Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02734303
Other study ID # 999916083
Secondary ID 16-C-N083
Status Completed
Phase
First received
Last updated
Start date March 17, 2016
Est. completion date December 1, 2019

Study information

Verified date March 2021
Source National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC)
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Observational

Clinical Trial Summary

Background: The first nuclear bomb test took place in New Mexico in July 1945. This was called the Trinity test. Researchers want to learn how it affected the health of people who lived in New Mexico at the time of the test. To do this, they want to learn about the diet and daily life of those people at that time. They want to study Native Americans, Hispanic/Latinos, and non-Hispanic/Latino whites. Objective: To learn about the health risks for people who may have been exposed to radiation from the Trinity nuclear test. Eligibility: People who: - Are Native American, Hispanic/Latino, or non-Hispanic white - Are age 70 and older - Lived near the fallout region of the Trinity test and know about lifestyle and dietary patterns in New Mexico in the 1940s and 1950s Design: Participants will be screened with a questionnaire. Participants will answer questions in an interview or a focus group. This will be at a place like an office, tribal or community center, or library. It will take up to 2 hours. The interview or group session will include: - Questions about their and their family members activities and eating habits in the 1940s and 1950s - A card-sorting exercise: There will be cards with pictures and names of certain foods. They will sort the cards into 2 piles: those that were consumed and those that were not. - Filling out a chart of their family members and the foods they ate If participants give permission, their interview or group session will be recorded. ...


Description:

Over the last four decades, assessments of health risks based on estimated radiation doses received by the public have been completed for all major U.S. nuclear testing sites and nuclear fuel cycle facilities in the U.S. except for the Trinity test. This research plan is for a radiationrelated cancer risk projection study for the residents of the state of New Mexico (NM) potentially exposed to radioactive fallout from the Trinity nuclear test conducted in 1945. Data to be collected on diet and lifestyle from the three main ethnic groups in NM (white, Hispanic, and Native American) via focus groups and key informant interviews will be used to derive means and ranges of exposure-related parameters for a dose assessment and risk projection. As preliminary work to this proposal, in 2014 we conducted a pilot study to obtain information from 9 key informants (maximum number allowed under OMB regulations prior to clearance) determined that the elders could recall the relevant time period and relevant lifestyle practices. This work established that it is possible to: 1) locate elderly representative of the ethnic groups, 2) assemble groups of members of tribal, a n d Hispanic/Latino communities in New Mexico who were alive in 1945 at the time of the test to participate in focus groups, and 3) obtain lifestyle and diet information to be used for refining focus group interviewing tools. Due to the successful completion of the pilot phase, here we are proposing a second phase to collect data, on a larger scale, via focus group and individual interviews, on lifestyle and diet from up to 150 Native American, Hispanic/Latino, and non-Hispanic white participants living in New Mexico who were alive at the time of the Trinity detonation (currently greater than or equal to 70 years old). The data collected in the proposed study will allows us to estimate exposure-related parameter values that can be used in fallout dose assessment models to estimate external and internal radiation doses to representative persons in all counties in New Mexico by ethnicity, gender, and age. Those doses will be used with published risk models and coupled with literature-derived parameters on risk/unit dose to project the excess cancers (per 1,000 persons within each strata) expected. Endpoints are leukemia, thyroid cancer, stomach cancer, and colon cancer.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 90
Est. completion date December 1, 2019
Est. primary completion date September 12, 2017
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 70 Years to 100 Years
Eligibility - INCLUSION CRITERIA: - Hispanic/Latino, non-Hispanic White or Native American - 70 years or older (Alive in 1945) - Resided in New Mexico or on one of New Mexico s tribal reservations (if Native American) during the 1940s and 1950s - Ideally, helped to care for children in his or her community during the 1940s - Potential focus group members an d key informants may include any of the following: - Community elders, tribal members, and people with first hand knowledge of food practices in New Mexico in the 1940s or 1950s. - Individuals must self-identify as a New Mexico tribal community member, Hispanic/Latino or non-Hispanic white in order to participate in an interview, and have firsthand knowledge about lifestyle and dietary patterns in New Mexico during the 1940s or 1950s.

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Locations

Country Name City State
United States University of New Mexico Albuquerque New Mexico

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
National Cancer Institute (NCI)

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

References & Publications (2)

Schwerin M, Schonfeld S, Drozdovitch V, Akimzhanov K, Aldyngurov D, Bouville A, Land C, Luckyanov N, Mabuchi K, Semenova Y, Simon S, Tokaeva A, Zhumadilov Z, Potischman N. The utility of focus group interviews to capture dietary consumption data in the distant past: dairy consumption in Kazakhstan villages 50 years ago. J Dev Orig Health Dis. 2010 Jun;1(3):192-202. doi: 10.1017/S2040174410000243. — View Citation

Simon SL, Bouville A. Radiation doses to local populations near nuclear weapons test sites worldwide. Health Phys. 2002 May;82(5):706-25. Review. — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary risk assessment prediction of number of excess cancers of: colon, lung, active bone marrow, stomach, and thyroid Cumulative since 1945 exposure
See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT01127711 - Cohort of Swedish Men N/A
Recruiting NCT05299710 - Ovarian Tissue Cryopreservation in Pre-Pubertal (OTC-Pre Pubertal)
Completed NCT01295658 - Cancer Survivor Registry: The Breast Cancer M.A.P. (Mind Affects the Physical) Project
Completed NCT01127698 - Swedish Mammography Cohort N/A
Completed NCT01646437 - The International Polycap Study 3 (TIPS-3) Phase 3
Completed NCT01441674 - Animal Assisted Therapy in a Pediatric Setting Phase 1/Phase 2
Completed NCT04198896 - The Sakakibara Health Integrative Profile of Atherosclerotic-Carcinogenesis Hypothesis (SHIP-AC)
Completed NCT01185470 - The Clinical Evaluation of Implantable Pump System For Safety And Delivery Accuracy In Patients Requiring Intrathecal Administration Of Morphine Sulfate For Chronic Pain Phase 2/Phase 3
Completed NCT00484016 - Drug Delivery and Toxicities of Adjuvant Chemotherapy in Resected NCSLC N/A
Completed NCT03378895 - CEPPPIA Pilot. Experimental Center of Participative and Individualized Predictive Prevention in Auvergne N/A
Recruiting NCT06046066 - A Phase 1 Study of NM6603 in Advanced Solid Tumors Phase 1
Not yet recruiting NCT06416267 - Risk and Clinical Consequences of Low Count Monoclonal B-cell Lymphocytosis (LC MBL)