| Literature DB >> 22550493 |
Abstract
Certain infectious agents are associated with lymphomas, but the strength of the association varies geographically, suggesting that local environmental factors make important contributions to lymphomagenesis. Endemic Burkitt's Lymphoma has well-defined environmental requirements making it particularly suitable for research into local environmental factors. The Epstein-Barr virus and holoendemic Malaria are recognized as important cofactors in endemic Burkitt's Lymphoma and their contributions are discussed. Additionally, infection with Chikungunya Fever, a potentially oncogenic arbovirus, was associated with the onset of endemic Burkitt's Lymphoma in one study and also with space-time case clusters of the lymphoma. Chikungunya Virus has several characteristics typical of oncogenic viruses. The Flavivirus, Hepatitis C, a Class 1 Human Carcinogen, closely related to the arboviruses, Yellow Fever, and Dengue, is also more distantly related to Chikungunya Virus. The mechanisms of oncogenesis believed to operate in Hepatitis C lymphomagenesis are discussed, as is their potential applicability to Chikungunya Virus.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22550493 PMCID: PMC3328886 DOI: 10.1155/2012/494758
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Hematol
Reports of Case clustering in endemic Burkitt's Lymphoma.
| Location | Dates | Space only | Space and time | Author |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| West Nile, | 1961–65 | + | Williams et al. [ | |
| Uganda | 1972-73 | Siemiatycki et al. [ | ||
| Mengo District and Bwamba County, | 1966–68 | + | Morrow et al. [ | |
| Aliba, Uganda | 1962-63 | + | Pike et al. [ | |
| Malawi | 1987–90 | + | van den Bosch [ | |
| West Kenya | 1999–04 | + | Not tested | Rainey et al. [ |
| Cameroon | 2003–2006 | + | Not tested | Wright et al. [ |
Arboviruses and Malaria—a comparison.
| Characteristic | Arboviruses | Malaria |
|---|---|---|
| Epidemiology in Lymphoma Belt | Endemic and occasionally epidemic | Holoendemic + 3 types less intense |
| Age acquisition immunity | Mimics age distribution of eBL | By age of 5 yrs if holoendemic |
| Altitude Barrier | 5000 ft at Equator, 3000 ft in Zambia—same as BL | Up to 8,000 ft at Equator |
| Geographic Distribution | Dependent on vectors—usually mosquitoes | Dependent on anopheline mosquitoes |
| Replication Temperature Requirements | Yellow fever stops <15.5–18°C | Malaria stops <20°C |
| Same as BL | (PF > 18°C, PV > 17°C, PM > 16°C) | |
| Effect malaria suppression | None | Reduced |
| Effect malaria eradication | Eradicated | Eradicated |
Characteristic arboviral signs and symptoms seen in eBL patients immediately preceding development of lymphoma.
| Sign or symptom | Total number (%) | Time before BL in days (range) | CHIK IgG/M+ On admission | CHIK IgG/M+ after 14/7 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rash | 9 (8) | 8 (2–14) | 0 | 5 |
| Sore eyes | 16 (18) | 19 (7–28) | 1 | 10 |
| Joint pains | 32 (37) | 14 (2–28) | 9 | 16 |
| Mouth ulcers | 14 (16) | 13 (3–21) | 2 | 10 |
| Fever | 27 (31) | 16 (1–56) | 10 | 19 |
| Bleeding | 14 (16) | 19 (14–28) | 3 | 6 |
Classification of arboviruses.
| Family | Genus | Disease | Vector |
|---|---|---|---|
| Flaviviridae | Flavivirus | Yellow Fever | Aedes Mosquitoes |
| Togaviridae | Alphaviruses | Chikungunya, O'Nyong-Nyong, Sindbis | Aedes and Culicine |
| Mayaro | Culicine Mosquitoes | ||
| Equine Encephalitis | |||
| Bunyaviridae | Bunyavirus | Bunyamwera Virus | Aedes Mosquitoes |
Figure 1