Summary
Statistical analysis of parental age data from 225 sporadic cases of bilateral retinoblastoma, plus ten sporadic cases of chromosome deletion or translocation involving 13q14 that was identified as of paternal origin, revealed no evidence of paternal or maternal age effect. Parental exposure to ionizing radiation or chemical mutagens, the effect of which is accumulated with advancing age, does not seem to play a major role in the production of germinal mutations at the responsible (RB) locus. Furthermore, analysis of variation in the month of birth of 753 children with sporadic unilateral retinoblastoma did not show any significant deviation from the controls or a cyclic trend. The occurrence of nonheritable retinoblastoma is not likely to be associated with certain viruses such as human adenovirus 12 whose activity varies markedly with season. These results, together with the fairly uniform pattern in the incidence of this tumor among different populations, suggest that most, if not all, cases of sporadic retinoblastoma are caused by some intrinsic biological mechanisms, and not by environmental mutagens that may vary with respect to time and place.
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Matsunaga, E., Minoda, K. & Sasaki, M.S. Parental age and seasonal variation in the births of children with sporadic retinoblastoma: a mutation-epidemiologic study. Hum Genet 84, 155–158 (1990). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00208931
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00208931