0.5% per rad.
PMID: 894746
ISSN: 0027-8874
CID: 10305

BREAST-CANCER FOLLOWING X-RAY THERAPY FOR ACUTE POSTPARTUM MASTITIS [Meeting Abstract]

SHORE, R; HEMPELMANN, L; PASTERNACK, B; KOWALUK, E
ISI:A1977DU76800010
ISSN: 0002-9262
CID: 39939

Statistical methods for assessing risk following exposure to environmental carcinogens

Chapter by: Pasternack BS; Shore RE
in: Environmental health : quantitative methods by Wittemore A [Eds]
Philadelphia : SIAM, 1977
pp. 49-71
ISBN: n/a
CID: 2793

Follow-up study of patients treated by x-ray epilation for tinea capitis. Estimation of the dose to the thyroid and pituitary glands and other structures of the head and neck

Harley NH; Albert RE; Shore RE; Pasternack BS
This study is a further investigation of radiation dose to various head structures in the children given X-ray therapy for tinea capitis (ringworm of the scalp). In this work, estimates of the dose to the thyroid and pituitary gland were obtained with lithium fluoride thermoluminescent dosemeters using a child's head phantom. Doses were also measured for the parotid gland and several skin sites where skin tumours developed in the irradiated cases. In a previous study, brain and scalp doses of 140 and 500-800 rad had been estimated for the treated group using this same head phantom. In this work dosemeters were also placed in the same brain locations so that comparisons could be obtained between the two studies. The thyroid dose was estimated to be 6 +/- 2 rad and the pituitary dose was 49 +/- 6 rad for the conventional tinea capitis treatment. The dose to the parotid gland was 39 rad and the dose to skin sites on the face and neck where tumours occurred ranged from 20 to 40 rad. The data for the thyroid adenoma response from this and other studies involving irradiation of children suggests a linear dose-response relationship within the first 30-40 years after exposure with a risk of about 0-04% per rad.
PMID: 972927
ISSN: 0031-9155
CID: 10308

Relating influenza epidemics to childhood leukemia in tumor registries without a defined population base: a critique with suggestions for improved methods

Shore RE; Pasternack BS; Curnen MG
PMID: 937337
ISSN: 0002-9262
CID: 10309

A statistical note on "differential misdiagnosis of blacks and whites by the MMPI"

Shore RE
This report presents a critique of the conclusion by Strauss et al, that MMPI diagnostic decision-making rules derived from whites are inapplicable to blacks. It is shown that for the data from two of their three MMPI indices, a multiple discriminant function and the Goldberg Index, there was no clear evidence for greater misdiagnosis among blacks than whites when the hit rates among psychotics, behavior disorders or both are examined. For the third measure, semiactuarial profile analysis, the results show less diagnostic accuracy for blacks psychotics, but this one result does not warrant a broad generalization. A preferable method of analysis and a source of potential bias in one of the measures are pointed out
PMID: 1255394
ISSN: 0022-3891
CID: 38468

Follow-up study of patients treated by X-ray epilation for Tinea capitis; resurvey of post-treatment illness and mortality experience

Shore RE; Albert RE; Pasternack BS
This is the second follow-up study of 2,215 persons who during childhood between 1940 and 1959 had been given x-ray therapy for tinea capitis and of 1,395 persons well matched for age, sex, and race who were treated for the same disease during the same period without the use of x-ray therapy. The major finding of the study was an excess incidence in the irradiated cases of tumors of the head and neck including the skin, brain, thyroid, and parotid. However, between the groups there was no difference in death due to malignant neoplasms or any other cause. Among white patients, a 40% excess of treated psychiatric disorders was observed in the irradiated group, but there was no difference among blacks.
PMID: 1244805
ISSN: 0003-9896
CID: 10311