Literature DB >> 16308412

Socioeconomic status and childhood leukaemia: a review.

Charles Poole1, Sander Greenland, Crystal Luetters, Jennifer L Kelsey, Gabor Mezei.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: A long-held view links higher socioeconomic status (SES) to higher rates of childhood leukaemia. Some recent studies exhibit associations in the opposite direction.
METHODS: We reviewed journal literature through August 2002 for associations between childhood leukaemia and socioeconomic measures. We determined the direction of each association and its P-value. We described the results with regard to study design, calendar period, geographic locale, and level of the socioeconomic measures (individual or ecological). For measures with sufficient number of results, we computed summary P-values across studies.
RESULTS: Case-control studies conducted in North America since 1980 have involved subject interviews or self-administered questionnaires and have consistently reported inverse (negative) associations of childhood leukaemia with individual-level measures of family income, mother's education, and father's education. In contrast, associations have been consistently positive with father's occupational class in record-based case-control studies and with average occupational class in ecological studies.
CONCLUSIONS: Connections of SES measures to childhood leukaemia are likely to vary with place and time. Validation studies are needed to estimate SES-related selection and participation in case-control studies. Because different socioeconomic measures (such as income and education) and individual-level and ecological-level measures may represent different risk factors, we advise researchers to report these measures separately rather than in summary indices of social class.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2005        PMID: 16308412     DOI: 10.1093/ije/dyi248

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Epidemiol        ISSN: 0300-5771            Impact factor:   7.196


  42 in total

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5.  Socioeconomic Status and Childhood Cancer Incidence: A Population-Based Multilevel Analysis.

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7.  Maternal prenatal intake of one-carbon metabolism nutrients and risk of childhood leukemia.

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8.  Risk of leukemia in relation to exposure to ambient air toxics in pregnancy and early childhood.

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9.  Household exposure to paint and petroleum solvents, chromosomal translocations, and the risk of childhood leukemia.

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10.  The incidence of and mortality from leukaemias in the UK: a general population-based study.

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