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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
On a second mail survey (in 1984) concerning radiation-induced cancer following radiotherapy for benign diseases, 86 cases were collected from 95 hospitals in Japan. Adding these to 150 cases collected in the previous survey in 1979, 236 cases were accumulated. This is a report on the analysis of the 236 cases from a clinicopathological viewpoint. Underlying diseases consisted of cervical tuberculous lymphadenitis (125 cases), skin diseases (41 cases), benign thyroid diseases (19 cases), hemangioma (18 cases) and others (33 cases). Radiation-induced cancers, which were defined as cancers originating in the radiation field, including
leukemia
, consisted of hypopharyngeal cancer (68 cases), skin cancer (61 cases), laryngeal cancer (26 cases), esophageal cancer (23 cases),
thyroid cancer
(23 cases), salivary gland tumor (8 cases) and others (27 cases). Multiple primary cancers in the radiation field were observed in 7 cases. Average latent period was 28.9 years. It was demonstrated that the older the age at irradiation the shorter the latent period. Based on the population irradiated for benign diseases before 1977, which was collected in the first mail survey, incidence of radiation-induced cancers was estimated to be about 0.9%. The incidence varied with the period of radiotherapy; 1.9% for the period of radiotherapy before 1955, 0.4% for 1956-1965, 0.1% for 1966-1977. Although radiotherapy is now rarely indicated for benign diseases, it was shown in the first mail survey that more than 15,000 cases of benign diseases had been irradiated after 1956. It seems to be reasonable to consider that radiation-induced cancers after radiotherapy for benign diseases may continue to be discovered for several years in the future.
...
PMID:[Radiation-induced cancers following radiotherapy of benign diseases: the second mail survey in Japan]. 372 66
Out of a total of 47,005 cases of primary breast cancer with curative surgery recorded in Japan in the 20 year period from 1963 to 1982, 764, or 1.6 per cent had a second primary cancer occurring during the same period. The distribution of the second site was gastric cancer in 200 (26.2 per cent), breast cancer in 200 (26.2 per cent), colorectal cancer in 59 (7.7 per cent), cancer of the cervix uteri in 54 (7.1 per cent) and
thyroid cancer
in 37 (4.8 per cent). The gastric cancer was the Borrmann type 4, and the poorly differentiated scirrhous type. Incidence of the second cancer was enhanced, in the first period before 1971 and by contrast, in the second period after 1971 it was diminished. In the chemotherapy (+) group, the occurrence of the second cancer seemed to be strongly influenced by mitomycin C. In the radiotherapy prescribed group,
leukemia
was as frequent as esophageal cancer, and in those given endocrine therapy, breast cancer strongly inhibited the current one.
...
PMID:Second primary cancer following adjuvant chemotherapy, radiotherapy and endocrine therapy for breast cancer: a nationwide survey on 47,005 Japanese patients who underwent mastectomy from 1963-1982. 377 58
The patterns of cancer risk by religion in the large multidenominational population of Los Angeles County were examined with the method of proportional incidence. Risk estimates for individual cancers by religion were screened and those extreme but stable estimates found were reexamined in light of relative socioeconomic class, nativity, and ethnicity. Within Protestant denominations, gradients which can still best be attributed to religious preference were observed for
leukemia
, stomach, and cervix cancer. Roman Catholics tend to have high risks of stomach and gallbladder and a low risk of prostate cancer, whereas Eastern Orthodox women trade high risk of stomach cancer for low risk of endometrial and lung cancer. The most extreme pattern of risk, that for Jews, is comprised of lowered risk for cervical cancer and for most sites usually associated with smoking, plus consistently higher risk for lymphomas,
thyroid cancer
, and bladder cancer among males. Like Jews, Seventh-Day Adventists experience high risk for lymphoma and low risk for cervical and respiratory cancers. Risk to Mormons in Los Angeles differs from that of the standard Protestant population in only minor and inconsistent ways. Neither Mormons nor Adventists showed the previously reported deficits of colorectal or breast cancer. Although the method of proportional incidence may be partly responsible for our failure to confirm previous findings, nonreligious cultural or methodologic factors in the original investigations also provide plausible explanations. More generally, associations of the modest magnitude observed between cancer risk and religion in American populations should probably not be attributed to religious life-style, unless extraordinary circumstances permit the exclusion of other determinants.
...
