
A Review
of Residential Radon Case-Control Epidemiologic Studies Performed in
the United States
College of Public Health, Dept. of Epidemiology, University of Iowa
(2001)
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death in the United States
for both men and women. Although most lung cancer deaths are attributable
to tobacco usage, even secondary causes of lung cancer are important
because of the magnitude of lung cancer incidence and its poor survival
rate.
This review summarizes the basic features and major findings from
the published U.S. large-scale residential radon case-control studies
performed in New Jersey, Iowa, and Missouri (two studies). The methodology
from an unpublished study covering Connecticut, Utah, and Southern
Idaho is also presented.
Overall, the higher categorical risk estimates for these published
studies produced a positive association between prolonged radon exposure
and lung cancer. Two studies (Missouri-II and Iowa) that incorporated
enhanced dose estimates produced the most compelling evidence suggesting
an association between prolonged residential radon exposure and lung
cancer.
The prevailing evidence suggests that the statistically significant
findings may be related to improved retrospective radon exposure
estimates. The general findings from the U.S. studies, along with
extrapolations from radon-exposed underground miners, support the
conclusion that after cigarette smoking, prolonged residential radon
exposure is the second leading cause of lung cancer in the general
population.