A 17 per cent higher overall rate of adult and child cancers in the offspring of women who had fertility problems. Photo / Thinkstock
Results of a large study unveiled in Auckland show a link between women
with fertility problems and an increased risk of cancer in their children. The
study of more than two million people in Denmark was presented at the Fertility
Society of Australia conference in Auckland. The researchers, from the Danish
Cancer Society Research Centre and Copenhagen University, found a 17 per cent
higher overall rate of adult and child cancers in the offspring of women who
had fertility problems than in those born to fertile women. "[This] is
mainly explained by an increased risk of leukaemias in childhood, and ... by an
increased risk of skin cancer, cancer of the urinary tract and cancer in the
endocrine glands in adulthood," Dr Marie Hargreave told the conference. "For
all other childhood cancer types and adulthood cancer sites we found no
statistically significant associations."
The increase in the relative risk of childhood leukaemias was greater,
at 33 per cent, than for cancer overall. Dr Hargreave said other studies had
pointed to a potential increased risk of cancer in children who were conceived
through the use of assisted reproductive technology, but the results had been
inconsistent and were limited by imprecise risk estimates. "Furthermore,
if negative effects of assisted reproductive technology are present, they could
be related to the underlying infertility rather than the procedure
itself."
Auckland University professor of biostatistics, Thomas Lumley, said the
study appeared very reliable for demonstrating that there was a higher risk in
children of infertile women, but didn't allow any reliable conclusions about
the reasons. "Part of the background to this is that a drug used to
prevent miscarriage in the 1950s and 1960s, diethylstilboestrol, caused a
specific, rare form of cancer in female offspring."
Fertility Society president Dr Mark Bowman said there was no conclusive
evidence the increased cancer risk reported by Dr Hargreave was "directly
associated" with fertility treatment. "Importantly, the research
involves offspring born since 1963, nearly two decades before IVF came to
Denmark. "Since the first in-vitro fertilisation baby was born in Britain
in 1978, five million babies have been born through this technology around the
world. Overwhelmingly, these IVF offspring ... enjoy very good health."
The Risks
Offspring of women who had fertility problems were found to have higher
rates of cancer than the offspring of fertile women.
* 17 per cent overall increase in the relative risk of cancer
Children:
* 33 per cent increased risk of leukaemias
Adult offspring:
* 82 per cent increased risk of skin cancers
* 187 per cent
increased risk of urinary-tract cancers
* 229 per cent increased risk of
endocrine gland cancers.
NZ Herald
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