Smoking
Linked to Higher Risk of Non-AIDS Malignancies and Anal Cancer in Men
with HIV
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SUMMARY:
HIV positive men who smoke tobacco or did so in the past have
elevated rates of non-AIDS cancers overall, and of anal cancer
and pre-cancerous anal cell abnormalities in particular, but
clinicians often fail to ask patients about their smoking
habits, according to a study of U.S. veterans reported last
month at the 50th Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial
Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC 2010)
in Boston. Three years after quitting, ex-smokers' cancer
rates approached those of lifetime non-smokers, but anal dysplasia
remained common. |
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By
Liz Highleyman
Use
of tobacco is a known risk factor for non-AIDS malignancies including
lung and mouth cancers.
The 3
AIDS-defining
malignancies are Kaposi sarcoma (KS), non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL),
and invasive cervical cancer. Although anal cell abnormalities (dysplasia,
neoplasia, and squamous intraepithelial lesions) and anal cancer are
caused by the same high-risk human papillomavirus (HPV) types as cervical
cancer, it is not officially classified as AIDS-related.
Angelike
Liappis and colleagues conducted a study of cancer rates among HIV
positive men receiving care at the Washington, DC, Veterans Affairs
Medical Center (VAMC). A total of 200 participants were prospectively
surveyed about their use of tobacco over 6 months.
Clinical
data -- including information on smoking history recorded by providers
-- were collected from the VAMC's VistaCPRS computerized medical record
system. The researchers correlated tobacco use with non-AIDS malignancies
overall, anal cancer, and anal dysplasia, or abnormal and potentially
pre-cancerous cell changes.
Results
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Among
the 200 surveyed patients, 82% reported ever smoking tobacco. |
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A
majority (63%) reported active tobacco use within the past 30 days. |
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25%
quit smoking at least 3 years ago. |
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Just
19% had never smoked. |
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Rates
of non-AIDS malignancies were higher among smokers -- especially
current smokers -- compared with lifetime non-smokers and those
who quit: |
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Ever
smoked: 13%; |
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Smoked
during past 30 days: 14%; |
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Quit
3 or more years ago: 10%; |
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Never
smoked: 8%. |
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Anal
cancer was also more common among smokers, though overall numbers
were small: |
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Ever
smoked: 4%; |
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Smoked
during past 30 days: 5%; |
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Quit
3 or more years ago: no cases; |
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Never
smoked: no cases. |
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Anal
dysplasia was common among smokers, and rates did not fall back
toward those of non-smokers even after 3 years: |
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Ever
smoked: 82%; |
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Smoked
during past 30 days: 92%; |
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Quit
3 or more years ago: 71%; |
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Never
smoked: 25%. |
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Only
49% of participants had smoking mentioned in their electronic medical
records. |
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The
researchers calculated that tobacco use among 54% of screened patients
would have been missed by providers using electronic medical records
alone. |
"In
those patients surveyed, we improved tobacco use documentation by 40%
and were able to further distinguish use as remote or active,"
the researchers said.
When screening for anal cell abnormalities, they recommended, "HIV
[care] providers should strive to document smoking history and factor
in the risk due to tobacco, particularly active use, in addition to
sexual risk and presence of HPV related pathology."
Investigator affiliations: VA Medical Center, Washington, DC; George
Washington University, Washington, DC.
10/5/10
Reference
AP Liappis, H Cohen-Blair, CA Reisen, and others. Identification
of Tobacco Use in HIV-Infected Patients: The Added Role in Screening
for Malignancy and Anal Dysplasia. 50th Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial
Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC 2010). Boston, September 12-15, 2010.
Abstract
H-224.