Glaser Sally L, Hsu Joe L
Northern California Cancer Center, 32960 Alvarado-Niles Road, Suite 600, Union City, CA 94587, USA.
Leuk Res. 2002 Mar;26(3):261-9. doi: 10.1016/s0145-2126(01)00126-6.
Hodgkin's disease (HD) has been reported to be rare in Asians. Data sparseness has hindered studies exploring the relative contributions of environment and heredity to HD etiology, and individual risk factors have never been studied in an Asian population. With the most recent, uniformly collected population-based data from the US and Asia, we compared HD incidence rates in Chinese, Japanese, Filipinos, and Asian Indians in the US and in Asia. HD incidence rates were quite low in all Asian subgroups, but approximately double in US Asians as in native Asians. In both, rates were lower for Japanese and Chinese than for Filipinos and Asian Indians. A modest young-adult rate peak occurred for most US Asian groups, but not for any population in Asia. In data from a population-based case-control study of HD in San Francisco area women, young-adult Asian cases, like young-adult cases of other racial/ethnic groups, had childhood social environments indicative of less early contact with children. Given environmental and lifestyle differences between the US and Asia, the consistently low rates of HD in Asians suggest genetic resistance to disease development, possibly associated with HLA type. International and inter-ethnic differences, and risk factor patterns in case-control data, implicate environmental influences in the etiology of HD.
据报道,霍奇金淋巴瘤(HD)在亚洲人中较为罕见。数据稀缺阻碍了对环境和遗传因素在HD病因中相对作用的研究,且从未在亚洲人群中研究过个体风险因素。利用美国和亚洲最新统一收集的基于人群的数据,我们比较了在美国和亚洲的中国人、日本人、菲律宾人和亚洲印度人的HD发病率。所有亚洲亚组的HD发病率都相当低,但美国亚洲人的发病率约为亚洲本土人的两倍。在这两个群体中,日本人和中国人的发病率低于菲律宾人和亚洲印度人。大多数美国亚洲人群在青年期出现了适度的发病率高峰,但亚洲任何人群均未出现。在旧金山地区女性HD的一项基于人群的病例对照研究数据中,青年期亚洲病例与其他种族/族裔群体的青年期病例一样,其童年社会环境表明早期与儿童接触较少。鉴于美国和亚洲在环境和生活方式上的差异,亚洲人HD发病率持续较低表明对疾病发展具有遗传抗性,这可能与HLA类型有关。国际和种族间差异以及病例对照数据中的风险因素模式表明环境因素对HD病因有影响。