- The second round: Two new cases surgically confirmed
- The fourth round: Five new cases diagnosed as suspicious or malignant, and 2 new surgical cases.
- Total number of suspected/confirmed thyroid cancer has increased by 5 to 246: 116 in the first round (including a single case of benign tumor), 71 in the second round, 31 in the third round, 21 in the fourth round, and 7 in Age 25 Milestone Screening.
- Total number of surgically confirmed thyroid cancer cases has increased by 4 to 199 (101 in the first round, 54 in the second round, 27 in the third round, 13 in the fourth round, and 4 in Age 25 Milestone Screening)
- Data reported is as of March 31, 2020. (Delayed reporting persists after the fourth quarterly session was skipped in 2019.)
- A list of official English translation of the results is available on the website for the Radiation Medical Science Center of the Fukushima Health Management Survey. No translation is available for the 2020 sessions at this time.
The second round
As of March 31, 2020, the number of suspected or confirmed thyroid cancer cases in the second round remains unchanged at 71. Of 52 cases from the FY 2014 targeted municipalities, 2 cases were newly confirmed as papillary thyroid cancer after surgery, increasing the number of surgical cases to 54 (53 papillary thyroid cancer and 1 "other" thyroid cancer).
The previous results from the first round are as follows: 65 with "A" 33 with A1, 25 with A2 cysts, and 7 with A2 nodules), 5 with "B," and 1 with no prior screening.
The fourth round, scheduled from April 1, 2018 through March 31, 2020, is still ongoing. Between December 31, 2019 and March 31, 2020, the primary examination gained 17,177 more participants, raising the current participation rate from 55.6% to 61.4%. This is still below what the prior rounds registered (81.7% for the first round, 71.0% for the second round, and 64.7% for the third round), although it is approaching the third round.
Age 25 Milestone Screening
The Age 25 Milestone Screening results reported this time were also released at the June 15th TUE Subcommittee like the final report of the third round. Although already discussed in the previous post, the content is reposted below due to a confusing nature of this particular screening.
Summary of the results from the previous screening
Below is the summary of the previous screening results for the suspected/confirmed thyroid cancer cases. This information, already mentioned above except for the second round, can be difficult to locate in print. In particular, a breakdown of the "A2" assessment is only verbally reported during the Oversight Committee sessions.
Definition"A1": no ultrasound findings."A2": ultrasound findings of nodules ≤ 5.0 mm and/or cysts ≤ 20.0 mm."B": ultrasound findings of nodules ≥ 5.1 mm and/or cysts ≥ 20.1 mm.
- Second round (71 cases): 33 cases with A1, 32 cases with A2 (7 nodules and 25 cysts), 5 cases with B, 1 case previously unexamined
- Third round (31 cases): 7 cases with A1, 14 cases with A2 (4 nodules and 10 cysts), 7 cases with B, 3 cases previously unexamined
- Fourth round (21 cases): 3 cases with A1, 14 cases with A2 (3 nodules and 11 cysts), 4 cases with B
- Age 25 Milestone Screening (7 cases): 1 case with A2 (it was never reported if nodule or cyst), 1 case with B, 5 cases previously unexamined
The previous post covered a group promoting an overdiagnosis theory, "Japan Consortium for Juvenile Thyroid Cancer (JTJTC)," which was spearheaded by Toru Takano of Osaka University, a former controversial member of the Oversight Committee and the TUE Subcommittee. The member roster includes those who were aggressively attributing Fukushima's thyroid cancer to overdiagnosis: Akira Otsuru, Tomotaka Sobue, Toru Takano, Shoichiro Tsugane, and Sanae Midorikawa.
As explained in the previous post, objectives of the group might not be totally obvious from the website. Rather, their beliefs and claims are explained by Midorikawa on the website of Miyagi Gakuin Women's University (link). Excerpts are translated below:
- It is not that radiation exposure led to an increase in thyroid cancer in Fukushima.
- Many thyroid cancers happen to be "discovered" because of the Thyroid Ultrasound Examination (TUE).
- Further, majority of those thyroid cancer cases would not have been diagnosed if it weren't for the TUE: They are harmless cancers which probably would have remained undetected for life. (This is called overdiagnosis.)
- Even Fukushima residents and their families are unaware of this fact, and they continue to participate in the TUE.
The JTJTC even boasts several international advisory members, as described on their website. There is also a Japanese Twitter account called "Save Children from Overdiagnosis (SCO)" affiliated with JTJTC, clearly intended to inform the public of their agenda, often tweeting video clips by Takano, Midorikawa, and Ohtsuru.
Midorikawa, a former director of the school screening, and Ohtsuru, a former director of the TUE, have publicly turned against their former colleagues at Fukushima Medical University (FMU) in their letter to the editor regarding a recent FMU paper on the non-malignant cytological examination results from the first and second rounds. Criticizing that FMU's use of the term "overtreatment" is misleading, Midorikawa and Ohtsuru ultimately recommends halting the school screening based on various pieces of "evidence" which are meant to rationalize their claim of overdiagnosis. Their discourse, built on an unproven assumption of overdiagnosis, is illogical at times.
Takano has done his share of pushing the group's biased view of overdiagnosis, actively publishing papers in various academic journals. In a letter to the editor published in the June 2019 issue of the Archives of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Takano even claimed that overdiagnosis has put Fukushima's children in danger, prompting a reply from FMU officials describing "an accurate picture" of the TUE.
Albeit a common thread of denying radiation effects due to "lower doses in Fukushima than in Chernobyl," JTJTC's activities deviate from FMU's work by emphasizing harm (mostly psychosocial) originating in the TUE, posing constant hindrance to FMU's plan to continue the TUE. Their garbled views might make FMU's claims appear reasonable, but they are actually a good match when it comes to garbling.
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