Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2136408 Leukemia Research 2016 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Net CLL risks are increased in persons with solid cancers not treated with radiation.•Net CLL risks are not increased in persons with solid cancers treated with radiation.•CLL 2nd cancer risk troughs occur only after solid 1st cancers treated with radiation.

Exposure to ionizing radiation is not thought to cause chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). Challenging this notion are recent data suggesting CLL incidence may be increased by radiation exposure from the atomic bombs (after many decades), uranium mining and nuclear power facility accidents. To assess the effects of therapeutic ionizing radiation for the treatment of solid neoplasms we studied CLL risks in data from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) Program. Specifically, we compared the risks of developing CLL in persons with a 1st non-hematologic cancer treated with or without ionizing radiation. We controlled for early detection effects on CLL risk induced by surveillance after 1st cancer diagnoses by forming all-time cumulative CLL relative risks (RR). We estimate such CLL RR to be 1.20 (95% confidence interval, 1.17, 1.23) for persons whose 1st cancer was not treated with ionizing radiation and 1.00 (0.96, 1.05) for persons whose 1st cancer was treated with ionizing radiations. These results imply that diagnosis of a solid neoplasm is associated with an increased risk of developing CLL only in persons whose 1st cancer was not treated with radiation therapy.

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Life Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Cancer Research
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