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Featured researches published by David Shore.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1992

Reduced fertility among women employed as dental assistants exposed to high levels of nitrous oxide

Andrew S. Rowland; Donna D. Baird; Clarice R. Weinberg; David Shore; Carl M. Shy; Allen J. Wilcox

BACKGROUND Fertility is reduced in female rats exposed to levels of nitrous oxide similar to those found in some dental offices. Epidemiologic studies have suggested an association between exposure to mixed anesthetic gases and impaired fertility. We investigated the effects of occupational exposure to nitrous oxide on the fertility of female dental assistants. METHODS Screening questionnaires were mailed to 7000 female dental assistants, ages 18 to 39, registered by the California Department of Consumer Affairs. Sixty-nine percent responded. Four hundred fifty-nine women were determined to be eligible, having become pregnant during the previous four years for reasons unrelated to the failure of birth control, and 91 percent of these women completed telephone interviews. Detailed information was collected on exposure to nitrous oxide and fertility (measured by the number of menstrual cycles without contraception that the women required to become pregnant). RESULTS After controlling for covariates, we found that women exposed to high levels of nitrous oxide were significantly less fertile than women who were unexposed or exposed to lower levels of nitrous oxide. The effect was evident only in the 19 women with five or more hours of exposure per week. These women were only 41 percent (95 percent confidence interval, 23 to 74 percent; P less than 0.003) as likely as unexposed women to conceive during each menstrual cycle. CONCLUSIONS Occupational exposure to high levels of nitrous oxide may adversely affect womens ability to become pregnant.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 1998

NIMH genetics initiative millennium schizophrenia consortium: Linkage analysis of African-American pedigrees

Charles A. Kaufmann; Brian K. Suarez; Dolores Malaspina; John R. Pepple; Dragan M. Svrakic; Paul D. Markel; Joanne M. Meyer; Christopher T. Zambuto; Karin Schmitt; Tara C. Matise; Jill Harkavy Friedman; Carol L. Hampe; Hang Lee; David Shore; Debra Wynne; Stephen V. Faraone; Ming T. Tsuang; C. Robert Cloninger

The NIMH Genetics Initiative is a multi-site collaborative study designed to create a national resource for genetic studies of complex neuropsychiatric disorders. Schizophrenia pedigrees have been collected at three sites: Washington University, Columbia University, and Harvard University. This article-one in a series that describes the results of a genome-wide scan with 459 short-tandem repeat (STR) markers for susceptibility loci in the NIMH Genetics Initiative schizophrenia sample-presents results for African-American pedigrees. The African-American sample comprises 30 nuclear families and 98 subjects. Seventy-nine of the family members were considered affected by virtue of having received a DSMIII-R diagnosis of schizophrenia (n = 71) or schizoaffective disorder, depressed (n = 8). The families contained a total of 42 independent sib pairs. While no region demonstrated evidence of significant linkage using the criteria suggested by Lander and Kruglyak, several regions, including chromosomes 6q16-6q24, 8pter-8q12, 9q32-9q34, and 15p13-15q12, showed evidence consistent with linkage (P = 0.01-0.05), providing independent support of findings reported in other studies. Moreover, the fact that different genetic loci were identified in this and in the European-American samples, lends credence to the notion that these genetic differences together with differences in environmental exposures may contribute to the reported differences in disease prevalence, severity, comorbidity, and course that has been observed in different racial groups in the United States and elsewhere.


Occupational and Environmental Medicine | 1994

The effect of occupational exposure to mercury vapour on the fertility of female dental assistants.

