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Epidemiology

Increased Birth Weights of National Wilms' Tumor Study Patients Suggest a Growth Factor Excess

W. M. Leisenring, N. E. Breslow, I. E. Evans, J. B. Beckwith, M. J. Coppes and P. Grundy
W. M. Leisenring
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N. E. Breslow
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I. E. Evans
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J. B. Beckwith
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M. J. Coppes
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P. Grundy
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DOI:  Published September 1994
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Abstract

An analysis of over 1800 patients with Wilms' tumor revealed significantly higher birth weights than newborns in the general United States population. The highest birth weights were found not only in patients diagnosed with the Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (mean, 3.78 kg), as had been expected, but also in those with hemihypertrophy (3.80 kg) or perilobar nephrogenic rests (3.56 kg) in addition to their Wilms' tumor. The birth weights of Wilms' tumor patients with intralobar nephrogenic rests (3.43 on average kg) and of those without associated anomalies (3.45 kg) were slightly but still significantly higher on average than national birthweights (overall mean, 3.35 kg) adjusted for gender, race, and year of birth in each subgroup. Birth weights of children with aniridia and Wilms' tumor (2.99 kg) were lower than the national mean. Among more than 3000 patients with Wilms' tumor, heights and weights at diagnosis were significantly higher for the subgroups of patients with Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome or hemihypertrophy, and height was lower for those with aniridia or characteristic genitourinary anomalies, when compared to other patients with Wilms' tumor. These data suggest prenatal effects of growth factors on the development of Wilms' tumors, or vice versa, and provide further epidemiological support for heterogeneity in the pathogenesis of Wilms' tumors associated with perilobar nephrogenic rests versus intralobar nephrogenic rests.

Footnotes

  • ↵1 This research was supported in part by USPHS Grants R01 CA54498 and U01 CA42326. Principal investigators at participating institutions also receive support from the National Cancer Institute.

  • ↵2 To whom requests for reprints should be addressed, at Department of Biostatistics, SC-32, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195.

  • Received March 1, 1994.
  • Accepted June 28, 1994.
  • ©1994 American Association for Cancer Research.
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September 1994
Volume 54, Issue 17
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Increased Birth Weights of National Wilms' Tumor Study Patients Suggest a Growth Factor Excess
W. M. Leisenring, N. E. Breslow, I. E. Evans, J. B. Beckwith, M. J. Coppes and P. Grundy
Cancer Res September 1 1994 (54) (17) 4680-4683;

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Increased Birth Weights of National Wilms' Tumor Study Patients Suggest a Growth Factor Excess
W. M. Leisenring, N. E. Breslow, I. E. Evans, J. B. Beckwith, M. J. Coppes and P. Grundy
Cancer Res September 1 1994 (54) (17) 4680-4683;
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