For moms-to-be, taking prenatal multivitamins enriched with folic acid may reduce the risk of three common forms of childhood cancer.
Folic acid and other prenatal vitamins are typically taken to reduce the risk of birth defects. Now a new study reveals that these pills seem to also reduce the baby’s risk of developing the most common types of childhood cancer: leukemia, brain tumors and neuroblastoma, a cancer of the nervous system.
“Our research indicates that a large proportion of several early childhood cancers can be prevented by taking a prenatal multivitamin before and during pregnancy,” said Dr. Gideon Koren, the study’s principal investigator from the SickKids Research Institute in Toronto, Canada.
The American Cancer Society predicts that more than 10,000 American children under age 15 will be diagnosed with cancer in 2007. About one-fifth of children with cancer do not live more than five years after diagnosis, and even in those who are successfully treated, months of chemotherapy and radiation have long-term risks. Therefore, finding new ways to prevent childhood cancer is especially important