Literature DB >> 9033642

Epstein-Barr virus-associated Hodgkin's disease: epidemiologic characteristics in international data.

S L Glaser1, R J Lin, S L Stewart, R F Ambinder, R F Jarrett, P Brousset, G Pallesen, M L Gulley, G Khan, J O'Grady, M Hummel, M V Preciado, H Knecht, J K Chan, A Claviez.   

Abstract

Hodgkin's disease (HD) has long been suspected to have an infectious precursor, and indirect evidence has implicated Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), a ubiquitous herpesvirus, as a causal agent. Recent molecular studies using EBER in situ hybridization or latency membrane protein-I (LMP-I) immunohistochemistry have identified EBV latent infection in up to 50% of HD tumors. However, the epidemiologic features of these cases have not been examined in detail. To explore the epidemiology of EBV-positive HD so as to understand the role of EBV in HD etiology more clearly, this project accumulated patient data from 14 studies that had applied these EBV assays to HD tumors. With information on age at diagnosis, sex, ethnicity, histologic subtype, country of residence, clinical stage and EBV tumor status from 1,546 HD patients, we examined risk for EBV-positive disease using logistic regression. Forty percent of subjects had EBV-positive tumors, and EBV prevalence varied significantly across groups defined by the study variables. Odds ratios (OR) for EBV-associated HD were significantly elevated for Hispanics vs. whites (OR = 4.1), mixed cellularity vs. nodular sclerosis histologic subtypes (OR = 7.3, 13.4, 4.9 for ages 0-14, 15-49, 50+ years), children from economically less-developed vs. more-developed regions and young adult males vs. females (OR = 2.5). These findings suggest that age, sex, ethnicity and the physiologic effects of poverty may represent biologic modifiers of the EBV association and confirm that this association is strongly but variably linked to histologic subtype. The data augment biologic evidence that EBV is actively involved in HD pathogenesis in some cases but describe epidemiologic complexity in this process.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9033642     DOI: 10.1002/(sici)1097-0215(19970207)70:4<375::aid-ijc1>3.0.co;2-t

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Cancer        ISSN: 0020-7136            Impact factor:   7.396


  122 in total

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8.  EBV may be expressed in the LP cells of nodular lymphocyte-predominant Hodgkin lymphoma (NLPHL) in both children and adults.

Authors:  Alison R Huppmann; Alina Nicolae; Graham W Slack; Stefania Pittaluga; Theresa Davies-Hill; Judith A Ferry; Nancy Lee Harris; Elaine S Jaffe; Robert P Hasserjian
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9.  Infectious, autoimmune and allergic diseases and risk of Hodgkin lymphoma in children and adolescents: a Children's Oncology Group study.

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Journal:  Int J Cancer       Date:  2014-03-18       Impact factor: 7.396

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