Risk of childhood leukemia and parental self-reported occupational exposure to chemicals, dusts, and fumes: Results from pooled analyses of German population-based case-control studies
J. Schuz et al., Risk of childhood leukemia and parental self-reported occupational exposure to chemicals, dusts, and fumes: Results from pooled analyses of German population-based case-control studies, CANC EPID B, 9(8), 2000, pp. 835-838
A recent large-scale United States study reported an association between pa
rental exposure to hydrocarbons at work and the risk of childhood leukemia.
Parental occupational exposure to different chemicals and industrial dusts
or fumes also was assessed in three German case-control studies that were
conducted from 1992-1997, The design and methods of exposure assessment wer
e similar for these studies; therefore, they were pooled for this analysis,
In total, these three studies involved 1138 eases of acute lymphocytic leu
kemia (ALL) and 2962 controls. We found that maternal exposure to paints or
lacquers during the preconception period (odds ratio, 1.6; 95% confidence
interval, 1.1-2.4) and during the index pregnancy (odds ratio, 2.0; 95% con
fidence interval, 1.23.3) was related to an increased risk of childhood ALL
. Whereas our findings for exposure to paints or lacquers confirmed observa
tions from the United States study, we failed to confirm associations betwe
en risk of ALL and maternal exposure to solvents and parental exposure to p
lastic materials. Our studies provide some evidence that parental occupatio
nal exposure to certain substances may be associated with cancer risk in of
fspring; however, more specific studies are needed to identify such substan
ces and the doses that may be hazardous.