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The
contribution of nonmalignant tumors to CNS tumor incidence rates among children
in the United States
James
G. Gurney1,+,
Donna A. Wall2,
Patti J. Jukich3,
Faith G. Davis3
1,+University of Minnesota, Division of Pediatric
Epidemiology, Dept. of Pediatrics, 1300 S, 2nd St., Suite 300, Minneapolis, MN
55454, USA; 2Cardinal Glennon Childrens
Hospital, Saint Louis University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, USA; 3Central Brain
Tumor
Registry of the United States and University of Illinois at Chicago School of
Public Health, Chicago, IL, USA
Objectives.
According the U.S. National Cancer Institute (NCI), the incidence rate of
primary malignant central nervous system (CNS) neoplasms among children is about
30 per million person-years.
This rate, however, underestimates the true burden
of CNS tumors because nonmalignancies are not included in the NCI case reporting
system.
Intracranial tumors, to an extent regardless of their histological
behavior, can have a malignant clinical course and result in a high degree of
morbidity and mortality.
The purpose of this report is to estimate the
contribution that nonmalignant tumors have on the overall incidence of CNS
tumors in children.
Methods.
Population-based data from the Central Brain
Tumor Registry of the United States were
analyzed.
Included in the analysis were children aged 019
years who were diagnosed with a primary CNS tumor from 199093
(N=1133).
Results.
The inclusion of nonmalignancies increased the CNS tumor incidence rate by 28%
from 29.4 to 37.6 per million person- years.
The increases were 17% for children
aged 04 years, 17% for children aged 59
years, 31% for children aged 1014 years and
57% for adolescents aged 1519 years.
Differences in patterns between malignant and nonmalignant tumor occurrence by
sex, histology, and location were also observed.
Conclusion.
Because of the potentially profound adverse health effects on children who
experience CNS tumors, the systematic collection of both malignancies and
nonmalignancies is consistent with the mission of public health surveillance.
Without such population-based data, analytic epidemiologic studies to evaluate
disease etiology and assess disease consequences are greatly hindered.
Keywords:
benign neoplasms, brain neoplasms, child, choroid plexus neoplasms, CNS
neoplasms, craniopharyngiomas, epidemiology, pituitary neoplasms
Copyright
© 1999 Kluwer
Academic Publishers. All
rights reserved
Source: http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.1023/A:1008867024545
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