학술논문

Chromosomal Abnormalities among Offspring of Childhood-Cancer Survivors in Denmark: A Population-Based Study.
Document Type
Report
Source
American Journal of Human Genetics. Jun2004, Vol. 74 Issue 6, p1282-1285. 4p.
Subject
*IONIZING radiation
*CARCINOGENS
*GENETIC disorders
*DOWN syndrome
*HUMAN chromosome abnormalities
*PRENATAL diagnosis
Language
ISSN
0002-9297
Abstract
Ionizing radiation and many cancer drugs have the potential to produce germ-cell mutations that might lead to genetic disease in the next generation. In a population-based study, we identified, from records in the Danish Cancer Registry, 4,676 children treated for cancer. Their 6,441 siblings provided a comparison cohort. The results of a search of the Central Population Register identified 2,630 live-born offspring of the survivors and 5,504 live-born offspring of their siblings. The occurrence of abnormal karyotypes diagnosed in these offspring and also in any pregnancies terminated following prenatal diagnosis of a chromosome abnormality was determined from the Danish Cytogenetic Registry. After exclusion of hereditary cases and inclusion of the prenatal cases, after correction for expected viability, the adjusted proportion of live-born children in survivor families with abnormal karyotypes (5.5/2,631.5 [0.21%]) was the same as that among the comparison sibling families (11.8/5,505.8 [0.21%]). There were no significant differences in the occurrence of Down syndrome (relative risk [RR] = 1.07; 95% CI 0.16-5.47) or Turner syndrome (RR = 1.32; 95% CI 0.17-7.96) among the children of cancer survivors, compared with the children of their siblings. These reassuring results are of importance to the survivors, to their families, and to genetic counselors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]