Wartenberg D, Schneider D, Brown S
UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, The Cancer Institute of New Jersey, New Brunswick, NJ, 170 Frelinghuysen Road, Piscataway, NJ 08854, USA.
Br J Cancer. 2004 May 4;90(9):1771-6. doi: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6601734.
We evaluated the infectious aetiology hypothesis of childhood leukaemia that rapid population influx into rural areas is associated with increased risk. Using data from the US SEER program, we found that in changes in rural county population sizes from 1980 to 1989 were associated with incidence rates for childhood acute lymphocytic leukaemia (ALL). The observed associations were strongest among children 0-4 years of age, born in the same state as diagnosis, in extremely rural counties, and when counties adjacent to nonrural counties were excluded. Similar analyses for brain and central nervous system (CNS) cancer in children, a disease less linked to this infectious hypothesis, provide evidence against methodologic bias. Similar evaluations for other decades were not meaningful due to limited sample sizes and, perhaps, increased population mobility.
我们评估了儿童白血病的感染病因假说,即农村地区人口的快速涌入与风险增加有关。利用美国监测、流行病学和最终结果(SEER)项目的数据,我们发现1980年至1989年农村县人口规模的变化与儿童急性淋巴细胞白血病(ALL)的发病率相关。在0-4岁、与诊断所在州出生相同、处于极度农村县且排除与非农村县相邻的县的儿童中,观察到的关联最为强烈。对儿童脑和中枢神经系统(CNS)癌症进行的类似分析(这种疾病与该感染假说的联系较少)提供了反对方法学偏差的证据。由于样本量有限,或许还有人口流动性增加的原因,对其他几十年进行的类似评估没有意义。