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Incidence of AIDS Defining and Non-AIDS Defining Malignancies among HIV-infected Persons
Pragna Patel*1, D Hanson1, R Novak2, A Moorman1, T Tong1, S Holmberg3, P Sullivan1, and J Brooks1
1CDC, Atlanta, GA, US; 2Univ of Illinois Coll of Med, Chicago, US; and 3Res Triangle Inst Intl, Atlanta, GA, US
Background: Although
the incidence of AIDS-defining malignancies has decreased in the highly active
antiretroviral therapy (HAART) era, less is known about the incidence of
non-AIDS defining malignancies among HIV-infected persons. We determined the incidence of the most
frequent malignancies among HIV-infected persons relative to the general
population.
Methods: Incidence
rates of three AIDS-defining malignancies and eleven non-AIDS defining malignancies
were calculated using combined data from 1992 to 2002 from two longitudinal
medical records abstraction projects, the HIV Outpatient Study (HOPS) and the
Adult/Adolescent Spectrum of Disease (ASD) project. All incidence rates were adjusted for age and
several were also adjusted for race and gender using direct standardization. Using incidence rate ratios, these rates were
compared to data from the Surveillance and End Results (SEER) project.
Results: A total
of 59,101 persons were observed in the combined dataset, representing 181,201
person-years of follow-up. The rates of
the 3 AIDS-defining malignancies as well as of 7 non-AIDS defining malignancies
were significantly higher in the HIV-infected population than in the SEER
population. Incidence rate ratios for
these malignancies were as follows: Kaposi’s sarcoma (RRadj=
353.7 [95%CI: 338.6, 369.4]), non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (RRadj=
28.7 [95%CI: 26.9, 30.5]), cervical cancer (RRadj=
17.0 [95%CI: 13.9 , 20.7]), anal cancer (RRadj = 18.3
[95%CI: 13.6, 24.2]), Hodgkin’s disease (RRadj= 17.5
[95%CI: 14.4, 21.1]), liver cancer (RRadj= 4.5
[95%CI: 3.2, 6.1]), testicular cancer (RRadj= 3.3
[95%CI: 2.3, 4.5]), melanoma (RRadj=2.1 [95%CI: 1.6,
2.6]), oropharyngeal cancer (RRadj= 2.0 [95%CI: 1.5 , 2.5]), and lung cancer (RRadj= 1.6 [95%CI: 1.4, 1.8]). The incidence rates of breast and prostate cancer
were significantly lower in the HIV-infected population; there were no
differences in incidence rates of colorectal or renal cancer.
Conclusions: Relative
to the SEER population, the incidence of many non-AIDS defining malignancies were
significantly higher in HIV-infected persons from 1992-2002. Health care providers should consider
enhanced monitoring for these malignancies in their HIV-infected patients.
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