The Influence of DNA Repair Genes and Prenatal Tobacco Exposure on Risk of Childhood Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia-A Gene-Environment Interaction Study.
Wang X, Zhong C, Ma X, Metayer C, Mancuso N, Gauderman W, Wiemels J. The Influence of DNA Repair Genes and Prenatal Tobacco Exposure on Risk of Childhood Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia-A Gene-Environment Interaction Study. Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers & Prevention 2024, of1-of8. PMID: 39495115, DOI: 10.1158/1055-9965.epi-24-1037.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchPrenatal tobacco exposureTobacco exposureGene-environment interaction studiesNon-Latino white childrenAcute lymphoblastic leukemia riskChildhood ALL riskRepair genesGene-environment interactionsAcute lymphoblastic leukemiaStatistically significant interactionPotential risk factorsDNA repair genesTobacco smokeLatino childrenPediatric oncologyALL riskTargeted preventionWhite childrenLogistic regressionEpidemiological studiesEnvironmental exposuresRisk factorsTobaccoGenotype dataSignificant interaction