European Journal of Medical Research (Mar 2011)

Cancer risk in HIV-infected individuals on HAART is largely attributed to oncogenic infections and state of immunocompetence

  • Vogel M,
  • Friedrich O,
  • Lüchters G,
  • Holleczek B,
  • Wasmuth JC,
  • Anadol E,
  • Schwarze-Zander C,
  • Nattermann J,
  • Oldenburg J,
  • Sauerbruch T,
  • Rockstroh JK,
  • Spengler U

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/2047-783X-16-3-101
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 3
p. 101

Abstract

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Abstract Objectives To estimate the cancer risk of HIV-infected patients in the HAART era with respect to a general reference population and to determine risk factors for malignancy. Methods Long term (1996-2009) cancer incidence of the Bonn single centre HIV cohort was compared to the incidence of the reference population of Saarland using standardized incidence ratios (SIR). Poisson regression analysis was used to identify predictors of cancer risk. Results 1,476 patients entered the cohort, enabling 8,772 person years of observation. 121 tumours in 114 patients, 7 in-situ and 114 invasive cancers, were identified. Malignancies associated with infectious agents such as Kaposi sarcoma (SIRs: male: 5,683; female: 277), non-Hodgkin lymphoma (SIRs male: 35; female: 18), anal cancer (SIRs male: 88; female: 115) as well a cervical carcinoma (SIR female: 4) and Hodgkin's disease (SIR male: 39) and liver cancer (SIR male: 18) were substantially more frequent in HIV-infected patients than in the general population (p Conclusions HAART and preserved CD4 cells preferentially reduce the risk of malignancies associated with oncogenic infections.

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