| Literature DB >> 35118581 |
Brigitte Schlehofer1, Maria Blettner2, Monika Moissonnier3, Isabelle Deltour3, Graham G Giles4,5,6, Bruce Armstrong7, Jack Siemiatycki8, Marie-Elise Parent9, Daniel Krewski10, Christoffer Johansen11, Anssi Auvinen12,13, Anna Lahkola13, Martine Hours14, Gabriele Berg-Beckhoff15, Siegal Sadetzki16,17,18, Susanna Lagorio19, Toru Takebayashi20, Naohito Yamaguchi21, Alistair Woodward22, Angus Cook23, Tore Tynes24, Lars Klaboe25, Maria Feychting26, Richard Feltbower27, Anthony Swerdlow28, Minouk Schoemaker28, Elisabeth Cardis29,30,31, Joachim Schüz32.
Abstract
We investigated the association of allergic diseases and epilepsy with risk of brain tumours, in Interphone, a 13-country case-control study. Data were obtained from 2693 glioma cases, 2396 meningioma cases, and 1102 acoustic neuroma cases and their 6321 controls. Conditional logistic regression models were used to estimate pooled odds ratios (ORs) and their respective 95% confidence intervals (CIs), adjusted for education and time at interview. Reduced ORs were observed for glioma in relation to physician-diagnosed asthma (OR = 0.73; CI 0.58-0.92), hay fever (OR 0.72; CI 0.61-0.86), and eczema (OR 0.78, CI 0.64-0.94), but not for meningioma or acoustic neuroma. Previous diagnosis of epilepsy was associated with an increased OR for glioma (2.94; CI 1.87-4.63) and for meningioma (2.12; CI 1.27-3.56), but not for acoustic neuroma. This large-scale case-control study adds to the growing evidence that people with allergies have a lower risk of developing glioma, but not meningioma or acoustic neuroma. It also supports clinical observations of epilepsy prior to the diagnosis of glioma and meningioma.Entities:
Keywords: Allergies; Brain tumours; Epilepsy; Multicenter case–control study
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35118581 DOI: 10.1007/s10654-022-00843-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Epidemiol ISSN: 0393-2990 Impact factor: 8.082