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Research
High birth weight may raise brain tumour risk
Babies
who are heavy at birth weighing more than 4000 grams (8.8 pounds)may have
an increased risk for two of the most common types of brain tumors among children,
German researchers reported. Astrocytomas, which form in the large cells of
the nervous system, and medulloblastomas, which generally develop in the central
part or within the hemispheres of the brain, account for up to about half of
childhood brain tumours, noteed Dr Thomas Harder and colleagues at Charite-Universitatsmedizin
Berlin.
"Remarkably, for both of these types of childhood brain cancer high birth
weight was significantly associated with increased tumour risk," Harder
and colleagues report in the American Journal of Epidemiology. The investigators
found this association after looking at the combined findings from eight studies
that involved more than 1.7 million children younger than 19 years old. Over
4000 of these children developed astrocytomas, medulloblastomas, or tumors in
the cerebrospinal passageways of the brain known as ependymomas.
In studies reporting the development of astrocytomas, the researchers found
that each 1000 gram (2.2 pound) increase in birth weight increased risk by 19
percent.
Studies reporting the development of medulloblastomas also showed a significantly
increased risk among children who were heavy at birth, but risk did not appear
to increase with increasing birth weight, as found with astrocytomas, the investigators
note.
By contrast, they found no association between low birth weight and the development
of these two tumour types; nor did they identify a link between birth weight
and the development of ependymomas in the small number of studies reporting
on this type of tumour. Should follow up research find causal associations between
high birth weight and childhood cancers, measures to decrease the incidence
of high birth weight may be needed to curb the risk for brain tumours in children,
Harder and colleagues conclude.
Reuters
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