The following browsers support numerous web standards including CSS,XHTML, and the DOM (a universal means of controlling the behavior of web pages):
Please note that this is not intended be an exhaustive list of browsers that support web standards, nor a test of browser compliance, nor a side-by-side comparison of various manufacturers’ browsers.
New Public Access Data Tables
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The Long-Term Follow-Up Study
The on-line version of the current survey is unavailable at this time. Please complete the paper version of the questionnaire or call the LTFU center at 1-800-775-2167 to schedule a time to complete the questionnaire by phone.
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Approximately one in every 350 individuals living in the United States develops a cancer before the age of 20. In the 1940s and 1950s, few children survived cancer. In the 1960s however, researchers discovered ways to design therapies using combinations of chemotherapy drugs and combinations of different treatment modalities (chemotherapy, radiation, and surgery). These new approaches resulted in increasing numbers of patients experiencing sustained remission and cures.

With current therapies, more than 80 percent of children diagnosed with cancer can be expected to be long-term survivors. As a result, there now exists for the first time a large and rapidly growing population of individuals who have been cured of childhood cancer, and who have survived years, even decades, from the time they were treated. Unfortunately, however, as a consequence of their disease and treatment these long-term survivors now face significant, largely uncharacterized, risks to their health and well-being, which they must deal with for the remainder of their lives.
Thus, the population of childhood cancer survivors presents researchers with both an opportunity and an obligation: