INTRODUCTION
Childhood cancer has become a significant public health issue, with an
overall increase in incidence rates by 1% every year in the past three
decades 1. Life style changes and exposure to various
environmental factors are thought to contribute this trend besides
better cancer diagnosis. One of these environmental factors is cigarette
smoke, which contains approximately 7000 chemical compounds, 72 of them
are carcinogenic 2. Main source of cigarette smoke
exposure of children is parental smoking.Various chemicals related to
cigarette use have been detected in fetal blood, placenta, human breast
milk and tissue samples of infants including urine, blood and hair3. However, numerous studies have encountered
challenges in establishing a clear correlation between tobacco smoke
exposure and the incidence of childhood cancers. The application of
questionnaires, which are the most used method may potentially introduce
bias in studies. Cotinine is the main metabolite of nicotine which is
the most abundant organic compound of cigarette and is a reliable
biomarker of tobacco smoke exposure. Hair cotinine has longer half-time
than the other body samples and hair cotinine analysis is an efficient
way to detect chronic exposure. In this study, we used both
questionnaire and hair cotinine analysis to detect the extent of
environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) exposure among cancer patients and
establish the relationship between ETS and childhood cancer.