Purpose of review
We provide an overview of the etiology of childhood cancer, the state of the literature, and highlight some opportunities for future research, including technological advancements that could be applied to etiologic studies of childhood cancer to accelerate our understanding.
Recent findings
Risk factors of childhood cancer were summarized based on demographics and perinatal factors, environmental risk factors, and genetic risk factors. Overall, demographics and perinatal factors are the most well studied in relation to childhood cancer. While environmental risk factors have been implicated, more work is needed to pinpoint specific exposures, identify window(s) of susceptibility, and understand mechanisms. With genome-wide association studies (GWAS), genetic risk factors of eight childhood cancers have emerged, and opportunities remain to conduct GWAS for other cancer types and determine whether risk variants are inherited or de novo. Technological advancements that can shed light into the susceptibility of childhood cancer include metabolomics, using primary teeth as an exposure matrix, and long-read sequencing.
Summary
The development of childhood cancer remains largely not well understood. Collaboration to increase sample size to conduct analyses by histology and/or molecular subtype and application of novel technologies will accelerate our understanding of childhood cancer.