| Literature DB >> 17366838 |
Beverly S Kingsley1, Karen L Schmeichel, Carol H Rubin.
Abstract
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) continues to be aware of the need for response to public concern as well as to state and local agency concern about cancer clusters. In 1990 the CDC published the "Guidelines for Investigating Clusters of Health Events," in which a four-stage process was presented. This document has provided a framework that most state health departments have adopted, with modifications pertaining to their specific situations, available resources, and philosophy concerning disease clusters. The purpose of this present article is not to revise the CDC guidelines; they retain their original usefulness and validity. However, in the past 15 years, multiple cluster studies as well as scientific and technologic developments have affected duster science and response (improvements in cancer registries, a federal initiative in environmental public health tracking, refinement of biomarker technology, cluster identification using geographic information systems software, and the emergence of the Internet). Thus, we offer an addendum for use with the original document. Currently, to address both the needs of state health departments as well as public concern, the CDC now a) provides a centralized, coordinated response system for cancer cluster inquiries, b) supports an electronic cancer cluster listserver, c) maintains an informative web page, and d) provides support to states, ranging from laboratory analysis to epidemiologic assistance and expertise. Response to cancer clusters is appropriate public health action, and the CDC will continue to provide assistance, facilitate communication among states, and foster the development of new approaches in duster science.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17366838 PMCID: PMC1797849 DOI: 10.1289/ehp.9021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Perspect ISSN: 0091-6765 Impact factor: 9.031
Recent CDC-sponsored cancer cluster activities in the United States.
| Year | CDC cluster activities |
|---|---|
| 2002 | CCPITS |
| 2002–2003 | Survey of state protocols in cancer clusters (56 states/territories) |
| 2002 | State site visits (AZ, OH, NJ, MA) |
| 2003 | State and Federal Technical Capacity Building Workshop: Response to Cancer Clusters with Suspected Environmental Etiology (CA, FL, GA, MA, MD, MN, NY, SC, TX, WA; |
| 2003 | Electronic listserver (185 participants; |
| 2002–2003 | Survey of media reports on cancer clusters |
| 2001–2003 | Assistance to Nevada State Department of Health; Cross Sectional Exposure Assessment of Case Children with Leukemia and a Reference Population in Churchill County, Nevada ( |
| 2003–2005 | Assistance to the CCHD and the Arizona Department of Health Services; Biosampling of Children with Leukemia plus a Comparison Population in Sierra Vista, Arizona ( |
Figure 1NCEH Cancer Cluster Public Inquiry Triage System. Abbreviations: APRHB, Air Pollution and Respiratory Health Branch; HSB, Health Studies Branch; RSB, Radiation Studies Branch; SHD, state health department; U.S. EPA, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
Figure 2The 15 most commonly used environmental exposure terms found in articles pertaining to cancer clusters published in U.S. newspapers from 1977 to 2001.
Software available for disease cluster analysis.
| Software name/package | Fee | GIS functions | Website | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CLUSTER 3.1 | Yes | None | ||
| ClusterSeer | Yes | Compatible | ||
| CrimeStat 3.0 | Yes | None | ||
| DMAP | No | Built in | ||
| EpiAnalyst | Yes | Compatible | ||
| GeoDa 0.9.5-1 | No | Built in | ||
| Point Pattern Analysis (PPA) | No | None | ||
| R-Geo 2.0.0 | No | Compatible | ||
| S+SpatialStats | Yes | Compatible | ||
| SaTScan | No | None | ||
| SpaceStat | Yes | Compatible |
Features of these software packages are compared in a review by Anselin (2004).