The causes for 90% of childhood leukemias are unknown. Many studies suggest that environmental exposures of concern at Superfund sites, such as pesticides, metals, solvents, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), and polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), may increase the risk of developing childhood leukemia. However, these associations are based on parental reports or occupational exposures. This proposal provides a special opportunity to extend an existing case-control study of childhood leukemia being conducted in the San Francisco Bay and Central Valley areas by directly measuring environmental and chemical exposures, evaluating the interaction of environmental exposures by directly measuring environmental and chemical exposures, evaluating the interaction of environmental exposures with genetic susceptibility, and increasing the sample size and duration of study enrollment. Approximately, 30-40% of the combined study population will be Hispanic. Currently, two of three tiers of an exposure assessment are being implemented. Tier 1 enrolls and interviews cases and controls seeking to identify risk factors for the disease, including residential and occupational chemical exposures. In Tier 2, cases and birth certificate controls that have not changed residence based on specific criteria (approximately 50% of the Tier 1 study population) are part of a reliability study, which seeks to determine if self reported chemicals used at the time of interview are found in the home during a visual survey several months after interview. The focus of the current proposal, Tier 3, aims to document the potential for household exposures by sampling dust on the floor surfaces in a subset of homes of cases and controls participating in Tier 2. The objective is to identify if there are differences in concentrations of pesticides, metals, polyaromatic hydrocarbons, cotinine, polychlorinated biphenyls, and ethylenethiourea in the homes of cases and controls. Further, a case-case analysis will identify if cases with chromosomal translocations of interest life in homes with higher concentrations of target compounds than cases that do not have such translocations. These analysis will determine whether leukemic children with common genetic changes experience common exposures and whether these genetic changes have approximately the same temporal occurrence. Further, we will evaluate whether children with and without leukemia differ with respect to susceptibility to leukemia.

Project Start
2000-04-15
Project End
2001-03-31
Budget Start
Budget End
Support Year
14
Fiscal Year
2000
Total Cost
$293,470
Indirect Cost
Name
University of California Berkeley
Department
Type
DUNS #
094878337
City
Berkeley
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
94704
Lavy, Adi; Keren, Ray; Yu, Ke et al. (2018) A novel Chromatiales bacterium is a potential sulfide oxidizer in multiple orders of marine sponges. Environ Microbiol 20:800-814
Perttula, Kelsi; Schiffman, Courtney; Edmands, William M B et al. (2018) Untargeted lipidomic features associated with colorectal cancer in a prospective cohort. BMC Cancer 18:996
Edmands, William M B; Hayes, Josie; Rappaport, Stephen M (2018) SimExTargId: a comprehensive package for real-time LC-MS data acquisition and analysis. Bioinformatics 34:3589-3590
McHale, Cliona M; Osborne, Gwendolyn; Morello-Frosch, Rachel et al. (2018) Assessing health risks from multiple environmental stressors: Moving from G×E to I×E. Mutat Res 775:11-20
Bruton, Thomas A; Sedlak, David L (2018) Treatment of perfluoroalkyl acids by heat-activated persulfate under conditions representative of in situ chemical oxidation. Chemosphere 206:457-464
Schiffman, Courtney; McHale, Cliona M; Hubbard, Alan E et al. (2018) Identification of gene expression predictors of occupational benzene exposure. PLoS One 13:e0205427
Wiemels, Joseph L; Walsh, Kyle M; de Smith, Adam J et al. (2018) GWAS in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia reveals novel genetic associations at chromosomes 17q12 and 8q24.21. Nat Commun 9:286
Prasse, Carsten; Ford, Breanna; Nomura, Daniel K et al. (2018) Unexpected transformation of dissolved phenols to toxic dicarbonyls by hydroxyl radicals and UV light. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 115:2311-2316
Smith, Allan H; Marshall, Guillermo; Roh, Taehyun et al. (2018) Lung, Bladder, and Kidney Cancer Mortality 40?Years After Arsenic Exposure Reduction. J Natl Cancer Inst 110:241-249
Castriota, Felicia; Acevedo, Johanna; Ferreccio, Catterina et al. (2018) Obesity and increased susceptibility to arsenic-related type 2 diabetes in Northern Chile. Environ Res 167:248-254

Showing the most recent 10 out of 629 publications