Abstract

A cohort study designed to evaluate the carcinogenicity of treatment for Hodgkin's disease (HD) was begun in 1976. This report describes 1,553 patients diagnosed with HD in 1940–75 and presents an analysis of follow-up findings through 1976. Twenty-seven cancers (excluding basal cell and squamous cell carcinomas of skin, trichoepitheliomas, and in situ carcinomas of cervix uteri) were observed 1 year or more after diagnosis of HD, including 6 leukemias. The relative risk (RR) of leukemia in patients treated with intensive chemotherapy with or without radiotherapy relative to general population incidence rates was 140 (95% confidence limits: 50,300). In the subgroup treated with both intensive radiotherapy and intensive chemotherapy, the RR of leukemia was 270 (95% confidence limits: 56,800). No leukemia occurred after treatment with intensive radiotherapy without chemotherapy. For cancers other than leukemia and for non-HD lymphomas, RR were generally not significantly different from the null value one.

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