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. 1996 Jul 25;382(6589):352-3.
doi: 10.1038/382352a0.

Infant leukaemia after in utero exposure to radiation from Chernobyl

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Infant leukaemia after in utero exposure to radiation from Chernobyl

E Petridou et al. Nature. .

Abstract

There has been no documented increase in childhood leukaemia following the Chernobyl accident. However, different forms of childhood leukaemia may not be equally susceptible to radiation carcinogenesis. Infant leukaemia is a distinct form associated with a specific genetic abnormality. Outside the former Soviet Union, contamination resulting from the Chernobyl accident has been highest in Greece and Austria and high also in the Scandinavian countries. All childhood leukaemia cases diagnosed throughout Greece since 1 January 1980 have been recorded. Here we report that infants exposed in utero to ionizing radiation from the Chernobyl accident had 2.6 times the incidence of leukaemia compared to unexposed children (95% confidence interval, 1.4 to 5.1; P approximately 0.003), and those born to mothers residing in regions with high radioactive fallout were at higher risk of developing infant leukaemia. No significant difference in leukaemia incidence was found among children aged 12 to 47 months. Preconceptional irradiation had no demonstrable effect on leukaemia risk at any of the studied age groups.

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Comment in

  • Links in childhood leukaemia.
    Darby SC, Roman E. Darby SC, et al. Nature. 1996 Jul 25;382(6589):303-4. doi: 10.1038/382303a0. Nature. 1996. PMID: 8684455 No abstract available.
  • Infant leukaemia after the Chernobyl accident.
    Michaelis J, Kaletsch U, Burkart W, Grosche B. Michaelis J, et al. Nature. 1997 May 15;387(6630):246. doi: 10.1038/387246a0. Nature. 1997. PMID: 9153387 No abstract available.

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