Br-J-Cancer. 1998 Mar; 77(5): 818-24
Spatial clustering of childhood leukaemia: summary results from the EUROCLUS project.
Alexander-FE; Boyle-P; Carli-PM; Coebergh-JW; Draper-GJ; Ekbom-A; Levi-F; McKinney-PA;
McWhirter-W; Michaelis-J; Peris-Bonet-R; Petridou-E; Pompe-Kirn-V; Plisko-I; Pukkala-E;
Rahu-M; Storm-H; Terracini-B; Vatten-L; Wray-N
Department of Public Health Sciences, The University of Edinburgh, Medical School, UK.
The interpretation of reports of clusters of childhood leukaemia is difficult, first
because little is known about the causes of the disease, and second because there is
insufficient information on whether cases show a generalized tendency to cluster
geographically.
The EUROCLUS project is a European collaborative study whose primary objective is to
determine whether the residence locations of cases at diagnosis show a general tendency
towards spatial clustering. The second objective is to interpret any patterns observed
and, in particular, to see if clustering can be explained in terms of either infectious
agents or environmental hazards as aetiological agents. The spatial distribution of
13351 cases of childhood leukaemia diagnosed in 17 countries between 1980 and 1989 has
been analysed using the Potthoff-Whittinghill method. The overall results show
statistically significant evidence of clustering of total childhood leukaemia within
small census areas (P=0.03) but the magnitude of the clustering is small
(extra-Poisson component of variance (%) = 1.7 with 90% confidence interval 0.2-3.1).
The clustering is most marked in areas that have intermediate population density
(150-499 persons km[-2]). It cannot be attributed to any specific age group at diagnosis
or cell type and involves spatial aggregation of cases of different ages and cell types.
The results indicate that intense clusters are a rare phenomenon that merit careful
investigation, although aetiological insights are more likely to come from investigation
of large numbers of cases. We present a method for detecting clustering that is simple
and readily available to cancer registries and similar groups.
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