PMID:Religion and cancer in Los Angeles County. 383 40
The numbers of second cancers among 182,040 women treated for cervical cancer that were reported to 15 cancer registries in 8 countries were compared to the numbers expected had the same risk prevailed as in the general population. A small 9% excess of second cancers (5,146 observed vs. 4,736 expected) occurred 1 or more years after treatment. Large radiation doses experienced by 82,616 women did not dramatically alter their risk of developing a second cancer; at most, about 162 of 3,324 second cancers (approximately equal to 5%) could be attributed to radiation. The relative risk (RR = 1.1) for developing cancer in organs close to the cervix that had received high radiation exposures--most notably, the bladder, rectum, uterine corpus, ovary, small intestine, bone, and connective tissue--and for developing multiple myeloma increased with time since treatment. No similar increase was seen for 99,424 women not treated with radiation. Only a slight excess of acute and non-lymphocytic leukemia was found among irradiated women (RR = 1.3), and substantially fewer cases were observed than expected on the basis of current radiation risk estimates. The small risk of
leukemia
may be associated with low doses of radiation absorbed by the bone marrow outside the pelvis, inasmuch as the marrow in the pelvis may have been destroyed or rendered inactive by very large radiotherapy exposures. There was little evidence of a radiation effect for cancers of the stomach, colon, liver, and gallbladder, for melanoma and other skin cancers, or for chronic lymphocytic leukemia despite substantial exposures. An excess of
thyroid cancer
possibly was related to the low dose received by this organ. Ovarian damage caused by radiation may have been responsible for a low breast cancer risk (RR = 0.7), which was evident even among postmenopausal women. A substantial excess of lung cancer (RR = 3.7) largely may be due to misclassification of metastases and the confounding influence of cigarette smoking. Women who were under 30 or over 50 years of age when irradiated were at greatest absolute risk for developing a second cancer. The RR, however, was higher among those under age 30 years at exposure (RR = 3.9) than among older women. The expression period for radiation-induced solid tumors appeared to continue to the end of life.
...
PMID:Second cancers following radiation treatment for cervical cancer. An international collaboration among cancer registries. 385 84
Aclarubicin, discovered by Umezawa in 1975, is a new cytostatic anthracycline antibiotic. It is one of the anthracyclines with the lowest cardiotoxicity, it is not mutagenic and it stimulates differentiation of tumour cells. The therapeutic index of aclarubicin (efficacy related to toxicity) is higher than that of doxorubicin and daunorubicin, using a proper dose schedule. Single dose therapy of aclarubicin shows only marginal efficacy, whereas multiple divided dose therapy exhibits efficacy comparable to that of doxorubicin and daunorubicin. Thus for clinical trials two dose schedules were designed: 25 mg/m2/day, days 1-7 for acute
leukaemia
; and 30 mg/m2/day, days 1-4 for solid tumours. Aclarubicin was shown to be highly active in acute
leukaemia
with 58% complete remissions in first relapse of AML. Good results were also seen in acute
leukaemia
in combination with cytosine arabinoside and thioguanine. In clinical trials with breast cancer and
thyroid cancer
the efficacy was in the same range as would be expected for doxorubicin, but side-effects were markedly reduced. Anorexia, mild nausea and infrequent vomiting were observed. Myelosuppression was common but dose reduction was not necessary. There was no alopecia and no congestive heart failure.
...
PMID:Aclarubicin: experimental and clinical experience. 391 80
An analysis was conducted of 3373 deaths among 39 546 people employed by the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority between 1946 and 1979, the population having been followed up for an average of 16 years. Overall the death rates were below those prevailing in England and Wales but consistent with those expected in a normal workforce. At ages 15-74 years the standardised mortality ratios (SMRs) were 74 for deaths from all causes and 79 for deaths from all cancers. Mortality from only four causes was above the national average--namely, testicular cancer (SMR 153; 10 deaths),
leukaemia
(SMR 123; 35 deaths),
thyroid cancer
(SMR 122; three deaths), non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (SMR 107; 20 deaths)--but in none was the increase significant at the 5% level. Half of the authority's employees were recorded as having been monitored for exposure to radiation, their collective recorded exposure being 660 Sv (65 954 rem). Among these prostatic cancer was the only condition with a clearly increased mortality in relation to exposure. Of the 19 men who had a radiation record and died from prostatic cancer at ages 15-74 years, nine had been monitored for several different sources of exposure to radiation. The standardised mortality ratios were 889 (six deaths) in employees monitored for contamination by tritium, 254 (nine deaths) in those monitored for contamination by other radionuclides, and 385 (nine deaths) in those with dosimeter readings totalling more than 50 mSv (5 rem); but the same nine subjects tended to account for each of these significantly raised ratios. Because multiple exposures were common and other relevant information was not available the reason for the increased mortality from prostatic cancer in this population could not be determined and requires further investigation. Excess mortality rates of 2.2 and 12.5 deaths per million person years per 10 mSv (1 rem) were estimated for
leukaemia
and all cancers, respectively. The confidence limits around these estimates were wide, included zero, and made it unlikely that the International Commission on Radiological Protection's cancer risk coefficients were underestimated by more than 15-fold. Thus despite this being the largest British workforce whose mortality has been reported in relation to low level ionising radiation exposure, even larger populations will need to be followed up over longer periods before narrower ranges of risk estimates can be derived.
