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Skin Allergies Linked to Cancer
Reported November 5, 2004
(Ivanhoe
Newswire) -- People who suffer from certain skin allergies are more
likely to develop blood-related cancers when they get older. Swedish
researchers report these findings in a study in the most recent issue of BMC
Public Health. The research shows people who experience hives are more
likely to develop leukemia. Those who have eczema in childhood are about
two-times more likely to develop non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. Investigators
believe the skin allergies might lead to cancer because they stimulate the
immune system to increase the number of white blood cells, which in turn
might foster cancer-causing mutations within the white blood cell
population. This finding runs counter to previous medical wisdom, which
holds allergic diseases might actually protect against cancer because they
stimulate the immune system to work harder. “Findings from our study do not
support the ‘immune surveillance’ hypothesis,” write the authors, “which
stipulates that allergic conditions protect against malignancies by
enhancing the ability of the immune system to detect and eliminate malignant
cells.” The researchers found no link between later cancers and other
allergic conditions, such as hay fever. However, results did trend toward a
higher leukemia risk among those with asthma. The authors urge people to
consider these findings in relation to the overall risk for blood cancers,
which is low. Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, for example, only strikes about 0.03
percent of the population in the United States. The study was conducted
among more than 16,500 twins in Sweden who were followed for more than 30
years.
SOURCE: BMC Public Health, published online Nov. 4, 2004 |