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Associations between birth defects and childhood and adolescent germ cell tumors according to sex, histologic subtype, and site.

Jeremy M SchrawPagna SokTania A DesrosiersAmanda E JanitzPeter H LangloisMark A CanfieldA Lindsay FrazierSharon E PlonPhilip J LupoJenny N Poynter
Published in: Cancer (2023)
We investigated whether birth defects (such as congenital heart disease or Down syndrome) are linked to childhood germ cell tumors (GCTs), cancers that mainly develop in the ovaries or testes. We studied different types of birth defects (defects that were caused by chromosome changes such as Down syndrome or Klinefelter syndrome and defects that were not) and different types of GCTs. Only chromosome changes such as Down syndrome or Klinefelter syndrome were linked to GCTs. Our study suggests that most children with birth defects are not at an increased risk of GCTs because most birth defects are not caused by chromosome changes.
Keyphrases
  • germ cell
  • congenital heart disease
  • gestational age
  • young adults
  • mental health
  • case report
  • gene expression
  • pregnant women
  • early life
  • preterm birth