Andrew S. Rowland; Donna D. Baird; Clarice R. Weinberg; David Shore; Carl M. Shy; Allen J. Wilcox

Exposure to mercury vapour or inorganic mercury compounds can impair fertility in laboratory animals. To study the effects of mercury vapour on fertility in women, eligibility questionnaires were sent to 7000 registered dental assistants in California. The final eligible sample of 418 women, who had become pregnant during the previous four years, were interviewed by telephone. Detailed information was collected on mercury handling practices and the number of menstrual cycles without contraception it had taken them to become pregnant. Dental assistants not working with amalgam served as unexposed controls. Women with high occupational exposure to mercury were less fertile than unexposed controls. The fecundability (probability of conception each menstrual cycle) of women who prepared 30 or more amalgams per week and who had five or more poor mercury hygiene factors was only 63% of that for unexposed women (95% CI 42%-96%) after controlling for covariates. Women with low exposure were more fertile, however, than unexposed controls. Possible explanations for the U shaped dose response and limitations of the exposure measure are discussed. Further investigation is needed that uses biological measures of mercury exposure.


PLOS Genetics | 2008

Plasminogen Alleles Influence Susceptibility to Invasive Aspergillosis

Aimee K. Zaas; Guochun Liao; Jason W. Chien; Clarice R. Weinberg; David Shore; Steven S. Giles; Kieren A. Marr; Jonathan Usuka; Lauranell H. Burch; Lalith Perera; John R. Perfect; Gary Peltz; David A. Schwartz

Invasive aspergillosis (IA) is a common and life-threatening infection in immunocompromised individuals. A number of environmental and epidemiologic risk factors for developing IA have been identified. However, genetic factors that affect risk for developing IA have not been clearly identified. We report that host genetic differences influence outcome following establishment of pulmonary aspergillosis in an exogenously immune suppressed mouse model. Computational haplotype-based genetic analysis indicated that genetic variation within the biologically plausible positional candidate gene plasminogen (Plg; Gene ID 18855) correlated with murine outcome. There was a single nonsynonymous coding change (Gly110Ser) where the minor allele was found in all of the susceptible strains, but not in the resistant strains. A nonsynonymous single nucleotide polymorphism (Asp472Asn) was also identified in the human homolog (PLG; Gene ID 5340). An association study within a cohort of 236 allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) recipients revealed that alleles at this SNP significantly affected the risk of developing IA after HSCT. Furthermore, we demonstrated that plasminogen directly binds to Aspergillus fumigatus. We propose that genetic variation within the plasminogen pathway influences the pathogenesis of this invasive fungal infection.


Environmental Health Perspectives | 2006

Incidence of leukemia, lymphoma, and multiple myeloma in Czech uranium miners: a case-cohort study.

Rericha; Michal Kulich; Rericha R; David Shore; Dale P. Sandler

Objective Uranium miners are chronically exposed to low levels of radon and its progeny. We investigated whether radon exposure is associated with increased incidence of leukemia, lymphoma, or multiple myeloma in this population. Design We conducted a retrospective case–cohort study in 23,043 uranium miners and identified a total of 177 incident cases of leukemia, lymphoma, and myeloma. Detailed information on occupational radon exposure was obtained for the cases and a randomly selected subcohort of 2,393 subjects. We used the proportional hazards model with power relative risk (RR) function to estimate and test the effects of cumulative radon exposures on incidence rates. Results Incidence of all leukemia combined and chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) alone was positively associated with cumulative radon exposure. The RR comparing high radon exposure [110 working level months (WLM); 80th percentile] to low radon exposure (3 WLM; 20th percentile) was 1.75 [95% confidence interval (CI), 1.10–2.78; p = 0.014] for all leukemia combined and 1.98 (95% CI, 1.10–3.59; p = 0.016) for CLL. Myeloid leukemia and Hodgkin lymphoma were also associated with radon, but RRs were not statistically significant. There was no apparent association of radon with either non-Hodgkin lymphoma or multiple myeloma. Exposure to radon and its progeny was associated with an increased risk of developing leukemia in underground uranium miners. CLL, not previously believed to be radiogenic, was linked to radon exposure.


Epidemiology | 1996

Ethylene oxide exposure may increase the risk of spontaneous abortion, preterm birth, and postterm birth.

