Since the reports in 1956 and 1958 that in utero radiation was associated w
ith an increased risk of leukemia and solid cancers during childhood, this
issue has been debated. Many epidemiological studies have been performed. E
vidence for a causal association derives almost entirely from case-control
studies, whereas practically all cohort studies find no association, most n
otably the series of atomic bomb survivors exposed in utero. Although it is
likely that in utero radiation presents a leukemogenic risk to the fetus,
the magnitude of the risk remains uncertain. The causal nature of the risk
of cancers other than leukemia is less convincing, and the similar relative
risks (RR = 1.5) for virtually all forms of childhood cancer suggests an u
nderlying bias. Few studies have addressed the potential risk of adult canc
er after intrauterine exposure. Radiotherapy given to newborns, however, ha
s been linked to cancers of the thyroid and breast later in life. (C) 1999
Wiley-Liss, Inc.