A university degree is linked to a heightened risk of developing a brain
tumour1, suggests a large observational study, published online in the Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health. Gliomas, in particular, were more common among people who had studied at university for at least three years than they were among those who didn't go on to higher education, the data show.
The researchers base their findings on more than 4.3 million Swedes, all of whom were born between 1911 and 1961 and living in Sweden in 1991.
They were monitored between 1993 and 2010 to see if they developed a primary brain tumour, and information on educational
attainment2, disposable income,
marital3 status, and occupation was obtained from national insurance, labour market,and national
census4 data.
During the monitoring period, 1.1 million people died and more than 48,000 emigrated, but 5735 of the men and 7101 of the women developed a brain tumour.
Men with university level education,
lasting5 at least three years, were 19% more likely to develop a glioma--a type of cancerous tumour arising in glial cells that surround and support neurons in the brain--than men whose educational attainment didn't extend beyond the period of
compulsory6 schooling7 (9 years).
Among women, the magnitude of risk was 23% higher for glioma, and 16% higher for meningioma--a type of mostly non-cancerous brain tumour arising in the layers of tissue (meninges) that surround and protect the brain and
spinal8 cord--than it was for women who didn't go on to higher education.
Taking account of potentially
influential9 factors, such as marital status and disposable income, only marginally
affected10 the size of the risk, and only among the men.
High levels of disposable income were associated with a 14% heightened risk of glioma among men, but had no bearing on the risk of either meningioma or
acoustic11 neuroma--a type of non-cancerous brain tumour that grows on the nerve used for hearing and balance.
Nor was disposable income associated with heightened risk of any type of brain tumour among the women.