​Diagnosed with 9/11-Related Leukemia: Now What?
​Diagnosed with 9/11-Related Leukemia: Now What? Recently, researchers from New York teamed up with scientists from Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center to conduct a study to determine if first responders who were present in the Lower Manhattan exposure area on 9/11 or in the months that followed had a such as leukemia. This recent study adds more support to the already proven link between exposure to 9/11 toxins – by first responders, downtown workers, residents, students, and others – and leukemia and other forms of blood cancers.

Leukemia is the tenth most common cancer in the general public and the ninth most common cancer in the population exposed to the 9/11 toxins. Leukemia results in more than and more than 23,000 deaths, including almost that the certified as related to the 9/11 dust and fumes. It is among the most common childhood cancers, but it occurs more frequently in adults. It is both more common and more deadly in males than females. It is also most often diagnosed in people over 55.