C
Cheng Yu Ding
Publications - 4
Citations - 332
Cheng Yu Ding is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cancer & Retrospective cohort study. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 4 publications receiving 329 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
A cohort study of cancer among benzene-exposed workers in China: overall results.
Songnian Yin,Richard B. Hayes,Martha S. Linet,Gui Lan Li,Mustafa Dosemeci,Lois B. Travis,Chin Yang Li,Zhi Nan Zhang,De Gao Li,Wong Ho Chow,Sholom Wacholder,Yao Zu Wang,Z. L. Jiang,T. R. Dai,Wan You Zhang,X. ‐J Chao,P. Z. Ye,Q. R. Kou,Xi Chun Zhang,X. F. Lin,J. F. Meng,Cheng Yu Ding,J. S. Zho,William J. Blot +23 more
TL;DR: Employment in benzene-associated occupations in China is associated with a wide spectrum of myelogenous and lymphocytic malignant diseases and related disorders, and Investigations continue to assess the nature of these associations.
Journal ArticleDOI
An expanded cohort study of cancer among benzene-exposed workers in China
Songnian Yin,Richard B. Hayes,Martha S. Linet,Gui Lan Li,Mustafa Dosemeci,Lois B. Travis,Zhi Nan Zhang,De Gao Li,Wong Ho Chow,Sholom Wacholder,William J. Blot,Y. Z. Wang,Z. L. Jiang,T. R. Dai,Wan You Zhang,X. Y. Chao,P. Z. Ye,Q. R. Kou,X. C. Chang,X. F. Lin,J. F. Meng,Cheng Yu Ding,J. S. Zho +22 more
TL;DR: An expanded cohort study of 74,828 benzene-exposed and 35,805 unexposed workers were followed during 1972 to 1987, based on a previous study in 12 cities in China, and a small increase was observed in total cancer mortality.
Journal ArticleDOI
Mortality among benzene-exposed workers in China
Richard B. Hayes,Songnian Yin,Mustafa Dosemeci,Gui Lan Li,Sholom Wacholder,Wong Ho Chow,Nathaniel Rothman,Yao Zu Wang,T. R. Dai,X. ‐J Chao,Z. L. Jiang,P. Z. Ye,Hong Bin Zhao,Q. R. Kou,Wan You Zhang,J. F. Meng,J. S. Zho,X. F. Lin,Cheng Yu Ding,Chin Yang Li,Zhi Nan Zhang,De Gao Li,Lois B. Travis,William J. Blot,Martha S. Linet +24 more
TL;DR: Mortality was slightly increased among workers with greater cumulative exposure to benzene, but this excess was largely due to cancer deaths (ptrend < 0.05), and deaths due to lymphatic and hematopoietic malignancies and lung cancer increased with increasing cumulative exposureto benzene.
Journal ArticleDOI
Cohort study among workers exposed to benzene in China: I. General methods and resources.
Songnian Yin,Martha S. Linet,Richard B. Hayes,Guilan Li,Mustafa Dosemeci,Y. Z. Wang,Wong-Ho Chow,Z. L. Jiang,Sholom Wacholder,W. ‐U Zhang,T. R. Dai,X. ‐J Chao,X. ‐C Zhang,P. Z. Ye,Q. R. Kou,J. F. Meng,J. S. Zho,X. F. Lin,Cheng Yu Ding,Robert Kneller,William J. Blot +20 more
TL;DR: A collaborative study was carried out to expand on a previous retrospective cohort mortality study of Chinese benzene-exposed workers to clarify dose-response relationships and examine risks of malignancies other than leukemia.