Dorak M Tevfik, Pearce Mark S, Hammal Donna M, McNally Richard J Q, Parker Louise
Paediatric and Lifecourse Epidemiology Research Group, Sir James Spence Institute, School of Clinical Medical Sciences, Newcastle University, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, UK.
Cancer Causes Control. 2007 Mar;18(2):219-28. doi: 10.1007/s10552-006-0093-8. Epub 2007 Jan 6.
Higher birth weight and maternal history of miscarriage has been associated with an increased risk of childhood leukemia. The possibility that this association may be sex-specific has not been explored in detail in previous studies.
In a retrospective case-control study, 732 childhood (< or =14 years) cancer cases from a population-based Registry in Northern England whose hospital birth records could be accessed and 3,723 controls matched for date and hospital of birth to the cases were compared. We examined birth weight for sex-specific associations with childhood cancer. Conditional logistic regression analysis was used for statistical evaluation of associations.
In acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) (225 cases and 1,163 matched controls), birth weight and sex showed a strong interaction (P = 0.003). In boys with ALL, but not in girls, there was a nonlinear association with birth weight (P for trend = 0.008; OR = 3.05 for the highest quintile compared to the second lowest quintile, 95% CI = 1.40-6.64; P = 0.005). When birth weights were adjusted using UK standards for gestational age and sex, the risk associations were similar in statistical significance and magnitude. Maternal history of miscarriage showed an association with all cancers and individually with ALL. The miscarriage association with ALL was statistically significant in boys only (OR = 1.91, 95% CI = 1.07-3.42; P = 0.03). A multivariable model for ALL containing other examined maternal and reproductive variables confirmed the independence of the birth weight and miscarriage associations. There was no birth weight or miscarriage associations in other cancers.
This study confirmed the risk associations with birth weight and miscarriages in childhood ALL. Statistically significant association of size at birth suggested marked differences in etiology between girls and boys.
较高的出生体重和母亲流产史与儿童白血病风险增加有关。此前的研究尚未详细探讨这种关联是否存在性别差异。
在一项回顾性病例对照研究中,对来自英格兰北部基于人群的登记处的732例儿童(≤14岁)癌症病例进行了比较,这些病例的医院出生记录可获取,同时选取了3723名与病例出生日期和出生医院相匹配的对照。我们研究了出生体重与儿童癌症的性别特异性关联。采用条件逻辑回归分析对关联进行统计学评估。
在急性淋巴细胞白血病(ALL)(225例病例和1163名匹配对照)中,出生体重和性别显示出强烈的交互作用(P = 0.003)。在患ALL的男孩中,而非女孩中,出生体重与ALL存在非线性关联(趋势P = 0.008;最高五分位数与第二低五分位数相比,OR = 3.05,95%CI = 1.40 - 6.64;P = 0.005)。当根据英国的孕周和性别标准对出生体重进行调整后,风险关联在统计学意义和强度上相似。母亲流产史与所有癌症以及单独与ALL均有关联。流产与ALL的关联仅在男孩中具有统计学意义(OR = 1.91,95%CI = 1.07 - 3.42;P = 0.03)。包含其他所检查的母亲和生殖变量的ALL多变量模型证实了出生体重和流产关联的独立性。在其他癌症中不存在出生体重或流产关联。
本研究证实了儿童ALL与出生体重和流产之间的风险关联。出生时大小的统计学显著关联表明男孩和女孩在病因上存在明显差异。