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Genetic epidemiology of childhood brain tumors

โœ Scribed by Dr. Melissa L. Bondy; Edward D. Lustbader; Patricia A. Buffler; William J. Schull; Robert J. Hardy; Louise C. Strong; G. P. Vogler


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1991
Tongue
English
Weight
906 KB
Volume
8
Category
Article
ISSN
0741-0395

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โœฆ Synopsis


The study goal was to determine the genetic (heritable) contribution to childhood brain tumors (CBT) which cause nearly one quarter of all childhood cancer deaths. Their etiology remains unknown, but previous studies have suggested a proportion of CBT may be heritable. In this study we collected family histories of 243 confirmed CBT patients referred to The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center between the years 1944 and 1983, diagnosed before age 15, and residents of the United States or Canada. Family histories were obtained for all the probands' first degree relatives (parents, siblings, and offspring) and extended to include selected second degree relatives (aunts, uncles, grandparents) using sequential sampling. To determine if these CBT families exhibited excess cancer, we compared their cancer experience to age-, race-, sex-, and calendar-year specific rates from the Connecticut Tumor Registry. No cancer excess was observed among 1,099 first and second degree relatives [39 cancers observed (0) and 44 expected (E) for a standardized incidence ratio (SIR) of 0.881. For colon cancer, although small numbers, five cases were observed among the probands' first degree relatives with 1.6 expected, for a significant SIR of 3.10. Segregation analysis demonstrated that chance alone could not account for the observed cancer distribution with a multifactorial model providing the best overall explanation of the data. Overall, heredity played a role in the etiology of CBT in 4% of the study families: four (1.7%) due to known hereditary syndromes (nevoid basal cell carcinoma syndrome and von Recklinghausens neurofibromatosis-NF-l), four (1.7%) with multifactorial


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