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Overweight, obesity and height as risk factors for meningioma, glioma, pituitary adenoma and nerve sheath tumor: a large population-based prospective cohort study

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posted on 2017-05-26, 17:03 authored by Markus K. H. Wiedmann, Cathrine Brunborg, Antonio Di Ieva, Kristina Lindemann, Tom B. Johannesen, Lars Vatten, Eirik Helseth, John A. Zwart

Background: In 2016, the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) has announced that avoiding body fatness (i.e. overweight and obesity) contributes to prevent meningioma occurrence, but considered the available evidence for glioma inadequate. The association of body fatness with other CNS tumor subgroups is largely unknown.

Objectives: To assess whether body fatness or body height are associated with risk for meningioma, glioma, pituitary adenoma (PA) or nerve sheath tumor (NST) in a large population-based Norwegian cohort.

Methods: In this prospective cohort study of 1.8 million Norwegian residents, weight and height were measured at baseline and incident intracranial tumors were subsequently identified by linkage to the Cancer Registry of Norway. Cox regression analyses were performed to estimate risk for each tumor subgroup in relation to anthropometric measures, stratified by sex and in different age groups.

Results: During 54 million person-years of follow-up 3335 meningiomas, 4382 gliomas, 1071 PAs and 759 NSTs were diagnosed. Obesity (BMI ≥30 kg/m2) was not associated with risk for meningioma or glioma, but was significantly associated with risk for PA (HR 1.43; 95% CI 1.09–1.88) compared with the reference group (BMI 20–24.9 kg/m2). For intracranial NSTs, obesity was associated with reduced tumor risk (HR 0.68; 95% CI 0.46–0.99). Body height was associated with increased risk for all four tumor subgroups.

Conclusions: This study does not confirm overweight or obesity as risk factors for meningioma. Additionally, overweight and obesity can be quite confidently excluded as risk factors for glioma. However, this study indicates that body fatness increases the risk for PA, while it reduces the risk for NST.

Funding

This study was supported by the South-Eastern Norway Regional Health Authority (grant number 2014060).

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