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which this article appears: Surgery
PEDIATRICS Vol. 111 No. 6 June 2003, pp. 1343-1350
Appendectomy During Childhood and Adolescence
and the Subsequent Risk of Cancer in Sweden
Judith U. Cope, MD, MPH*, Johan
Askling, MD, PhD, Gloria Gridley, MS*,
Adam Mohr, BS*, Anders Ekbom, MD, PhD,
Olof Nyren, MD, PhD and Martha S. Linet, MD, PhD*
* Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer
Institute, Rockville, Maryland
Department of Medical Epidemiology, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden
Objective. Researchers have speculated that surgical excisionof lymphoid tissue, such as appendectomy, early in life might
confer an increased risk of cancer. In this study, we determinedthe
risks of cancer for people who had appendectomy performedduring
childhood.
Methods. We studied the risk of cancer in a large Swedish cohortof children who had appendectomy performed during the periodof
19651993. Standardized incidence ratios (SIRs) werecomputed using
age-, gender-, and period-specific incidencerates derived from the
entire Swedish population as comparison.Hospital discharge diagnosis
data were used to examine cancerrisks by categories of surgery,
medical conditions, and typeof appendicitis. The average length of
follow-up was 11.2 years.
Results. We found no excess overall cancer risk but noted a
significant excess for stomach cancer (SIR: 2.45; 95% confidence
interval [CI]: 1.14.8) and a borderline increase of non-Hodgkins
lymphoma (NHL; SIR: 1.55; 95% CI: 1.02.3). The elevatedrisks for
both cancers were only evident 15 or more years afterappendectomy
(stomach cancer, SIR: 3.82; 95% CI: 1.77.5;NHL, SIR: 2.49; 95% CI:
1.44.2).
Conclusions. It is reassuring that there was no overall increaseof cancer several years after childhood appendectomy. Increased
risks for NHL and stomach cancer, occurring 15 or more yearsafter
appendectomy, were based on small absolute numbers ofexcess cancers.
As 95% of the subjects were younger than 40years at exit, this
cohort requires continuing follow-up andmonitoring.
Key Words: childhood appendectomy appendicitis Sweden
cancer incidence cancer risk
Abbreviations: IPR, Inpatient Registry ICD,
International Classification of Diseases ICD-7, International
Classification of Diseases, Seventh Revision SIR, standardized incidence
ratio NHL, non-Hodgkins lymphoma CI, confidence interval SES,
socioeconomic status
Received for publication Feb 6, 2002; accepted Nov 12, 2002.
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