Literature DB >> 22652680

Bladder cancer documentation of causes: multilingual questionnaire, 'bladder cancer doc'.

Klaus Golka1, Yael Abreu-Villaca, Rowshanak Anbari Attar, Miriam Angeli-Greaves, Muhammad Aslam, Nursen Basaran, Rouslana Belik, Chaniphun Butryee, Orietta Dalpiaz, Keneshbek Dzhusupov, Thorsten H Ecke, Henrieta Galambos, Henrieta Galambos, Helena Gerilovica, Holger Gerullis, Patricia Casares Gonzalez, Maria E Goossens, Lela Gorgishvili-Hermes, Chris F Heyns, Jasmin Hodzic, Fumihiko Ikoma, Patrice Jichlinski, Boo-Hyon Kang, Ernst Kiesswetter, Kannan Krishnamurthi, Marie-Louise Lehmann, Irina Martinova, Rama Devi Mittal, Beerappa Ravichandran, Imre Romics, Bidyut Roy, Fransiska Rungkat-Zakaria, Konrad Rydzynski, Cristian Scutaru, Jianhua Shen, Maria Soufi, Karlygash Toguzbaeva, Trinh Vu Duc, Agata Widera, Mohamed Wishahi, Jan G Hengstler.   

Abstract

There is a considerable discrepancy between the number of identified occupational-related bladder cancer cases and the estimated numbers particularly in emerging nations or less developed countries where suitable approaches are less or even not known. Thus, within a project of the World Health Organisation Collaborating Centres in Occupational Health, a questionnaire of the Dortmund group, applied in different studies, was translated into more than 30 languages (Afrikaans, Arabic, Bengali, Chinese, Czech, Dutch, English, Finnish, French, Georgian, German, Greek, Hindi, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Kannada, Kazakh, Kirghiz, Korean, Latvian, Malay, Persian (Farsi), Polish, Portuguese, Portuguese/Brazilian, Romanian, Russian, Serbo-Croatian, Slovak, Spanish, Spanish/Mexican, Tamil, Telugu, Thai, Turkish, Urdu, Vietnamese). The bipartite questionnaire asks for relevant medical information in the physician's part and for the occupational history since leaving school in the patient's part. Furthermore, this questionnaire is asking for intensity and frequency of certain occupational and non-occupational risk factors. The literature regarding occupations like painter, hairdresser or miner and exposures like carcinogenic aromatic amines, azo dyes, or combustion products is highlighted. The questionnaire is available on www.ifado.de/BladderCancerDoc.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22652680     DOI: 10.2741/e585

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Front Biosci (Elite Ed)        ISSN: 1945-0494


  5 in total

Review 1.  Medical follow-up for workers exposed to bladder carcinogens: the French evidence-based and pragmatic statement.

Authors:  Bénédicte Clin; Jean-Claude Pairon
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2014-11-06       Impact factor: 3.295

2.  Distinct SNP combinations confer susceptibility to urinary bladder cancer in smokers and non-smokers.

Authors:  Holger Schwender; Silvia Selinski; Meinolf Blaszkewicz; Rosemarie Marchan; Katja Ickstadt; Klaus Golka; Jan G Hengstler
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-12-20       Impact factor: 3.240

3.  Highlight report: Functional consequences of urinary bladder cancer risk variants.

Authors:  Silvia Selinski
Journal:  EXCLI J       Date:  2013-12-05       Impact factor: 4.068

4.  Relevance of genetic disposition versus environmental exposure for cancer risk: an old controversy revisited with novel methods.

Authors:  H M Bolt
Journal:  EXCLI J       Date:  2013-01-28       Impact factor: 4.068

5.  Interaction of genetic variants towards increased cancer risk.

Authors:  Seddik Hammad
Journal:  EXCLI J       Date:  2013-07-09       Impact factor: 4.068

  5 in total

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