Brain tumours more common in better educated, wealthier people. A Swedish study reveals that people with higher education or better jobs are more likely to be found with one of three types of brain tumour.
People who have a
college education, a professional career or a big paycheck may be more likely
to be diagnosed with a brain tumour than people who are less well-off or not as
educated, a new study reports.
Ensuring
timely medical access
Medical data for
more than 4.3 million residents of Sweden revealed that people with
higher education or better jobs were more likely to be found with one of three
types of brain tumour – glioma, meningioma or acoustic neuroma.
However, this
doesn't necessarily mean that achievement in life increases the risk of brain
tumours, said lead researcher Amal Khanolkar, a research associate with
University College London's Institute
of Child Health.People with money
or a better education might be better able to notice something's wrong with
their health.
"People with
higher education are perhaps more likely to detect symptoms and seek medical
care earlier on," Khanolkar said. These groups might also be more apt to
have complete health data recorded in national cancer registries, such as the
one used in this study, he said.
The study also
found that single men are more likely to be diagnosed with brain tumours.
"Spouses might notice symptoms in their partners, ensuing timely medical
access," he said.
For the study, Khanolkar
and his colleagues gathered data on people living in Sweden in 1991, and used the
country's National Cancer Register to see if these folks had developed a brain
tumour between 1993 and 2010.
During that
period, about 5,700 men and 7,100 women developed at least one of the three
brain tumours tracked.Gliomas are
cancerous tumours that develop in glial cells that protect neurons, while
meningiomas are mostly noncancerous tumours that arise in the tissues that
protect the brain and spinal cord. Acoustic neuromas are noncancerous tumours
that affect the nerve used for hearing and balance.
Potential
explanations
Men with three or
more years of college were 19 percent more likely to be diagnosed with glioma
compared to less-educated men, while women with similar educational attainment
were 23 percent more likely to be diagnosed with glioma and 16 percent more
likely to have meningioma than their less-educated peers, researchers
found.A high level of
disposable income was associated with a 14 percent increased risk of glioma in
men, while professional or managerial jobs were associated with men's increased
risk of glioma by 20 percent and acoustic neuroma by 50 percent.
Women in a
professional or managerial job were associated with a 26 percent increased risk
of glioma and a 14 percent increased risk of meningioma, versus women in
blue-collar jobs.
Very little is
known about what causes brain tumours, so studies like this are valuable for
unearthing threads that indicate potential explanations, said Elizabeth Ward,
the American Cancer Society's national vice president for intramural research.
"All of this
is really a clue that will help us look deeper and understand the reasons for
these differences," Ward said.
The National Brain
Tumour Society (NBTS) noted that the study only establishes an association
between these factors and brain tumours.
"An
'association' does not constitute cause or risk factor, and does not necessarily
infer that education, money, and/or marriage have any prospective effect on
whether individuals, or groups of people, may develop a brain tumour," the
NBTS said in a written statement.
Risky
medications
The study results
were published in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health.Ward agreed that
people with higher education might be more likely to figure out something's
wrong with them."If you were
more educated, you might go to the internet and say, 'Hmm, I've got hearing
loss in my right ear, I need to go get it checked out,' but someone with less
education might pass it off," she said.
But more
well-to-do people might have access to certain medications that increase their
risk of brain tumours, such as hormone replacement therapies, or other
differences in lifestyle that could potentially affect their risk, Ward added.In any case, brain
tumours are rare for any adult, regardless of socioeconomic status, Ward said.
According to the American Cancer Society, a person's lifetime risk of a malignant
brain or spinal cord tumour is less than 1 percent.
"There's no
cause for people to be concerned about their own individual risk, based on this
study," Ward said.
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