The irreversible HCV-associated risk of gastric cancer following interferon-based therapy: a joint study of hospital-based cases and nationwide population-based cohorts
Background: Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection causes many extrahepatic malignancies; whether it increases gastric cancer risk and the risk reverses after anti-HCV therapy remain elusive. Method: A nationwide population-based cohort study of Taiwan National Health Insurance Research Database (TNHIRD)...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Therapeutic advances in gastroenterology 2019-06, Vol.12, p.1756284819855732 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background:
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection causes many extrahepatic malignancies; whether it increases gastric cancer risk and the risk reverses after anti-HCV therapy remain elusive.
Method:
A nationwide population-based cohort study of Taiwan National Health Insurance Research Database (TNHIRD) was conducted. In parallel, the risk factors and HCV-core-protein expressions were surveyed in gastric cancer patients from a tertiary care center.
Results:
From 2003 to 2012, of 11,712,928 patients, three 1:4:4, propensity-score-matched TNHIRD cohorts including HCV-treated (7545 patients with interferon-based therapy ⩾ 6 months), HCV-untreated (n = 30,180), and HCV-uninfected cohorts (n = 30,180) were enrolled. The cumulative incidences of gastric cancer [HCV-treated: 0.452%; 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.149–1.136%; HCV-untreated: 0.472%; 95% CI: 0.274–0.776%; HCV-uninfected: 0.146%; 95% CI 0.071–0.280%] were lowest in HCV-uninfected cohort (p = 0.0028), but indifferent between treated and untreated cohorts. HCV infection [hazards ratio (HR): 2.364; 95% CI: 1.337–4.181], male sex (HR: 1.823; 95% CI: 1.09–3.05) and age ⩾ 49 years (HR: 3.066; 95% CI: 1.56–6.026) were associated with incident gastric cancers. Among 887 (males: 68.4%; mean age: 66.5 ± 12.9 years, 2008–2018) hospitalized gastric cancer patients, HCV Ab-positive rate was 7.8%. None of the investigated factors exhibited different rates between HCV Ab-positive and Ab-negative patients. No HCV-core-positive cells were demonstrated in gastric cancer tissues.
Conclusions:
HCV infection, male sex and old age were risk factors for gastric cancer development. HCV-associated gastric cancer risk might be neither reversed by interferon-based therapy, nor associated with in situ HCV-core-related carcinogenesis. |
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ISSN: | 1756-2848 1756-283X 1756-2848 |
DOI: | 10.1177/1756284819855732 |