High Birth Weight Linked to Leukemia
Risk
Heavy babies apparently face a heightened
risk of one type of childhood leukemia, a Scandinavian study indicates.
Each kilogram increase in birth
weight appears to increase the risk of acute lymphoblastic leukemia
(ALL) by 26 percent, according to a report in the Journal of the
National Cancer Institute. In contrast, high birth weight does
not seem to raise the risk of acute myeloid leukemia (AML).
The findings come from a study
of 1900 children with ALL, 300 with AML, and a matched comparison
group of more than 10,000 healthy children living in Denmark,
Sweden, Norway or Iceland.
As noted, the risk of ALL was directly
related to birth weight. Moreover, the association was found to
be similar across all ages and for both the B-cell and T-cell
subtypes of ALL, Dr. Lisa Lyngsie Hjalgrim, from the Statens Serum
Institut in Copenhagen, and colleagues report.
However, analysis of sibling data
revealed that children who developed ALL did not weigh more than
their brothers or sisters at birth, the researchers point out.
"Our results are compatible with
the hypothesis that high birth weight modifies the risk of ALL,
either through proliferative stress and/or increasing the number
of cells at risk of leukemia-associated genetic aberrations,"
the investigators conclude.
SOURCE: Journal of the National
Cancer Institute, October 20, 2004.
Reference
Source 89
Oct 26, 2004
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