“…The latest mortality study (Izumi et al, 2003) suggested that such exposure did not lead to increased cancer mortality rates in childhood and young adulthood among the offspring born in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. This finding is consistent with earlier studies of the cohort, which found no dose-dependent increases in mortality (Kato et al, 1966;Neel et al, 1974;Yoshimoto et al, 1991;Little et al, 1994), childhood cancer (Yoshimoto et al, 1990), untoward pregnancy outcomes (Neel and Schull, 1956;Otake et al, 1990), cytogenetic abnormalities (Awa et al, 1987), or loss of enzyme activity (Neel et al, 1988). However, because cancers with high survival rates could not be adequately evaluated by mortality data, the effects of parental irradiation on cancer risks among the offspring need to be examined using the cancer incidence data.…”