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International renal-cell-cancer study. VI. The role of medical and family history

✍ Scribed by Brigitte Schlehofer; Wolfgang Pommer; Anders Mellemgaard; John H. Stewart; Margaret McCredie; Shelley Niwa; Per Lindblad; Jack S. Mandel; Joseph K. McLaughlin; Jürgen Wahrendorf


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1996
Tongue
French
Weight
548 KB
Volume
66
Category
Article
ISSN
0020-7136

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✦ Synopsis


A number of medical conditions have been linked with renal-cell cancer, although the evidence is not consistent in every case. In a large international case-control study of renalcell cancer, we examined, among other hypotheses, associations with a personal history of certain medical conditions and a family history of cancer of the kidney or thyroid. Relative risks (RR), adjusted for the effects of age, gender, body-mass index, tobacco smoking and study centre, were significantly increased by a history of kidney stones or thyroid or kidney disease. The RR were not altered by additional adjustment for hypertension, or when diagnoses were restricted to those made at least 5 or 10 years before 1987 (the usual "cut-off'' date). The link with kidney injury is particularly likely to be affected by recall bias. Increased RR of borderline significance were found for kidney infection (RR, 1.2) and diabetes (RR, 1.4). Having one firstdegree relative with kidney cancer was associated with a significantly increased risk of renal-cell cancer (RR, I .6; 95% CI, 1. U-2.4). Seven cases reported 2 first-degree relatives with kidney cancer. No controls had first-degree relatives with kidney cancer. None of our participants reported having von Hippel-Lindau disease. The data suggests that a few conditions of the kidney are strongly associated with renal-cell cancer and that heredity plays a role in a small proportion of cases.


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