Wang Jayson, Stebbing Justin, Bower Mark
Department of Oncology, Imperial College School of Medicine, Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, London, United Kingdom.
Gend Med. 2007 Sep;4(3):266-73. doi: 10.1016/s1550-8579(07)80045-3.
Cancer in individuals living with HIV and AIDS is a common source of morbidity and mortality, especially in the underdeveloped world. As antiretrovirals are distributed with greater equity across the globe, individuals with HIV and AIDS are living longer and developing malignancies, as opposed to other opportunistic infections.
This article reviews the gender differences in studies of AIDS-associated cancers, examining factors related to transmission, treatment, and outcome.
MEDLINE, PubMed, Ovid, conference proceedings, and abstract books were searched from 1983 onward for English-language publications and data on gender differences related to AIDS-associated cancers. Relevant trials were similarly reviewed. The search terms used were women or gender, cancer or tumor or malignancy, lymphoma or Kaposi, and HIV or AIDS.
We found that studies in established market economies have focused predominantly on men, although a wider view suggests that the rapidly growing rates of HIV infection among women should prompt specific oncologic challenges.
Immunosuppression-induced malignancies in women, Kaposi sarcoma in particular, are likely to represent a global issue in the future.
感染艾滋病毒和患艾滋病个体中的癌症是发病和死亡的常见原因,在欠发达国家尤其如此。随着抗逆转录病毒药物在全球范围内更公平地分发,感染艾滋病毒和患艾滋病的个体寿命延长,并且出现恶性肿瘤,而非其他机会性感染。
本文回顾艾滋病相关癌症研究中的性别差异,探讨与传播、治疗及转归相关的因素。
检索1983年起的MEDLINE、PubMed、Ovid、会议论文集及摘要书籍,查找与艾滋病相关癌症性别差异有关的英文出版物及数据。对相关试验进行类似回顾。使用的检索词为女性或性别、癌症或肿瘤或恶性肿瘤、淋巴瘤或卡波西肉瘤、艾滋病毒或艾滋病。
我们发现,发达市场经济体的研究主要聚焦于男性,不过更全面来看,女性中艾滋病毒感染率的快速上升应会带来特定的肿瘤学挑战。
女性因免疫抑制引发的恶性肿瘤,尤其是卡波西肉瘤,未来可能成为一个全球性问题。