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Query: UMLS:C0019829 (
Hodgkin's disease
)
30,247
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In this study of cancer in offspring we demonstrate that factors linked to horticulture and use of pesticides are associated with cancer at an early age, whereas factors in animal husbandry, in particular poultry farming, are associated with cancers in later childhood and young adulthood. Incident cancer was investigated in offspring born in 1952-1991 to parents identified as farm holders in agricultural censuses in Norway in 1969-1989. In the follow-up of 323,292 offspring for 5.7 million person-years, 1,275 incident cancers were identified in the Cancer Registry for 1965-1991. The standardized incidence for all cancers was equal to the total rural population of Norway, but cohort subjects had an excess incidence of nervous-system tumours and testicular cancers in certain regions and strata of time that could imply that specific risk factors were of importance. Classification of exposure indicators was based on information given at the agricultural censuses. Risk factors were found for brain tumours, in particular non-astrocytic neuroepithelial tumours: for all ages, pig farming tripled the risk [rate ratio (RR), 3.11; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.89-5.13]; indicators of pesticide use had an independent effect of the same magnitude in a dose-response fashion, strongest in children aged 0 to 14 years (RR, 3.37; 95% CI, 1.63-6.94). Horticulture and pesticide indicators were associated with all cancers at ages 0 to 4 years, Wilms' tumour, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma,
eye cancer
and neuroblastoma. Chicken farming was associated with some common cancers of adolescence, and was strongest for osteosarcoma and mixed cellular type of
Hodgkin's disease
. The main problem in this large cohort study is the crude exposure indicators available; the resulting misclassification is likely to bias any true association towards unity.
...
PMID:Cancer in offspring of parents engaged in agricultural activities in Norway: incidence and risk factors in the farm environment. 854 94
No systematic population-based studies have been conducted on familial eye cancers. Reliable data on familial risks are important for clinical counselling and cancer genetics. The current analysis was based on the nation-wide Swedish Family-Cancer Database on 10.5 million individuals, containing families with parents and offspring. Cancer data were retrieved from the Swedish Cancer Registry from the years 1958 to 2002, including 3636 patients with any type of
eye cancer
. Familial risk for offspring was defined using the standardized incidence ratio (SIR), adjusted for many variables. Ocular melanoma was detected in two parent-offspring pairs, but the SIR of 3.90 was not significant. Parental upper aerodigestive tract (2.05), left-sided colon (1.83) and male non-medullary thyroid (6.98) cancers showed an association with ocular melanoma, albeit some with a borderline significance. The SIR for leukaemia was increased when parents were diagnosed with eye melanoma. There was no evidence for the association of ocular melanoma with cutaneous melanoma. The SIR for ocular melanoma was 1.76 when a sister was diagnosed with breast cancer, but there was no increase when a mother was diagnosed with breast cancer. When both a child and the parent presented with retinoblastoma, the SIR was 900. The parents of children with retinoblastoma had an excess of small intestinal and rectal cancers and
Hodgkin's disease
. The present findings were based on a limited number of cases, but they display a complex and heterogeneous pattern of familial associations in ocular melanoma, including an association with breast cancer through a putative recessive mechanism.
...
PMID:Familial risks for eye melanoma and retinoblastoma: results from the Swedish Family-Cancer Database. 1656 75