Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Breastfeeding and early infection in the aetiology of childhood leukaemia in Down syndrome

2009; Springer Nature; Volume: 101; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1038/sj.bjc.6605244

ISSN

1532-1827

Autores

Janet Flores‐Lujano, María Luisa Pérez‐Saldivar, Ezequiel M. Fuentes‐Pananá, Clara Gorodezky, Roberto Bernáldez-Rı́os, M. Angeles Del Campo-Martinez, Armando Martínez‐Avalos, Aurora Medina‐Sansón, Rogelio Paredes‐Aguilera, J De Diego-Flores Chapa, Victoria Bolea-Murga, M. C. Rodríguez-Zepeda, Roberto Rivera‐Luna, Miguel Ángel Palomo-Collí, Lina Romero‐Guzman, Patricia Pérez‐Vera, Martha Alvarado‐Ibarra, F Salamanca-Gómez, Arturo Fajardo‐Gutiérrez, Juan Manuel Mejı́a-Aranguré,

Tópico(s)

Immunodeficiency and Autoimmune Disorders

Resumo

For a child to develop acute leukaemia (AL), environmental exposure may not be sufficient: interaction with a susceptibility factor to the disease, such as Down syndrome (DS), may also be necessary. We assessed whether breastfeeding and early infection were associated with the risk of developing AL in children with DS. Children with DS in Mexico City, and either with or without AL, were the cases (N=57) and controls (N=218), respectively. Population was divided in children with AL and with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) and also in children ⩽6 and >6 years old. Breastfeeding and early infections showed moderate (but not significant) association for AL, whereas hospitalisation by infection during the first year of life increased the risk: odds ratios (confidence interval 95%) were 0.84 (0.43–1.61), 1.70 (0.82–3.52); and 3.57 (1.59–8.05), respectively. A similar result was obtained when only ALL was analysed. We found that breastfeeding was a protective factor for developing AL and ALL, and during the first year of life, infections requiring hospitalisation were related to a risk for developing the disease in those children with DS >6 years of age. These data do not support the Greaves's hypothesis of early infection being protective for developing ALL.

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