Case-control study of childhood leukaemia and cancer in Scotland: findings for neonatal intramuscular vitamin K

Abstract
Objective: To test the hypothesis of an association between neonatal intramuscular vitamin K and childhood leukaemia and other cancers. Design: Population based case-control study with data abstracted from hospital records. Setting: Scotland. Subjects: Children aged 0-14 years resident in Scotland from 1991-4 and diagnosed with leukaemia (150), lymphomas (46), central nervous system tumours (79), a range of other solid tumours (142), and a subset of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (129). Controls were 777 children matched for age and sex, providing 417 matched sets (360 triplets and 57 pairs) for analysis. Main outcome measure: Odds ratios for the risk of childhood leukaemia and cancer and intramuscular vitamin K versus a combined group of oral doses, none, and no record. Results are given for information recorded in medical notes and data supplemented by hospital policy. Results: Odds ratios based on medical record abstractions showed no significant positive association for leukaemias (odds ratio 1.30; 95% confidence interval 0.83 to 2.03), acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (1.21; 0.74 to 1.97), lymphomas (1.06; 0.46 to 2.42), central nervous system tumours (0.74; 0.40 to 1.34), and other solid tumours (0.59; 0.37 to 0.96). There was no association with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia in children aged 1 to 6 years. Imputation of exposure from hospital policy gave similar results. Adjustment for deprivation and type of delivery moved risk estimates closer to unity for all major diagnostic groups. Conclusions: The observation of an increased risk of childhood leukaemia and cancer associated with intramuscular vitamin K is not confirmed by this independent population based study. Debate continues over the role neonatal intramuscular administration of vitamin K may have in the subsequent development of childhood cancer Most previous epidemiological studies have failed to demonstrate an overall significant association No significant risk is evident from a population based study in Scottish children that used data from hospital records No relation was found for leukaemias, central nervous system tumours, or any other subgroup of childhood malignancy

This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: