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The Effects of Breastfeeding on Retinoblastoma Development: Results from an International Multicenter Retinoblastoma Survey

Authors :
Riffat Rashid
Sharon Blum
Mark W. Reid
Soma Rani Roy
Alia Ahmad
Shiran Madgar
Mary E. Kim
Ashley Polski
Mandeep S. Sagoo
Roy Poblete
Nathalie Cassoux
Yihua Zou
Jesse L. Berry
Naama Keren-Froim
Andrew W. Stacey
V.G. Polyakov
Rosdali Y. Diaz Coronado
Sadia Sultana
Lamis Al Harby
Tatiana L Ushakova
Elizabeth Burner
Nir Gomel
Xunda Ji
Swathi Kaliki
Matthew J. Burton
Juan Luis García
Caitlin S. Sayegh
Ido Didi Fabian
Kristen Mascarenhas
Nick Astbury
Sadik Taju Sherief
M. Ashwin Reddy
Jasmeen Randhawa
Richard Bowman
Covadonga Bascaran
Brianne Brown
Arturo Manuel Zapata López
Marcia Zondervan
Source :
Cancers, Vol 13, Iss 4773, p 4773 (2021), Cancers, Volume 13, Issue 19
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2021.

Abstract

Simple Summary Breastfeeding has been shown to lower the risk of oncogenesis in many pediatric cancers, with longer periods of breastfeeding having the most protective effect. However, an association has not yet been determined for the consequence or benefit of breastfeeding in retinoblastoma (RB), the most common intraocular malignancy of childhood affecting 8000 children worldwide each year. Herein, we aimed to understand the role of breastfeeding in the severity of development of nonhereditary RB, specifically its relationship to age at diagnosis, ocular prognosis, and extraocular involvement. Our analysis of 344 patients indicated that neither breastfeeding nor formula feeding was associated with differences in age at diagnosis, ocular prognosis, or extraocular involvement. More research elucidating the factors affecting the development of RB is warranted both to understand the pathophysiology of tumor development and to develop clinical recommendations for preventive care. Abstract The protective effects of breastfeeding on various childhood malignancies have been established but an association has not yet been determined for retinoblastoma (RB). We aimed to further investigate the role of breastfeeding in the severity of nonhereditary RB development, assessing relationship to (1) age at diagnosis, (2) ocular prognosis, measured by International Intraocular RB Classification (IIRC) or Intraocular Classification of RB (ICRB) group and success of eye salvage, and (3) extraocular involvement. Analyses were performed on a global dataset subgroup of 344 RB patients whose legal guardian(s) consented to answer a neonatal questionnaire. Patients with undetermined or mixed feeding history, family history of RB, or sporadic bilateral RB were excluded. There was no statistically significant difference between breastfed and formula-fed groups in (1) age at diagnosis (p = 0.20), (2) ocular prognosis measures of IIRC/ICRB group (p = 0.62) and success of eye salvage (p = 0.16), or (3) extraocular involvement shown by International Retinoblastoma Staging System (IRSS) at presentation (p = 0.74), lymph node involvement (p = 0.20), and distant metastases (p = 0.37). This study suggests that breastfeeding neither impacts the sporadic development nor is associated with a decrease in the severity of nonhereditary RB as measured by age at diagnosis, stage of disease, ocular prognosis, and extraocular spread. A further exploration into the impact of diet on children who develop RB is warranted.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20726694
Volume :
13
Issue :
4773
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancers
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2dd6fda4deeb24620f8346e9e459e394