BMJ 1996;313:199-203 (27 July)

Papers

Vitamin K and childhood cancer: a population based case-control study in Lower Saxony, Germany

Rudiger von Kries, paediatric epidemiologist,a Ulrich Gobel, head of paediatric haematology and oncology,a Alexandra Hachmeister, medical documentalist,a Uwe Kaletsch, statistician,b Jorg Michaelis, head b

a Kinderklinik der Heinrich-Heine-Universitat, 40225 Dusseldorf, Germany, b Institut fur Medizinische Statistik und Dokumentation, Johannes Gutenberg-Universitat, 55131 Mainz

Correspondence to: Professor R von Kries, Institute for Social Paediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Heiglhofstr 63, 81377 Munich, Germany.

Abstract

Objective: To confirm or refute a possible association of parenteral vitamin K prophylaxis and childhood cancer.
Design: Population based case-control study. Comparison of vitamin K exposure in children with leukaemia or other common tumours with two control groups.
Setting: State of Lower Saxony (north western part of Germany); case recruitment from the German childhood cancer registry.
Subjects: 272 children with leukaemia, nephroblastoma, neuroblastoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, and tumours of the central nervous system diagnosed between 1 July 1988 and 30 June 1993; children were aged between 30 days and 15 years at diagnosis. 334 population based controls without diagnoses of cancer matched to the leukaemia cases for age and sex.
Main exposure measures: Parenteral vitamin K prophylaxis (intramuscular and subcutaneous) versus oral and no vitamin K prophylaxis.
Results: An association between parenteral vitamin K exposure and childhood cancer (leukae-mias and other tumours combined) could not be confirmed (odds ratio 1.04, 95% confidence interval 0.74 to 1.48). For leukaemias the observed odds ratio was only 0.98 (0.64 to 1.50) (comparison of leukaemia cases with local controls 1.24 (0.68 to 2.25); state controls 0.82 (0.50 to 1.36)). These odds ratios remained almost unchanged when several potential confounders were considered in the logistic regression model.
Conclusions: This population based study adds substantial evidence that there is no association between parenteral vitamin K and childhood cancer.

Key messages

  • The study size was sufficient to detect a cancer risk of at least 1.55

  • The cumulative evidence from this and previous studies almost excludes an association of intramuscular vitamin K prophylaxis and childhood cancer


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