Biomedicines (Jun 2022)

Risk of Malignancy in Patients with Asthma-COPD Overlap Compared to Patients with COPD without Asthma

  • Barbara Bonnesen,
  • Pradeesh Sivapalan,
  • Alexander Jordan,
  • Johannes Wirenfeldt Pedersen,
  • Christina Marisa Bergsøe,
  • Josefin Eklöf,
  • Louise Lindhardt Toennesen,
  • Sidse Graff Jensen,
  • Matiullah Naqibullah,
  • Zaigham Saghir,
  • Jens-Ulrik Stæhr Jensen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines10071463
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 7
p. 1463

Abstract

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Chronic inflammation such as asthma may lead to higher risks of malignancy, which may be inhibited by anti-inflammatory medicine such as inhaled corticosteroids (ICS). The aim of this study was to evaluate if patients with asthma-Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) overlap have a higher risk of malignancy than patients with COPD without asthma, and, secondarily, if inhaled corticosteroids modify such a risk in a nationwide multi-center retrospective cohort study of Danish COPD-outpatients with or without asthma. Patients with asthma-COPD overlap were propensity score matched (PSM) 1:2 to patients with COPD without asthma. The endpoint was cancer diagnosis within 2 years. Patients were stratified depending on prior malignancy within 5 years. ICS was explored as a possible risk modifier. We included 50,897 outpatients with COPD; 88% without prior malignancy and 20% with asthma. In the PSM cohorts, 26,003 patients without prior malignancy and 3331 patients with prior malignancy were analyzed. There was no association between asthma-COPD overlap and cancer with hazard ratio (HR) = 0.92, CI = 0.78–1.08, p = 0.31 (no prior malignancy) and HR = 1.04, CI = 0.85–1.26, and p = 0.74 (prior malignancy) as compared to patients with COPD without asthma. ICS did not seem to modify the risk of cancer. In conclusion, in our study, asthma-COPD overlap was not associated with an increased risk of cancer events.

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