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Blood Levels of Folate at Birth and Risk of Childhood Leukemia

Abstract

Background

A role for folate in cancer etiology has long been suspected because of folate's function as a cofactor in DNA methylation and maintenance of DNA synthesis. Previous case-control studies examining the association between risk of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and mothers' self-reported folate intake and supplementation have been inconclusive.

Materials and methods

We used a quantitative microbiologic assay to measure newborn folate concentrations in archived dried bloodspots collected at birth from 313 incident ALL cases, 44 incident acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cases, and 405 matched population-based controls.

Results

Overall, we found no difference in hemoglobin-normalized newborn folate concentrations (HbFol, nmol/g) between ALL cases and controls (2.76 vs. 2.77, P = 0.97) or between AML cases and controls (2.93 vs. 2.76, P = 0.32). Null results persisted after stratification by both birth period (1982-94, 1995-98, and 1999-2002) to account for the start of folate fortification of grain products in the United States, and by self-reported maternal prepregnancy supplement use. Similarly, no association was observed for major ALL subgroups.

Conclusions

Our results do not support an association between birth folate concentrations and risk of childhood AML or major ALL subgroups.

Impact

However, they do not rule out a role for folate through exposures after birth or in early stages of fetal development.

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