...
PMID:Mortality of employees of the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority, 1946-1979. 392 32
Two-hundred and fifty-eight patients treated with high-activity 131I for
thyroid cancer
and on prolonged follow-up have been reviewed to determine long-term hazards and their relation to the radiation dose received. The expectation of life of those dying from causes other than cancer was slightly reduced in the female patients. A small, significant excess of deaths from cancer of the bladder and from
leukaemia
was found which, assuming that these were due to radiation, gave inferred risk-rates respectively of 0.4 and 4.9 deaths per 10(4) PYG (patient-year-grays) to the bladder wall and red marrow. Of 31 younger patients (eight male, 23 female), four of the marriages have been infertile. The fertile marriages produced a total of 44 live births. Considerable gonad irradiation (estimated 0.8-2.7 Gy) was compatible with apparently normal fertility. Despite the high level of irradiation of the salivary glands, no malignancies and only one adenoma was found. Impaired pulmonary function occurred in only one of the patients who had diffuse bilateral metastases. In this patient, tumour in the lung was persistent throughout, so that radiation was probably not alone responsible.
...
PMID:The long-term hazards of the treatment of thyroid cancer with radioiodine. 394 7
Patients with diffusely increased uptake in both kidneys (often referred to as "host kidneys") on Tc-99m-MDP bone imaging were evaluated. Among 2056 patients reviewed, this finding was seen in 13 patients (0.63%): four with liver cirrhosis, two with lung cancer, one each with primary hepatoma, Hodgkin's disease, malignant lymphoma,
thyroid cancer
,
leukemia
, sideroblastic anemia and diabetes mellitus. Renal vascular disease and iron overload are considered to be the major causes of this finding.
...
PMID:Diffusely increased Tc-99m-MDP uptake in both kidneys. 645 33
Exposures in southwestern Utah to radioactive fallout (1951 through 1962) from atmospheric nuclear detonations at the Nevada Test Site (NTS) were followed by smaller exposures (1962 through 1979) from venting of underground nuclear detonations. The cancer incidence in a 1951 cohort (4, 125) of Mormon families in southwestern Utah near the NTS was compared with that of all Utah Mormons (1967 through 1975). There were 109 more cases of cancer than expected (288[observed]/179[expected]).
Leukemia
was most prominent early (1958 through 1966), with 19 cases, five times more than expected (3.6). The excess of
leukemia
persisted into the later period (1972 through 1980), with 12 cases observed, 3.4 expected. There was an increase in lymphoma. Excess cases of
thyroid cancer
appeared early and a notable excess appeared later (14/1.7). An excess of breast cancer was noted later (27/14). There were more cancers of the gastrointestinal tract than expected. There was an excess of melanoma (12/4.5), bone cancer (8/0.7), and brain tumors (9/3.9). A subgroup with history of acute fallout effects had a higher cancer incidence. That these cases can be associated with radiation exposures is supported by a comparison between groups of the ratio of cancers of more radiosensitive organs with all other types of cancer.
...
PMID:Cancer incidence in an area of radioactive fallout downwind from the Nevada Test Site. 669 Jul 81
We conducted a survey of college health services to determine their policies regarding the use of screening chest radiographs and tuberculin skin tests. Pre-enrollment chest radiographs are prescribed for all incoming students by 24 per cent of the 531 respondents and for health professions students, foreign students, and intercollegiate athletes only by an additional 20 per cent, 19 per cent, and 6 per cent, respectively. Periodic chest radiography is conducted for all students by 7 per cent of the respondents and for health professions students, foreign students, and intercollegiate athletes only by an additional 22 per cent, 16 per cent, and 8 per cent, respectively. Pre-enrollment tuberculin skin tests are prescribed for all incoming students by 52 per cent of the respondents and for health professions students, foreign students, and intercollegiate athletes only by an additional 48 per cent, 29 per cent, and 9 per cent, respectively. Periodic tuberculin skin testing is conducted for all students by 27 per cent of the respondents and for health professions students, foreign students, and intercollegiate athletes only by an additional 48 per cent, 23 per cent, and 16 per cent, respectively. We estimate from these data that 723,000 incoming students in the United States received screening chest radiographs in 1979 with estimated charges totaling between $7 million and $27 million. There may be 0.05 to 0.33 induced cases of lung cancer,
leukemia
,
thyroid cancer
, and female breast cancer over a 20-year period among this group of students exposed to ionizing radiation.
...
PMID:Screening for chest disease in college students: policies of student health services regarding the use of routine screening chest radiographs and tuberculin skin tests. 669 25
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