1. Trends in Cancer Incidence in Different Antiretroviral Treatment-Eras amongst People with HIV.
- Author
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Greenberg, Lauren, Ryom, Lene, Bakowska, Elzbieta, Wit, Ferdinand, Bucher, Heiner C., Braun, Dominique L., Phillips, Andrew, Sabin, Caroline, d'Arminio Monforte, Antonella, Zangerle, Robert, Smith, Colette, De Wit, Stéphane, Bonnet, Fabrice, Pradier, Christian, Mussini, Cristina, Muccini, Camilla, Vehreschild, Jörg J., Hoy, Jennifer, Svedhem, Veronica, and Miró, Jose M.
- Subjects
HIV infections ,HIV-positive persons ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,ANTIRETROVIRAL agents ,DISEASE incidence ,TUMORS ,SMOKING ,BODY mass index ,POISSON distribution ,COMORBIDITY ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Simple Summary: Cancer is a leading cause of death, both in the general population and in people with HIV. We aimed to assess temporal trends of cancer from 2006 to 2021 in two international HIV cohort collaborations (D:A:D and RESPOND). We assessed overall cancer, AIDS-defining cancers (ADCs), non-ADCs (NADCs), infection-related cancers, body mass index (BMI)-related cancers, and smoking-related cancers. Amongst almost 65,000 individuals, we found that the age-standardised incidence of all cancers remained fairly constant over time; however, the incidence of ADCs and infection-related cancers both decreased, whilst the incidence of NADCs, smoking-related cancers, and BMI-related cancers increased. Trends were similar after adjusting for demographics, comorbidities, and HIV-related factors. Our results highlight the need for better prevention strategies to reduce the incidence of NADCs, smoking-related cancers, and BMI-related cancers. Despite cancer being a leading comorbidity amongst individuals with HIV, there are limited data assessing cancer trends across different antiretroviral therapy (ART)-eras. We calculated age-standardised cancer incidence rates (IRs) from 2006–2021 in two international cohort collaborations (D:A:D and RESPOND). Poisson regression was used to assess temporal trends, adjusted for potential confounders. Amongst 64,937 individuals (31% ART-naïve at baseline) and 490,376 total person-years of follow-up (PYFU), there were 3763 incident cancers (IR 7.7/1000 PYFU [95% CI 7.4, 7.9]): 950 AIDS-defining cancers (ADCs), 2813 non-ADCs, 1677 infection-related cancers, 1372 smoking-related cancers, and 719 BMI-related cancers (groups were not mutually exclusive). Age-standardised IRs for overall cancer remained fairly constant over time (8.22/1000 PYFU [7.52, 8.97] in 2006–2007, 7.54 [6.59, 8.59] in 2020–2021). The incidence of ADCs (3.23 [2.79, 3.72], 0.99 [0.67, 1.42]) and infection-related cancers (4.83 [4.2, 5.41], 2.43 [1.90, 3.05]) decreased over time, whilst the incidence of non-ADCs (4.99 [4.44, 5.58], 6.55 [5.67, 7.53]), smoking-related cancers (2.38 [2.01, 2.79], 3.25 [2.63–3.96]), and BMI-related cancers (1.07 [0.83, 1.37], 1.88 [1.42, 2.44]) increased. Trends were similar after adjusting for demographics, comorbidities, HIV-related factors, and ART use. These results highlight the need for better prevention strategies to reduce the incidence of NADCs, smoking-, and BMI-related cancers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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