Savitz D A, Chen J H
Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 27599.
Environ Health Perspect. 1990 Aug;88:325-37. doi: 10.1289/ehp.9088325.
Parental occupational exposures might affect childhood cancer in the offspring through genetic changes in the ovum or sperm or through transplacental carcinogenesis. The 24 published epidemiologic studies of this association have all used case-control designs, with controls generally selected from birth certificates or from general population sampling. Occupational exposures were inferred from job titles on birth certificates or through interviews. A large number of occupation-cancer associations have been reported, many of which were not addressed or not confirmed in other studies. Several associations have been found with consistency: paternal exposures in hydrocarbon-associated occupations, the petroleum and chemical industries, and especially paint exposures have been associated with brain cancer; paint exposures have also been linked to leukemias. Maternal exposures have received much less attention, but studies have yielded strongly suggestive results linking a variety of occupational exposures to leukemia and brain cancer. The primary limitations in this literature are the inaccuracy inherent in assigning exposure based on job title alone and imprecision due to limited study size. Although no etiologic associations have been firmly established by these studies, the public health concerns and suggestive data warrant continued research.
父母的职业暴露可能通过卵子或精子的基因变化或经胎盘致癌作用影响后代患儿童癌症的风险。已发表的24项关于这种关联的流行病学研究均采用病例对照设计,对照组通常从出生证明或一般人群抽样中选取。职业暴露是根据出生证明上的职业头衔或通过访谈推断出来的。已经报道了大量职业与癌症的关联,其中许多在其他研究中未得到探讨或证实。有几个关联已被一致发现:父亲在与碳氢化合物相关的职业、石油和化学工业中的暴露,尤其是油漆暴露与脑癌有关;油漆暴露也与白血病有关。母亲的职业暴露受到的关注要少得多,但研究已得出强烈的提示性结果,将多种职业暴露与白血病和脑癌联系起来。该文献的主要局限性在于仅根据职业头衔确定暴露存在固有的不准确性,以及由于研究规模有限而导致的不精确性。尽管这些研究尚未确凿地确立病因学关联,但公众健康问题和提示性数据值得继续研究。