Blood biochemistry and the risk of cancer Effect of sample pooling

Authors

  • M. Hakama From the University of Tampere School of Public Health, Tampere, Finland
  • L. Teppo From the University of Tampere School of Public Health, Tampere, Finland
  • M. Hakama the FinnishCancer Registry, Helsinki, Finland
  • T. Hakulinen the FinnishCancer Registry, Helsinki, Finland
  • L. Teppo the FinnishCancer Registry, Helsinki, Finland
  • T. Hakulinen the Department of Public Health,University of Helsinki
  • M.G. Kenward the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK
  • R.-K. Aaran the University of Tampere Medical School, Tampere, Finland
  • T. Nikkari the University of Tampere Medical School, Tampere, Finland
  • A. Aromaa the National Public HealthInstitute, Helsinki, Finland
  • P. Knekt the National Public HealthInstitute, Helsinki, Finland
  • R. Peto the University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1080/02841860410018566

Abstract

A longitudinal study based on a serum sample bank was carried out in Finland to find out the association between biochemical substances and the subsequent risk of cancer. The objective was to evaluate the consistency between means of individually estimated levels of these compounds and levels based on pooling. Levels of alpha-tocopherol, beta-carotene, retinol, retinol-binding protein, and ceruloplasmin were estimated by primary site and sex and partly by age and morphology. The concentrations in pooled samples were consistently lower than the averages of the individual samples. On the basis of individual samples, all the five biochemical compounds had a rather consistent protective effect on the risk of cancers at most primary sites. This protective effect disappeared in the pool analyses, and more than half of exposure contrasts showed an opposite sign. For ceruloplasmin, the effect of pooling was smaller but not negligible. The results of this study emphasize the demand to standardize the collecting, handling, and analysing of samples in serum banks. They are, furthermore, consistent with the hypothesis that pooling of biochemical samples affects the levels of the substances and may affect the conclusions of epidemiological studies on causes of diseases.

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Published

2004-10-01

How to Cite

Hakama, M. ., Teppo, . L. ., Hakama, M. ., Hakulinen, . T., Teppo, L. ., Hakulinen, T. ., … Peto, R. . (2004). Blood biochemistry and the risk of cancer Effect of sample pooling. Acta Oncologica, 43(7), 667–674. https://doi.org/10.1080/02841860410018566