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Study reveals elevated cancer risk in Holocaust survivors


 

Photo by Darren Baker

Researcher at a computer

A new study indicates that survivors of the Holocaust have experienced a small but consistent increase in the risk of developing cancer.

The findings, published in the journal Cancer, offer an example of how extreme population-level tragedies can have an impact on health.

Holocaust survivors were exposed to a variety of factors that have been linked with cancer.

So researchers set out to investigate whether the starvation, overcrowding, infectious diseases, and psychological stress that survivors endured might have contributed to the development of cancer in some individuals.

The team studied 152,622 Holocaust survivors who were followed for more than 45 years.

The researchers used 2 definitions of exposure to classify the survivors.

One definition was based on an individual’s entitlement for compensation for suffering persecution during the war. The other was based on the country of origin, dividing countries into those that were directly governed by Nazi Germany and those that were not occupied by Nazis.

The cancer incidence was significantly higher in survivors who were granted compensation than in those who were not—21.9% and 16.1%, respectively (P<0.0001).

However, the difference between survivors from occupied and non-occupied countries was not significant—22.7% and 21.4%, respectively.

On the other hand, when the researchers adjusted for confounding factors, survivors who had been exposed by either definition had a significantly increased risk of cancer.

For survivors who were granted compensation, the hazard ratio (HR) was 1.06 (P<0.001). For survivors born in occupied countries, the HR was 1.08 (P<0.001).

There was no increased risk of acute or chronic leukemia among patients who received compensation. And there was no increased risk of acute leukemia for survivors born in occupied countries.

However, there was a significantly increased risk of chronic leukemia among survivors born in occupied countries (HR=1.33, P=0.001)

“The data emphasize the importance of learning about the combined effect of several exposures occurring intensely and contemporaneously on cancer risk, such as those that unfortunately occurred during World War II,” said study author Siegal Sadetzki, MD, of the Chaim Sheba Medical Center in Tel HaShomer, Israel.

An editorial related to this study noted that the association between cancer and the extreme deprivation experienced by Holocaust survivors may also have parallels with other extreme population-level events, including in racial/ethnic minority groups experiencing severe social deprivation over time.

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