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Contact:
Vilhjalmur Rafnsson, M.D., Ph.D., 354-893-5415 (Iceland is 5 hours ahead
of CT).
EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE UNTIL 3 P.M. (CT), MONDAY, August 8, 2005
COSMIC RADIATION ASSOCIATED WITH RISK OF CATARACT IN AIRLINE PILOTS
CHICAGO -- Airline pilots have an increased risk of nuclear cataracts
[common type of cataract, associated with aging] compared with non-pilots,
and that risk is associated with cumulative exposure to cosmic radiation,
according to a study in the August issue of the Archives of Ophthalmology,
one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
Commercial airline pilots are reported to be at an increased risk for some
cancers, but studies on the biological effects of their exposure to cosmic
radiation have been limited, according to background information in the
article. Previous studies have shown that cataracts can be caused by
exposure to radiation, including a recent study of astronauts showing an
association of incidence of cataracts with space radiation at exposure
levels comparable to those of commercial airline pilots.
Vilhjalmur Rafnsson, M.D., Ph.D., of the University of Iceland, Reykjavik,
and colleagues conducted a case control study involved 445 men to
determine whether employment as a pilot is associated with lens
opacification. The cases included 71 men with nuclear cataract, and the
controls (n = 374) were those men with different types of lens
opacification or without lens opacification. Among the 445 men, 79 were
commercial pilots and 366 had never been pilots. All participants in the
study were 50 years or older and other factors that contribute to cataract
risk, including smoking, age and sunbathing, were controlled for in the
statistical analysis. Exposure to cosmic radiation was assessed based on
employment time as pilots, annual number of hours flown on each aircraft
type, time tables, flight profiles and individual cumulative radiation
doses calculated by computer.
Among the 71 cases with nuclear cataract, 15 were employed as commercial
pilots, whereas among the 374 controls (without nuclear cataract), 64 were
employed as pilots.
"The odds ratio for nuclear cataract risk among cases and controls was
3.02 for pilots compared with nonpilots, adjusted for age, smoking status,
and sunbathing habits," the researchers report. The researchers found an
association between the estimated cumulative radiation dose and the risk
of nuclear cataract.
"The association between the cosmic radiation exposure of pilots and the
risk of nuclear cataracts, adjusted for age, smoking status, and
sunbathing habits, indicates that cosmic radiation may be a causative
factor in nuclear cataracts among commercial airline pilots," the authors
conclude.
(Arch Ophthalmol. 2005;123:1102-1105. Available to the media pre-embargo
at
www.jamamedia.org)
Editor's Note: This study was supported by a grant from the University of
Iceland Research Fund, and the Helga Jonsdottir and Sigurlidi Kristjansson
Memorial Fund, Reykjavik, Iceland. All of the authors have frequently
traveled on Icelandair and other airline companies. They have no financial
connections with the airline company or the pilots' union.
For more information, contact:
JAMA/Archives media relations at 312/464-JAMA (5262).