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首页> 外文期刊>Hepatology: Official Journal of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases >Hepatitis C Viral Infection Increases the Risk of Lymphoid-Neoplasms: A Population-Based Cohort Study
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Hepatitis C Viral Infection Increases the Risk of Lymphoid-Neoplasms: A Population-Based Cohort Study

机译:丙型肝炎病毒感染增加了淋巴样肿瘤的风险:一项基于人群的队列研究

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Chronic hepatitis C viral (HCV) infection has been associated with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL); however, the results are inconsistent among regions with different HCV prevalence rates. The temporal relationship, risk estimates, and association between HCV and lymphoid-neoplasms remain unclear. This study investigated the temporal relationship between HCV infection and lymphoid-neoplasms using a nationwide population-based cohort. Patients with chronic HCV infection were retrieved from the Taiwan National Health Insurance Research Database during 2001-2005 and designated as the HCV cohort. Those with prior malignancies or coinfected with hepatitis B or human immunodeficiency virus were excluded. The age, sex, and comorbidities, including rheumatological disorders and diabetes, were matched by propensity scores to another non-HCV cohort. Both cohorts were followed longitudinally until 2009 for a new diagnosis of any lymphoid-neoplasms or NHL. A total of 11,679 HCV and 46,716 non-HCV patients were included and followed for 8 years. The incidence rates of any lymphoid-neoplasms and NHL were significantly greater in the HCV cohort than the non-HCV cohort (48.4 versus 22.1, and 37.0 versus 17.5 per 100,000 person-years, respectively, both P < 0.001), even after we excluded lymphoid-neoplasms developed within the first year of follow-up. Cox proportional hazards regression analysis (after adjustment for age, sex, numbers of annual medical visits during follow-up, and comorbidities) indicated that HCV infection was associated with an increased risk of either any lymphoid-neoplasms (hazard ratio = 2.30, 95% confidence interval 1.55-3.43, P < 0.0001) or NHL (hazard ratio 5 2.00, 95% confidence interval 1.27-3.16, P = 0.003). Conclusion: After adjustment for confounders and biases, chronic HCV infection is temporally associated with a two-fold increased risk of lymphoid-neoplasms, especially NHL, in Asian patients; additional large studies are needed to explore whether HCV eradication can reduce the incidence of lymphoid-neoplasms.
机译:慢性丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)感染与非霍奇金淋巴瘤(NHL)有关;但是,结果在不同HCV患病率的地区之间是不一致的。 HCV与淋巴样肿瘤之间的时间关系,风险估计以及关联尚不清楚。这项研究使用全国范围的人群队列研究了HCV感染与淋巴样肿瘤之间的时间关系。从2001-2005年台湾国家健康保险研究数据库中检索出患有慢性HCV感染的患者,并将其指定为HCV队列。那些先前有恶性肿瘤或合并感染乙型肝炎或人类免疫缺陷病毒的患者被排除在外。年龄,性别和合并症(包括风湿病和糖尿病)与倾向评分与另一项非HCV队列相匹配。对这两个队列进行纵向随访,直到2009年,以重新诊断任何淋巴瘤或NHL。总共纳入11,679例HCV和46,716例非HCV患者,并随访了8年。 HCV队列中任何淋巴瘤和NHL的发生率均显着高于非HCV队列(每100,000人年分别为48.4比22.1和37.0比17.5,两者均P <0.001),即使我们将其排除在外在随访的第一年内出现了淋巴样肿瘤。 Cox比例风险回归分析(调整了年龄,性别,随访期间的年度就诊次数和合并症后)表明,HCV感染与任何淋巴肿瘤的风险均增加相关(风险比= 2.30,95%置信区间1.55-3.43,P <0.0001)或NHL(危险比5 2.00,95%置信区间1.27-3.16,P = 0.003)。结论:在调整了混杂因素和偏见之后,慢性HCV感染在时间上与亚洲患者淋巴肿瘤(尤其是NHL)的危险性增加了两倍有关。还需要进行其他大型研究,以探讨根除HCV是否可以减少淋巴样肿瘤的发生。

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