Environment May Be
Linked to Rising Leukemia
Pesticides or chemicals in the environment
may be behind the steady rise in cases of childhood leukemia,
which have increased five-fold since the early 1900s, scientists
said.
Fewer children actually die from
the blood cancer than 40-50 years ago but cases have increased
about one percent per year in the last half century.
"It represents a five-fold increase,"
Professor Michel Coleman of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical
Medicine told a conference delving into the causes of the increase.
From about 10 cases per million
population in England and Wales in 1911-1915, cases rose to about
46 per million at the end of the century.
"The evidence suggests a steady
increase in the occurrence of leukemia in this country and in
others," said Coleman.
Leukemia is the most common childhood
cancer, accounting for nearly one-third of all cases. Most of
the rise is in children aged 1 to 4.
Boys have about a 10 percent higher
risk of developing the disease, according to Coleman.
Professor Denis Henshaw of the
University of Bristol in south-western England and chairman of
the conference, said a possible cause could be environmental agents
or chemicals that were not around 50 years ago.
Children are thought to be predisposed
to the illness at birth by something that occurs in the womb but
they do not develop it unless it is triggered by causes as yet
unknown.
Ionising radiation, electromagnetic
fields, viruses, infections and chemicals and pesticides are thought
to be possible triggers.
Professor Alan Preece, also from
the University of Bristol, presented research showing the unborn
child is particularly sensitive to the effects of exposure to
such agents.
In laboratory and animal studies,
Preece found levels of such compounds were higher in the fetus
than in the placenta or the mother.
"The environmental agents cross
the placenta and accumulate in certain foetal organs, varying
according to the nature of the agent," Preece said.
"The exact levels are as yet unknown
but we know that childhood leukemia is initiated in utero and
this could well be a factor in the initiation."
More than 200 doctors and specialists
are attending the week-long meeting, organized by Children with
Leukemia, Britain's leading charity devoted to conquering the
illness.
Reference
Source 89
September 7, 2004
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