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Prenatal
vitamin supplementation and pediatric brain tumors: huge international variation
in use and possible reduction in risk
Preston-Martin S, Pogoda JM, Mueller BA, Lubin F, Modan B, Holly EA,
Filippini G, Cordier S, Peris-Bonet R, Choi W, Little J, Arslan A
Department of Preventive Medicine, University of Southern
California, USC/Norris Cancer Center, Los Angeles 90033-0800, USA.
An international case-control study of primary pediatric brain tumors included
interviews with mothers of cases diagnosed from 1976-1994 and mothers of
population controls.
Data are available on maternal vitamin use during pregnancy for 1051 cases and
for 1919 controls in eight geographic areas of North America, Europe and
Israel.
While risk estimates varied by study center, combined results suggest that
maternal supplementation for two trimesters may decrease risk of brain tumor
[odds ratio (OR)=0.7; 95% confidence interval (CI)=0.5-0.9], with a trend toward
less risk with longer duration of use (P trend= 0.0007).
The greatest risk reduction was among children diagnosed under 5 years of age
whose mothers used supplements during all three trimesters (OR=0.5; CI=0.3-
0.8).
This effect did not vary by histology and was seen for supplementation during
pregnancy rather than during the month before pregnancy or while breast
feeding.
These findings are largely driven by data from the US, where most mothers took
vitamins.
The proportion of control mothers who took vitamins during pregnancy varied
tremendously, from 3% in Israel and in France through 21% in Italy, 33% in
Canada, 52% in Spain to 86-92% at the three US centers.
The composition of the various multivitamin compounds taken also varied: daily
dose of vitamin C ranged from 0 up to 600 mg; vitamin E from 0 to 70 mg; vitamin
A from 0 to 30,000 IU and folate from 0 to 2000 mg.
Mothers also took individual micronutrient supplements (e.g., vitamin C
tablets), but most mothers who took these also took multivitamins, making it
impossible to determine potential independent effects of these micronutrients.
PMID: 9840378 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Source: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=9840378&dopt=Abstract
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