A 10-year follow-up study of yearly indoor radon measurements in homes, review of other studies and implications on lung cancer risk estimates
Lung Neoplasms
indoor radon; year-to-year variability; lung cancer; risk assessment; epidemiological studies
Rome
3. Good health
Europe
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Italy
Air Pollutants, Radioactive
Radon
Air Pollution, Indoor
Housing
Humans
Follow-Up Studies
DOI:
10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.144150
Publication Date:
2020-12-09T20:44:33Z
AUTHORS (9)
ABSTRACT
Uncertainty on long-term average radon concentration has a large impact on lung cancer risk assessment in epidemiological studies. The uncertainty can be estimated by year-to-year radon concentration variability, however few data are available. In Italy a study has been planned and conducted to evaluate year-to-year radon variability over several years in normally inhabited dwellings, mainly located in Rome. This is the longest study of this kind in Europe; repeat radon measurements are carried out for 10 years using LR-115 radon detectors in the same home in consecutive years. The study includes 84 dwellings with long-term average radon concentration ranging from 28 to 636 Bq/m3. The result shows that year-to-year variability of repeated measurements made in the same home in different years is low, with an overall coefficient of variation of 17%. This is smaller than most of those observed in studies from other European countries and USA, ranging from 15% to 62%. Influencing factors that may explain the differences between this study and other studies have been discussed. Due to the low yearly variability estimated in the present 10-year study, a negligible impact on lung cancer risk estimate for the Italian epidemiological study is expected.
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