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Child Cancer Is Tied
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To Parents'Expds'ure:
To Chemicals on Job
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Study Suggests 25% of Brain
j" Tumors May Be Linked; o.'a Further Research Urged.<>
' . ~ . A Wall Staci-t Journal Nowm Roundup
Children of chemical workers and others
exposed to chemicals, paints and solvents
may face a greater risk of brain tumors
than other children. .
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' In a recent study of 92 children with
brain tumors, scientists found those children
were more likely to have parents who
worked with chemicals than were a similar
. group of children who didn't have tumors.
All the children were under 10 years Old. _
Compared with the control group, more
than three times as many, mothers of chil
dren with brain tumors were exposed to
chemicals and nearly three times as many
fathers were exposed to solvents. Seven
times as many of the children with brain tu
mors had fathers who worked with paints.
The study didn't identify which chemicals might 'cause the brain tumors. Scientists
said further research is necessary.
Researchers at the University of South
ern California School of Medicine in Los An
geles, site of the study, also found an asso
ciation between a father's employment in the aircraft industry and his child's brain tu
mor. The fathers of 12 children with brain
tumors worked ih the aircraft industry,
compared with only two of the controls.
If the data holds up in further research,
it may mean as many as 25% of the brain
< cancers among children are caused by the
' occupational exposures of their parents, said
Dr. John M. Peters, who headed the re-
; .search team. "We've worried about the dl-
j rect effects (of ch&cicaf Exposures) for
, years." he said. "Now ''We're beginning to
University of Southern California re
see evidence that exposures to parents may searchers interviewed the mothers of the 184
have repercussions to' >ills." Results of the children by telephone. The mothers were
study are to be published in'this week's Is- asked about their own work histories and
' sue of Science magazine. ' ,
those of the children's fathers. They also
Cancer is. the second leading cause of
death among children, after accidents. Brain cancers often are fatal.
were asked about smoking habits, use of drugs and alcohol, .hair dyes and certain foods during pregnancy, which the research
The study Is significant because little is known about the causes of brain tumors in children or in adults, and little research has been done on how children are affected by their parents' exposure to chemicals. Most studies have concentrated health problems among chemical workers and on the effects of chemicals on fertility, genetic material and on the fetus. Some studies have been
done on the health problems of families of
ers later concluded wasn't a factor in the brain tumors. The parents' chemical expo sures took place before, during and after pregnancy. .'Thestudy cited several "plausible" ways a child could be affected by a parent's occu pational exposure, including contact with soiled workclothes and the mother's contact with soiled workclothes before or during
pregnancy or while breastfeeding. .
asbestos workers.
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