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Indoor Radon Risk What do we know and how do we know it?. HPS Annual Meeting July 14, 2009 Jan Johnson, PhD, CHP Tetra Tech. Public - Mixed Messages. What do we know: Real problem or unnecessary concern?. Underground miner studies Indoor radon epidemiological studies (1972 – present)
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Indoor Radon RiskWhat do we know and how do we know it? HPS Annual Meeting July 14, 2009 Jan Johnson, PhD, CHP Tetra Tech
What do we know: Real problem or unnecessary concern? • Underground miner studies • Indoor radon epidemiological studies (1972 – present) • Europe • US and Canada • 1984: Watras House – Public Awareness – EPA Action • National Academy of Sciences/National Research Council Reports (BEIR IV and BEIR VI) • Recent results of pooled epidemiologic studies • Dosimetry
BEIR VI Reprise - 1999 • What did BEIR VI tell us? • How does that relate to information available since BEIR VI was written? • Does new information support or contradict BEIR VI?
Lifetime Relative Risk Model ERR = β(ω5-14+θ15-24ω15-24+θ25+ω25+)Φageγz where: ω = exposure during given time period θ = weighting factor (time since exposure) β = slope of the exposure-risk relationship Φ = age effect (ERR declines with increasing age) γ = exposure rate adjustment factor (duration or concentration)
Elements of the BEIR VI Risk Model (Based primarily on miner data) • Excess relative risk declines with age • Relative risk is the risk of the disease with the exposure divided by risk of the disease without exposure • Risk declines with time since exposure • Total “effective” exposure = ω5-14+θ15-24ω15-24+θ25+ω25+ • Exposures in the last 5 years do not contribute to the risk • Risk is dependent on dose rate – inverse dose rate effect • Expressed as a factor of duration of exposure or concentration
Estimated Relative Lifetime RiskExposure Age Concentration Model
Estimated Attributable Risk(Risk of LC death due to radon/total risk of LC death)
Estimated Number of Lung Cancer Deaths in the US Attributable to Radon (1995)
BEIR VI Conclusions • Radon in homes is expected to be a cause of lung cancer in the general public. • Adjustment factor for risk per WLM in mines to risk in homes (k) = 1 • Number of lung cancer cases due to residential radon exposure in the US projected to be 15,400 to 21,800. • Uncertainty analyses suggest that the number of radon-related cases could range from 3,000 to 33,000. • Indoor radon is the second leading cause of lung cancer after cigarette smoking. • Approximately 1/3 of radon-related lung cancer cases could be avoided if all homes had concentrations below 4 pCi/L.
Lifetime Risk of Lung Cancer From Radon Decay Products70% indoor occupancy; 70 years of exposure(2003 EPA estimates based on BEIR VI)
Recent Epidemiologic Analyses • Low Exposure Miner Data (1997) • Pooled Indoor Radon Studies • North-American Pooled Study (2005-06) • European Pooled Study (2005-06) • Chinese Pooled Study (2004)
Pooled Low Exposure Miner StudiesOccupational Exposure 0 – 15 WLM
Pooled Low Exposure Miner StudiesOccupational Exposure 15 - 100 WLM
Excess Relative Risks at Lifetime Exposure at 100 Bq m-3 (~30 WLM)
Estimated Lifetime Risk Based on Dose Coefficients at 100 Bq m-3 • Assumptions • 70 years of exposure, 7000 hours per year, equilibrium factor = 0.4 • 100 Bq m-3 = 31 WLM • Dose coefficient = 10 mSv WLM-1 • Risk coefficient = 0.05 Sv-1 • Estimated lifetime risk from RnD = 0.02 • EPA estimated lifetime risk at 100 Bq m-3 • Smoker – 0.04 • Non-smoker – 0.005
SMOKINGThe Elephant in the Room • Pooled indoor radon studies – Overall lung cancer risk for smokers is about 25 times the lung cancer risk for non-smokers • Contrary to previous opinions, radon-related lung cancer can occur in non-smokers as well as smokers • BEIR VI Excess Relative Risk for non-smokers greater than 2 x the Excess Relative Risk for smokers. • Pooled indoor radon epidemiological studies showed no difference between the relative risk for smokers and non-smokers • Uncertainty in smoking data, other exposures
HPS Revised Position Paper • In 2007 Health Physics Society Board appointed an Ad Hoc Committee to update the 1990 Indoor Radon Position Statement • Committee composed of health physicists, epidemiologists, EPA representatives, American Lung Association, State Health Department • Draft Position Statement approved with minor editorial changes by the Scientific and Public Issues Committee in February 2009 • Draft background document completed in May 2009 • Position Statement to be presented to the Board in July?