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Int J Cancer. 2006 Jun 15;118(12):2920-9.
Air pollution and childhood cancer: a review
of the epidemiological literature.
Raaschou-Nielsen O, Reynolds P
Institute of Cancer Epidemiology, Danish Cancer Society, Copenhagen Ø.
The authors evaluated support in the literature for the hypothesis that ambient air pollution causes
childhood cancer. The PubMed database was searched for original articles, which
were reviewed for evidence of a relation with the main types of childhood
cancer, using criteria including sample size, magnitude and precision of
relative risk estimates, presence of a dose-response pattern and potential for
bias. The hypothesis has been studied almost entirely with respect to
traffic-related air pollution. Since derivation of the hypothesis from 2
case-control studies in Denver,
USA, two
further case-control studies have provided new positive evidence and 4
case-control and 7 ecological studies mainly negative evidence. The 4
case-control studies providing positive evidence were relatively small and
tended to have more methodological limitations than those showing no
association. Publication bias is possible. The weight of the epidemiological
evidence indicates no increased risk for childhood cancer associated with
exposure to traffic-related residential air pollution. Nevertheless, the
limited number of studies, the methodological limitations of both positive and
negative studies and the absence of consistency in the results obviate a firm conclusion
of no effect. In particular, nondifferential misclassification of exposure
might have masked true, weak associations. Copyright 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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