| Literature DB >> 28508282 |
Katelynn M Wilton1, Eric L Matteson2.
Abstract
Traditional and biologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs) are effective medications for the management of rheumatoid arthritis (RA). However, the effects of these medications on immune function raises concern that they may increase long-term cancer risk. The baseline risk for some cancers appears to differ in patients with RA compared to the general population, with the former having an increased risk of lymphoma, lung cancer and renal cancer, but a decreased risk of colorectal and breast cancer. Some DMARDs appear to increase the rate of specific cancer types (such as bladder cancer with cyclophosphamide), but few appear to increase the overall cancer risk. Studying the link between lymphoma and disease severity in RA is complicated because patients with persistently active disease are at increased risk for lymphoma, and disease severity correlates with more intense use of immunosuppressive medications. Overall, cancer risk in patients with RA is slightly above that of the general population, with the increased risk likely secondary to an increased risk of lymphomas in those with high disease activity. Risk mitigation includes management of RA disease activity as well as age- and sex-appropriate cancer screening.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Comorbidity; Inflammation; Malignancy; Rheumatoid arthritis
Year: 2017 PMID: 28508282 PMCID: PMC5696277 DOI: 10.1007/s40744-017-0064-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rheumatol Ther ISSN: 2198-6576
Risk status for specific cancer types in patients with rheumatoid arthritis
| Cancer type | Risk in general rheumatoid arthritis | Prognosis | Impact of therapeutics | Recommendations [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | 10% increase [ | Worse [ | Follow national guidelines | |
| Breast | Decreased [ | Worse [ | Decreased with TNFi [ | 45–55 years of age: Annual mammography >55 years of age: annual or biannual mammography |
| Cervical | Likely unchanged [ | 21–29 years of age : Pap smear every 3 years 30–65 years of age: Pap smear and HPV test every 5 years, or Pap smear every 3 years | ||
| Gastric | Decreased [ | Worse [ | ||
| Liver | Decreased [ | Worse [ | ||
| Colon | Decreased [ | Worse [ | NSAIDs may inhibit tumorigenesis [ TNFi may restore general population level risk [ | Annual (gFOBT or FIT) or triannual (Multitarget Stool DNA test) stool testing or flexible signmoidoscopy every 5 years Colonoscopy every 10 years or after any positive tests |
| Lung | Increased [ | Worse [ | May be increased with MTX [ | Smoking cessation counseling, as appropriate Consideration of pulmonary imaging risks and benefits |
| Lymphoproliferative | Increased (2×) [ | Worse [ | Increased with Aza, CYC [ Maybe prevented with diligent glucocorticoid use [ Potential to treat B cell lymphomas with RTX [ | Control ofrheumatoid arthritis disease activity is important |
| Multiple myeloma | Likely unchanged [ | |||
| Non-melanoma skin cancer | Likely unchanged [ | Worse for SCC [ | May be increased with TNFi [ | Potential for skin cancer screening, depending on risk factors |
| Melanoma | Likely unchanged [ | Maybe increased with MTX [ | ||
| Prostate | Likely unchanged [ | Worse [ | Informed decision about prostate-specific antigen screening in men | |
| Renal cell carcinoma | Unclear [ | Worse [ |
Aza Azathioprine, CYC cyclophosphamide, FIT fecal immunochemical test, HPV human papillomavirus, gFOBT guaiac-based fecal occult blood test, MTX methotrexate, NSAIDs non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, RTX rituximab, SCC squamous cell carcinoma, TNFi tumor necrosis factor inhibitor