Andrew S. Rowland; Donna D. Baird; David Shore; Becky Darden; Allen J. Wilcox

&NA; Ethylene oxide is a gas used in some dental offices to sterilize equipment. In pregnant laboratory animals, ethylene oxide increases malformations and fetal loss. Increased gestation length has also been reported. In humans, two studies have reported increased spontaneous abortions among ethylene oxide‐exposed women, but few other data exist. We sent questionnaires to 7,000 dental assistants, age 18‐39 years, registered in California in 1987; 4,856 responded (69%). We based our analysis on 1,320 women whose most recent pregnancy was conceived while working full‐time. Thirty‐two women reported exposure to ethylene oxide; unexposed dental assistants comprised the comparison group. We estimated relative risks of spontaneous abortion and preterm birth using a person‐week model. We estimated relative risks of postterm birth (≥42 weeks) and a combined adverse outcomes model using logistic regression. Among exposed women, the age‐adjusted relative risk of spontaneous abortion was 2.5 [95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.0‐6.3], for preterm birth 2.7 (95% CI = 0.8‐8.8), and for postterm birth 2.1 (95% CI = 0.7‐5.9). The estimated relative risk of any of these adverse outcomes among exposed women was 2.5 (95% CI = 1.0‐6.1) after adjusting for age, nitrous oxide, and number of mercury amalgams prepared. These data further implicate ethylene oxide as a possible reproductive toxicant in humans.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 1998

Genome-Wide Search for Schizophrenia Susceptibility Loci: The NIMH Genetics Initiative and Millennium Consortium

C. Robert Cloninger; Charles A. Kaufmann; Stephen V. Faraone; Dolores Malaspina; Dragan M. Svrakic; Jill M. Harkavy-Friedman; Brian K. Suarez; Tara C. Matise; David Shore; Hang Lee; Carol L. Hampe; Debra Wynne; Caroline Drain; Paul D. Markel; Christopher T. Zambuto; Karin Schmitt; Ming T. Tsuang

Schizophrenia has a complex pattern of inheritance, indicative of interactions among multiple genes and environmental factors. The detection and replication of specific susceptibility loci for such complex disorders are facilitated by the availability of large samples of affected sib pairs and their nuclear families, along with standardized assessment and systematic ascertainment procedures. The NIMH Genetics Initiative on Schizophrenia, a multisite collaborative study, was established as a national resource with a centralized clinical data base and cell repository. The Millennium Schizophrenia Consortium has completed a genome-wide scan to detect susceptibility loci for schizophrenia in 244 individuals from the nuclear families of 92 independent pairs of schizophrenic sibs ascertained by the NIMH Genetics Initiative. The 459 marker loci used in the scan were spaced at 10-cM intervals on average. Individuals of African descent were higher than those of European descent in their average heterozygosity (79% vs. 76%, P < .0001) and number of alleles per marker (9.2 vs. 8.4, P < .0001). Also, the allele frequencies of 73% of the marker loci differed significantly (P < .01) between individuals of European and African ancestry. However, regardless of ethnic background, this sample was largely comprised of schizophrenics with more than a decade of psychosis associated with pervasive social and occupational impairment.


Epidemiology | 2002

DDT metabolite and androgens in African-American farmers.

Stephen A. Martin; Siobán D. Harlow; Mary Fran Sowers; Matthew P. Longnecker; David H. Garabrant; David Shore; Dale P. Sandler

Background. The ubiquitous dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) metabolite 1,1-dichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethylene (DDE) is an androgen receptor antagonist. Data on potential antiandrogenic activity of DDE in humans are limited. Methods. The relations between concentrations of plasma DDE and several serum androgens (total testosterone, bioavailable testosterone, 5&agr;-dihydrotestosterone, and free androgen index) were examined in 137 North Carolina black male farmers, using multiple linear regression. Results. Participants ranged in age from 30 to 88 years (mean = 62 years). Most had farmed for about 30 years and 27% reported having used DDT. The median DDE level was 7.7 &mgr;g per liter (1213 &mgr;g per kg lipid), slightly higher than in other recent studies. Overall, concentrations of DDE and androgens were unrelated. Total testosterone decreased 2% (95% confidence limits [CL] = −9%, 5%) per increase in interquartile distance of lipid-adjusted DDE. The percentage change in other hormones was similarly negligible. However, among those whose DDE level was in the top tenth percentile, compared with all others, total testosterone and free androgen index were lower by 23% (CL= −40%, 1%) and 22% (CL =−41%, 4%) respectively. Plasma androgen levels decreased with age, a relation that has previously been studied only in whites. Conclusions. Studies of more highly exposed populations may be needed to evaluate effects, if any, of DDE.


Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health | 2006

Indoor Radon and Lung Cancer Risk in Connecticut and Utah

Dale P. Sandler; Clarice R. Weinberg; David Shore; Victor E. Archer; Mary Bishop Stone; Joseph L. Lyon; Lynne Rothney-Kozlak; Marsha Shepherd; Jan A. J. Stolwijk

Radon is a well-established cause of lung cancer in miners. Residents of homes with high levels of radon are potentially also at risk. Although most individual studies of indoor radon have failed to demonstrate significant risks, results have generally been consistent with estimates from studies of miners. We studied 1474 incident lung cancer cases aged 40–79 yr in Connecticut, Utah, and southern Idaho. Population controls (n = 1811) were identified by random telephone screening and from lists of Medicare recipients, and were selected to be similar to cases on age, gender, and smoking 10 yr before diagnosis/interview using randomized recruitment. Complete residential histories and information on known lung cancer risk factors were obtained by in-person and telephone interviews. Radon was measured on multiple levels of past and current homes using 12-mo alpha-track etch detectors. Missing data were imputed using mean radon concentrations for informative subgroups of controls. Average radon exposures were lower than anticipated, with median values of 23 Bq/m3 in Connecticut and 45 Bq/m3 in Utah/southern Idaho. Overall, there was little association between time-weighted average radon exposures 5 to 25 yr prior to diagnosis/interview and lung cancer risk. The excess relative risk (ERR) associated with a 100-Bq/m3 increase in radon level was 0.002 (95% CI −0.21, 0.21) in the overall population, 0.134 (95% CI −0.23, 0.50) in Connecticut, and −0.112 (95% CI −0.34, 0.11) in Utah/Idaho. ERRs were higher for some subgroups less prone to misclassification, but there was no group with a statistically significant linear increase in risk. While results were consistent with the estimates from studies of miners, this study provides no evidence of an increased risk for lung cancer at the exposure levels observed. We are grateful to Drs. Stuart Shalat and Keith Schiager, who made early contributions to the design and implementation of this study, and to Patty Blanton for expert data management. Lynne Rothney-Kozlak and Jan A. J. Stolwijk were formerly affiliated with Yale University School of Public Health, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.


Archives of Environmental Health | 1993

Acute leukemia and residential proximity to potential sources of environmental pollutants.

David Shore; Dale P. Sandler; Frederick R. Davey; McIntyre Or; Bloomfield Cd

Possible associations between location of residence and acute leukemia risk were investigated in a study of 610 newly diagnosed patients, aged 18-79 y, and 618 population controls. There was an association between ever living within 5 miles (8 km) of an industrial plant and leukemia risk, with adjusted odds ratios (ORs) of 1.4 (95% confidence interval [95% CI] = 1.0-1.9) for all acute leukemias combined, 1.4 (95% CI = 1.0-2.0) for acute myeloid leukemia, and 1.7 (95% CI = 1.0-2.7) for acute lymphocytic leukemia. Odds ratios increased with decreasing distance from industrial sites, but a gradient with duration of residence was seen only among those less than age 60 who had lived within a mile of any industry. Suggestive associations were also observed for residence near specific industries, but the number of individuals living near any one industry was small.

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Dale P. Sandler

National Institutes of Health

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Clarice R. Weinberg

National Institutes of Health

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Allen J. Wilcox

National Institutes of Health

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Andrew S. Rowland

National Institutes of Health

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Donna D. Baird

National Institutes of Health

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Carl M. Shy

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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C. Robert Cloninger

Washington University in St. Louis

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Garth H. Rauscher

University of Illinois at Chicago

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