Allergies May Raise Blood Cancer Risk
In contrast to some earlier reports,
allergic conditions appear to increase, rather than decrease,
the risk of leukemia and lymphoma, according to a Swedish study.
Depending on the root cause of
allergies, theories predict that allergic conditions may either
reduce or raise the risk of cancer, researchers explain in the
medical journal BMC Public Health.
While several studies have looked
at the allergy-cancer relationship by comparing people who have
cancer to those who do not, there have been few studies that looked
at a representative segment of the general population.
To investigate any connection between
allergies and blood cancers, Dr. Karin C. Soderberg, from the
Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, and colleagues analyzed data
from a group of 16,539 Swedish twins who were born between 1886
and 1925.
The presence of allergic conditions
was assessed with questionnaires administered in 1967. The group
was followed from 1969 to 1999, and cases of cancer were identified
through the Swedish Cancer Registry.
Analysis of the data indicated
that hives and asthma appeared to increase the risk of leukemia
by 2.1- and 1.6-fold, respectively. Similarly, eczema during childhood
was linked to a 2.3-fold higher risk of lymphoma.
As mentioned, the results run counter
to past studies, and the team suggests several possible reasons
for the disparity. Perhaps new treatments for allergies and asthma
also affect the chances developing cancer, for example.
Whatever the reason, they point
out that it's important to clarify "if and how" allergic conditions
are connected to blood cancers, since the prevalence of allergies
is increasing.
SOURCE: BMC Public Health, November
4, 2004.
Reference
Source 89
November 19, 2004
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