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Showing papers by "Cancer Epidemiology Unit published in 1986"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Risks to sisters of bilateral patients were examined in a population-based series of patients diagnosed in Los Angeles County between 1971 and 1975, and sisters of unilateral patients diagnosed at age 40 years or younger appeared to have increased risk.
Abstract: Breast cancer risks to sisters of breast cancer patients were examined in a population-based series of patients diagnosed in Los Angeles County between 1971 and 1975. Sisters of bilateral patients diagnosed at age 50 years or younger had substantially increased risk (relative risk (RR) = 5.5), and risk was even higher for sisters of bilateral patients diagnosed at age 40 years or younger (RR = 10.5). Half of the breast cancers in sisters of bilateral cases occurred in the family of a single bilateral patient whose disease was diagnosed at age 39 years. Sisters of unilateral patients diagnosed at age 50 years or younger did not have significantly increased risk, but sisters of unilateral patients diagnosed at age 40 years or younger appeared to have increased risk (RR = 2.4). Risk to sisters of bilateral patients was slightly higher if the patient's contralateral diagnoses were less than three years apart than if they were three years apart or greater (RR = 6.3 vs. 3.9), but this difference was not statistically significant.

119 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The distribution of age at orchidopexy (or orchidectomy) of the 58 patients treated for undescended testis was almost identical to that expected on the basis of national rates, and the age at treatment of undescending testis appears to have no effect on the risk of testicular cancer.

102 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Socioeconomic status was significantly negatively associated with stomach and lung cancer in males and with cervical cancer in females; it was also positively associated with lymphomas and breast cancer in Female and for lymphomas, thyroid, breast, and ovarian cancer for females.
Abstract: The relationship of cancer incidence to terrestrial radiation and population density was investigated. Cancer incidence was obtained using 40 years of age-standardized data from the Connecticut Tumor Registry, and environmental radiation was estimated using data from an airborne gamma radiation survey of the entire state. These variables were examined ecologically, using the 169 towns of the state as the analytic units in a weighted regression analysis. The study design involves a large population base in a state having relatively high terrestrial radiation exposure levels overall and reasonable variation in exposure between towns. For all cancer combined, only one of the eight sex-specific analyses by decade yielded a significant radiation regression coefficient, and this was negative. In the sex- and site-specific analyses, almost all the coefficients for radiation were not significantly different from zero. In contrast, significant positive relationships of cancer incidence with population density were found for all cancer, for cancer of the lung for both sexes, for stomach, colonic, and prostatic cancer for males, and for lymphomas, thyroid, breast, and ovarian cancer for females. Both the radiation and population density relationships were adjusted for socioeconomic status. Socioeconomic status was significantly negatively associated with stomach and lung cancer in males and with cervical cancer in females; it was also positively associated with lymphomas and breast cancer in females. A power calculation revealed that, despite the relatively large size of this study, there was only a small probability of detecting a radiation effect of the strength anticipated from previous estimates.

17 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The human evidence for fat as a cause of these cancers is weak and no positive relationship is evident in prospective studies between blood lipid levels and colon or breast cancers.

4 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The distribution of age at orchidopexy (or orchidectomy) of the 58 patients treated for undescended testis was almost identical to that expected on the basis of national rates as mentioned in this paper.

1 citations