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首页> 外文期刊>International Journal of Obesity >Birthweight, childhood overweight, height and growth and adult cancer risks: a review of studies using the Copenhagen School Health Records Register
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Birthweight, childhood overweight, height and growth and adult cancer risks: a review of studies using the Copenhagen School Health Records Register

机译:出生体重,儿童超重,高度和成年癌症风险:使用哥本哈根学校卫生记录注册的研究综述

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摘要

Most identified risk factors for cancer primarily occur in adulthood. As cancers generally have long latency periods, it is possible that risk factors acting earlier in life and accumulation of risks across the life course are important. Thus, focusing only on adult overweight as a modifiable risk factor may overlook childhood as an important aetiologic time window when body size is relevant for future cancer risks. The objective of this study was to review the evidence for associations between birthweight, body mass index (BMI), height and growth from 7-13 years and adult cancer risks based on studies using the Copenhagen School Health Records Register. The register contains measured anthropometric information on 372,636 children born in 1930-1989. All studies examining associations between early life body size and risks of adult cancer (until 85 years, diagnosed in 1968-2015) were included, comprising 31 studies on 16 different cancer sites. Cancer diagnoses were retrieved via individual-level linkages to the Danish Cancer Registry. Birthweight was differentially associated with bladder, breast, colon, glioma, Hodgkin's disease, liver, kidney (renal cell), melanoma, ovarian, rectal, testicular and thyroid cancer. BMI in childhood was positively associated with risks of bladder (only late childhood), colon, endometrial, kidney, liver, oesophageal (only late childhood), ovarian, pancreatic (<70 years), prostate (only before childhood height adjustment) and thyroid cancer, whereas it was inversely associated with breast cancer. Child height was positively associated with breast, colon, endometrial, glioma, Hodgkin's disease, kidney, melanoma, oesophageal (only women), ovarian, prostate, testicular and thyroid cancer and inversely associated with bladder cancer. Greater than average increases in childhood BMI or linear growth at ages 7-13 increased risks of several cancers. Early life body size and growth are associated with many, but not all adult cancers, suggesting that the aetiology of several cancers may lie earlier in life than previously thought.
机译:大多数已识别的癌症的危险因素主要发生在成年期。随着癌症一般具有长期延迟期,危险因素可能在生命中前面的危险因素和寿命过程中的风险积累很重要。因此,仅关注成人超重作为可修改的危险因素可能会忽略童年,因为身体尺寸与未来癌症风险相关的重要性的疾病。本研究的目的是审查7-13岁及成人癌症风险的出生体重,体重指数(BMI),身高和增长之间的协会的证据,并根据使用哥本哈根学校卫生记录登记册。寄存器包含关于1930 - 1989年出生的372,636名儿童的测量人体测量信息。所有研究均包括检查早期寿命体重和成人癌症风险(直至1968 - 2015年诊断的85年)之间的关联,包括31种不同癌症部位的研究。通过对丹麦癌症登记处的个体水平联系来检索癌症诊断。出生重量与膀胱,乳腺,结肠,胶质瘤,霍奇金病,肝肾(肾细胞),黑素瘤,卵巢,直肠,睾丸和甲状腺癌差异化。童年的BMI与膀胱的风险呈正相关(幼儿晚期),结肠,子宫内膜,肾脏,肝脏,食管(仅限儿童),卵巢,胰腺(<70年),前列腺(仅在儿童身高调整之前)和甲状腺癌症,而它与乳腺癌相反。儿童身高与乳腺癌,结肠,子宫内膜,胶质瘤,霍奇金病,黑素瘤,食管(仅女性),卵巢,前列腺,睾丸和甲状腺癌和与膀胱癌反向相关的乳腺癌。大于儿童BMI的平均水平增加或7-13岁的线性增长增加了几种癌症的风险。早期生命身体的大小和生长与许多但不是所有成年癌症有关,表明几种癌症的病毒学可能比以前想象的早期谎言。

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