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An Observational Case-Control Study on Parental Age and Childhood Renal Tumors

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Wilms tumor (WT), as the most common renal tumor in childhood, is treated very successfully within prospective trials and studies. The association with various genetic alterations has been studied, but it is still unclear why a WT develops in a specific child and why some children su...

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Autores principales: Politis, Georgios, Wagenpfeil, Stefan, Welter, Nils, Mergen, Marvin, Furtwängler, Rhoikos, Graf, Norbert
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10647705/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37958318
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers15215144
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author Politis, Georgios
Wagenpfeil, Stefan
Welter, Nils
Mergen, Marvin
Furtwängler, Rhoikos
Graf, Norbert
author_facet Politis, Georgios
Wagenpfeil, Stefan
Welter, Nils
Mergen, Marvin
Furtwängler, Rhoikos
Graf, Norbert
author_sort Politis, Georgios
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Wilms tumor (WT), as the most common renal tumor in childhood, is treated very successfully within prospective trials and studies. The association with various genetic alterations has been studied, but it is still unclear why a WT develops in a specific child and why some children suffer from relapse. Genetic risk and external, environmental factors need further attention. Parental age at birth plays a role in various childhood diseases, so it is reasonable to also investigate whether older parental age is a risk factor for the development of childhood renal tumors. We could demonstrate that parental age has no correlation with the incidence of renal tumors in childhood. ABSTRACT: Despite excellent outcomes, many open questions remain about Wilms tumor (WT). Influences and risk factors for tumorigenesis, as well as tumor aggressiveness and recurrence, are not fully understood. Parental age plays a role in various childhood diseases and is also discussed as a risk factor for childhood cancer. We analyzed both maternal and paternal age at birth as risk factors for the occurrence of Wilms and non-Wilms tumors in children and investigated whether older maternal or paternal age is associated with a higher tumor incidence. During 1990 and 2019 we collected data from 3991 patients from the multicenter studies SIOP9/GPO, SIOP 93-01/GPOH, and SIOP 2001/GPOH, of whom maternal and paternal age was available in 2277 cases. Data from the Federal Statistical Office containing live births in Germany from 1990–2019 served as a comparative database. For maternal age at birth, the control data yielded 22,451,412 cases and for paternal age yielded 19,046,314 cases. Comparing maternal and paternal ages of the study patients with those of the control data, we confirmed that higher parental age is not correlated with the incidence of renal tumors in childhood. Mean ages of fathers and mothers in patients and the control cohort increased between 1991 and 2019 (fathers: 30.28 vs. 34.04; mothers: 27.68 vs. 29.79 in the patient group and 31.29 vs. 34.23 and 28.88 vs. 32.67 in the control group, respectively) without higher numbers of patients with kidney cancer over time. No influence was found for the subtype of cancer nor for syndromes. In addition, overall survival of patients is independent of the year of diagnosis and the age of the parents but depends on histology type and stage in WT.
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spelling pubmed-106477052023-10-26 An Observational Case-Control Study on Parental Age and Childhood Renal Tumors Politis, Georgios Wagenpfeil, Stefan Welter, Nils Mergen, Marvin Furtwängler, Rhoikos Graf, Norbert Cancers (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Wilms tumor (WT), as the most common renal tumor in childhood, is treated very successfully within prospective trials and studies. The association with various genetic alterations has been studied, but it is still unclear why a WT develops in a specific child and why some children suffer from relapse. Genetic risk and external, environmental factors need further attention. Parental age at birth plays a role in various childhood diseases, so it is reasonable to also investigate whether older parental age is a risk factor for the development of childhood renal tumors. We could demonstrate that parental age has no correlation with the incidence of renal tumors in childhood. ABSTRACT: Despite excellent outcomes, many open questions remain about Wilms tumor (WT). Influences and risk factors for tumorigenesis, as well as tumor aggressiveness and recurrence, are not fully understood. Parental age plays a role in various childhood diseases and is also discussed as a risk factor for childhood cancer. We analyzed both maternal and paternal age at birth as risk factors for the occurrence of Wilms and non-Wilms tumors in children and investigated whether older maternal or paternal age is associated with a higher tumor incidence. During 1990 and 2019 we collected data from 3991 patients from the multicenter studies SIOP9/GPO, SIOP 93-01/GPOH, and SIOP 2001/GPOH, of whom maternal and paternal age was available in 2277 cases. Data from the Federal Statistical Office containing live births in Germany from 1990–2019 served as a comparative database. For maternal age at birth, the control data yielded 22,451,412 cases and for paternal age yielded 19,046,314 cases. Comparing maternal and paternal ages of the study patients with those of the control data, we confirmed that higher parental age is not correlated with the incidence of renal tumors in childhood. Mean ages of fathers and mothers in patients and the control cohort increased between 1991 and 2019 (fathers: 30.28 vs. 34.04; mothers: 27.68 vs. 29.79 in the patient group and 31.29 vs. 34.23 and 28.88 vs. 32.67 in the control group, respectively) without higher numbers of patients with kidney cancer over time. No influence was found for the subtype of cancer nor for syndromes. In addition, overall survival of patients is independent of the year of diagnosis and the age of the parents but depends on histology type and stage in WT. MDPI 2023-10-26 /pmc/articles/PMC10647705/ /pubmed/37958318 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers15215144 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Politis, Georgios
Wagenpfeil, Stefan
Welter, Nils
Mergen, Marvin
Furtwängler, Rhoikos
Graf, Norbert
An Observational Case-Control Study on Parental Age and Childhood Renal Tumors
title An Observational Case-Control Study on Parental Age and Childhood Renal Tumors
title_full An Observational Case-Control Study on Parental Age and Childhood Renal Tumors
title_fullStr An Observational Case-Control Study on Parental Age and Childhood Renal Tumors
title_full_unstemmed An Observational Case-Control Study on Parental Age and Childhood Renal Tumors
title_short An Observational Case-Control Study on Parental Age and Childhood Renal Tumors
title_sort observational case-control study on parental age and childhood renal tumors
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10647705/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37958318
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers15215144
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