Since the MMR is made in chicken eggs, I wonder if this
childhood leukemia is connected to the avian leukemia chickens get. It would
be horrific to find out a stray virus in the egg mixture of the vaccine is
the culprit behind childhood leukemia.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/medicine/story/0,11381,1298223,00.html
Childhood leukaemia on the rise
Press Association
Monday September 6, 2004
More and more children are being diagnosed with leukaemia each year, experts
have warned today. Researchers say the trend has been disguised by falling
death rates from the disease. Around 500 children under the age of 15 are
diagnosed with leukaemia in Britain each year, with about 100 children dying.
But experts said that while better treatments had led to more surviving the
disease in the last half a century, the number of cases emerging had been
rising year on year. Researchers are trying to find out whether genetic,
environmental, diet or other factors are behind the rising leukaemia rates.
These and other issues were being discussed at the First International
Scientific Conference on Childhood Leukaemia, taking place in London this
week.
Michel Coleman, professor of epidemiology and vital statistics at the London
School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said: "The marked disparity between
incidence and mortality trends crystallises the problem posed by childhood
leukaemia from a public health standpoint. "We have become steadily better at
treating it - at least in the sense of preventing children dying from it -
but we have made little or no progress in preventing it. Rational approaches
to prevention are difficult to formulate when so little is known about the
cause."
In the late 1960s the mortality rate for leukaemia among children up to 14
was around 26 deaths per million of the population in England and Wales. This
dropped to around 10 per million by the late 1990s. But the incidence rate
has increased from about 40 cases per million in the 1960s to 45 per million
in the late 1990s. Leukaemia accounts for about a third of all cancers in
children and the number of new cases being diagnosed annually has been rising
for at least 40 years, particularly in children under the age of five. But
Prof Coleman said mortality trends between 1911 and the 1950s and incidence
and survival data available since the 1960s showed that the rise in cases had
been going on much longer.
"Suggestions that part of the increase has been due to more children
surviving infancy to reach the peak age of leukaemia incidence - one to four
years - and to improved registration and diagnosis of the disease, may be
partly true, but they cannot plausibly explain the overall pattern of data
now at our disposal," he said. This week's conference has been organised by
the charity Children with Leukaemia, prompted by the upward trend in cases,
inability to pin down the cause and concerns over the long-term effect of
cancer treatments had prompted it to organise the conference.
Experts from across Europe, America, Asia and Australia will discuss issues
such as radiation, smoking, viruses and air pollution. They will also look at
areas which have received less attention, such as the impact of diet in early
childhood, light pollution, damaging materials affecting the foetus
and medicines in pregnancy. The conference chairman, Prof Denis Henshaw,
said: "If the increased risk facing today's children is at least partly
caused by modern lifestyle factors, as is suggested by the increasing
incidence, then it may be possible to take some preventive measures. But
first we need to determine what these factors are."

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