• Etiologie

  • Facteurs exogènes : Agents infectieux

  • Testicule

Childhood infections, orchitis and testicular germ cell tumours: a report from the STEED study and a meta-analysis of existing data

A partir de la cohorte américaine STEED (767 cas et 929 témoins), cette étude, complétée par une méta-analyse, fait le point sur l'association entre une maladie infectieuse durant l'enfance et le risque de tumeurs germinales du testicule

Background: Similarities between the age-specific incidence pattern of testicular germ cell tumours (TGCTs) and the age-specific incidence pattern of cancers of viral origin prompted us to evaluate the relationship between common infections occurring during childhood or young adult life and TGCT using existing data from the US Servicemen's Testicular Tumor Environmental and Endocrine Determinants (STEED) case–control study. Methods: TGCT cases diagnosed between 2002 and 2005 (n=767) were matched on age, race and serum draw date to at least one control (n=929). Results: None of the infections evaluated were associated with TGCT risk. Further, a meta-analysis of mumps and mumps orchitis or orchitis infection did not support an association with TGCT (mumps pooled odds ratio (OR): 1.03, 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.89–1.20; mumps orchitis or orchitis pooled OR: 1.80, 95% CI: 0.74–4.42). Conclusion: Based on our evaluation of childhood and early life infections and meta-analyses of mumps and mumps orchitis and/or orchitis, TGCT does not appear to be associated with common childhood infections.

British Journal of Cancer

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