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Birth Order and Risk of Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma-True Association or Bias?

期刊

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
卷 172, 期 6, 页码 621-630

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/aje/kwq167

关键词

birth order; case-control studies; lymphoma; non-Hodgkin; selection bias; social class

资金

  1. Leukaemia Foundation of Australia [24]
  2. Italian Association for Cancer Research
  3. Italian League Against Cancer (Aviano-Napoli, Northern Italy)
  4. Canadian Cancer Society
  5. Canadian Institutes for Health Research (British Columbia)
  6. US National Cancer Institute (NCI) [CA62006]
  7. European Commission [QLK4-CT-2000-00422]
  8. Ministry of Health of the Czech Republic (EpiLymph-Czech Republic) [MZO MOU 2005]
  9. Association pour la Recherche contre le Cancer [5111]
  10. Fondation de France (EpiLymph-France) [1999 008471]
  11. Compagnia di San Paolo di Torino (EpiLymph-Italy)
  12. Health Research Board and Cancer Research Ireland (EpiLymph-Ireland)
  13. Spanish Ministry of Health, Fondo de Investigaciones Sanitarias [PI 081555]
  14. CIBER-ESP (EpiLymph-Spain) [06/06/0073]
  15. German Federal Office for Radiation Protection (EpiLymph-Germany) [StSch4261, StSch4420]
  16. NCI [CA51086, CA92153, PC65064, PC67008, PC67009, PC67010, PC71105, CA69269-02]
  17. European Community
  18. Italian League against Cancer (Italy)
  19. American Institute for Cancer Research (Nebraska) [99B083]
  20. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia (New South Wales) [990920, 568819, 510346]
  21. Swedish Cancer Society (SCALE) [04 0458]
  22. NCI (University of California, San Francisco) [CA45614, CA89745, CA87014, CA104682]
  23. Leukaemia Research Fund of Great Britain (United Kingdom)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

There is inconsistent evidence that increasing birth order may be associated with risk of non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). The authors examined the association between birth order and related variables and NHL risk in a pooled analysis (1983-2005) of 13,535 cases and 16,427 controls from 18 case-control studies within the International Lymphoma Epidemiology Consortium (InterLymph). Overall, the authors found no significant association between increasing birth order and risk of NHL (P-trend = 0.082) and significant heterogeneity. However, a significant association was present for a number of B- and T-cell NHL subtypes. There was considerable variation in the study-specific risks which was partly explained by study design and participant characteristics. In particular, a significant positive association was present in population-based studies, which had lower response rates in cases and controls, but not in hospital-based studies. A significant positive association was present in higher-socioeconomic-status (SES) participants only. Results were very similar for the related variable of sibship size. The known correlation of high birth order with low SES suggests that selection bias related to SES may be responsible for the association between birth order and NHL.

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