%0 Journal Article %T Incidence of leukemias in children from El Salvador and Mexico City between 1996 and 2000: Population-based data %A Juan Mej¨ªa-Arangur¨¦ %A Miguel Bonilla %A Rodolpho Lorenzana %A Servando Ju¨¢rez-Oca£¿a %A Gladys de Reyes %A Mar¨ªa P¨¦rez-Saldivar %A Guadalupe Gonz¨¢lez-Miranda %A Roberto Bern¨¢ldez-R¨ªos %A Antonio Ortiz-Fern¨¢ndez %A Manuel Ortega-Alvarez %A Mar¨ªa Mart¨ªnez-Garc¨ªa %A Arturo Fajardo-Guti¨¦rrez %J BMC Cancer %D 2005 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1471-2407-5-33 %X Design: Population-based data. Hospitals: In San Salvador, El Salvador, Hospital Nacional de Ni£¿os "Benjam¨ªn Bloom", the only center in El Salvador which attends all children, younger than 12 years, with oncologic disease. The Pediatric Hospital and the General Hospital of the Mexican Social Security Institute in Mexico City, the only centers in Mexico City which attend all those children with acute leukemia who have a right to this service. Diagnosis: All patients were diagnosed by bone marrow smear and were divided into acute lymphoid leukemia (ALL), acute myeloid leukemia (AML), chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), and unspecified leukemias (UL). The annual incidence rate (AIR) and average annual incidence rate (AAIR) were calculated per million children. Cases were stratified by age and assigned to one of four age strata: 1) <1 year; 2) 1¨C4 years; 3) 5¨C9 years, or 4) 10¨C14 or 10¨C11 years, for Mexico City and El Salvador, respectively.The number of cases was 375 and 238 in El Salvador and Mexico City, respectively. AAIRs in Mexico City were 44.9, 10.6, 2.5, 0.5, and 58.4 per million children for ALL, AML, CML, UL, and total leukemias, respectively. The AAIRs in El Salvador could not be calculated because the fourth age stratum in El Salvador included children only from 0¨C11 years old. The incidence rates for the Salvadoran group of 0¨C11 year olds were 34.2, 7.1, 0.6, 0.2, and 43.2 per million children for ALL, AML, CML, UL, and total leukemias, respectively.Reported AIRs for each age group in El Salvador were similar to those from other American countries. The AAIR of ALL in Mexico City is one of the highest reported for North America.Leukemias are the most frequent type of cancer in childhood [1], the incidence of which varies depending on the area of the world where they are studied [2]. An elevated frequency of acute leukemias has been reported in populations of Hispanic origin [3-5]. For example, in Costa Rica, the highest incidence rate in the world for acute leu %U http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2407/5/33