Eur J Cancer 1999 Mar;35(3):439-44
Population density and childhood leukaemia: results of the EUROCLUS Study.
Alexander FE, Boyle P, Carli PM, Coebergh JW, Ekbom A, Levi F, McKinney PA,
McWhirter W, Michaelis J, Peris-Bonet R, Petridou E, Pompe-Kirn V, Plesko I,
Pukkala E, Rahu M, Stiller CA, Storm H, Terracini B, Vatten L, Wray N
Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Medical School,
U.K.
The EUROCLUS study assembled incidence data for 13,551 cases of childhood
leukaemia (CL) diagnosed between 1980 and 1989 in 17 countries (or regions of
countries). These were referenced by location at diagnosis to small census
areas of which there were 25,723 in the study area. Population counts, surface
area and, hence, population density were available for all these small areas.
Previous analyses have shown limited extra-Poisson variation (EPV) of case
counts within small areas; this is most pronounced in areas of intermediate
population density (150-499 persons/km2). In this study, the data set was
examined in more detail for evidence that variations in incidence and EPV of CL
are associated with population density. Incidence showed a curvilinear
association with population density and was highest in areas which were
somewhat more densely populated (500-750 persons/km2), where the incidence rate
ratio relative to areas having > or = 1000 persons/km2 was 1.16 (95% confidence
interval 1.07-1.26) and the P value for quadratic trend across eight strata of
population density was 0.02. Incidence in these areas is uniformly elevated and showed no
evidence of heterogeneity (i.e. EPV).
Statistically significant evidence of EPV was evident amongst some of the areas
previously classified as intermediate density areas (specifically, those with a
density of 250-499 persons/km2, P < 0.001 for CL). These results were interpreted in
terms of the current aetiological hypotheses for CL which propose that exposure to
localised epidemics of one or more common infectious agent may contribute to the
development of leukaemia. They suggest that such epidemics arise regularly in
moderately densely populated areas and also sporadically in areas which are
somewhat less densely populated. Although other interpretations are possible,
these results may assist in the identification of characteristics which
infectious agents must possess if direct or indirect causes of CL.
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