Litcius/Paper detail

Epidemiology of Brain and Other CNS Tumors

Quinn T. Ostrom, Stephen Francis, Jill S. Barnholtz‐Sloan

2021Current Neurology and Neuroscience Reports194 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Brain and other central nervous system (CNS) tumors, while rare, cause significant morbidity and mortality across all ages. This article summarizes the current state of the knowledge on the epidemiology of brain and other CNS tumors. RECENT FINDINGS: For childhood and adolescent brain and other CNS tumors, high birth weight, non-chromosomal structural birth defects and higher socioeconomic position were shown to be risk factors. For adults, increased leukocyte telomere length, proportion of European ancestry, higher socioeconomic position, and HLA haplotypes increase risk of malignant brain tumors, while immune factors decrease risk. Although no risk factor accounting for a large proportion of brain and other CNS tumors has been discovered, the use of high throughput "omics" approaches and improved detection/measurement of environmental exposures will help us refine our current understanding of these factors and discover novel risk factors for this disease.

Topics & Concepts

EpidemiologyMedicineNeurologyDiseaseRisk factorBrain tumorSocioeconomic statusCentral nervous systemBioinformaticsPathologyBiologyInternal medicineEnvironmental healthPopulationPsychiatryGlioma Diagnosis and TreatmentBrain Metastases and TreatmentChromatin Remodeling and Cancer