Iwanaga Masako, Watanabe Toshiki, Yamaguchi Kazunari
Graduate School of Public Health, Teikyo University Tokyo, Japan.
Front Microbiol. 2012 Sep 10;3:322. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2012.00322. eCollection 2012.
Adult T-cell leukemia (ATL) is an aggressive T-cell malignancy caused by human T-cell leukemia virus type I (HTLV-1) infection and often occurs in HTLV-1-endemic areas, such as southwestern Japan, the Caribbean islands, Central and South America, Intertropical Africa, and Middle East. To date, many epidemiological studies have been conducted to investigate the incidence of ATL among general population or HTLV-1 carriers and to identify a variety of laboratory, molecular, and host-specific markers to be possible predictive factors for developing ATL because HTLV-1 infection alone is not sufficient to develop ATL. This literature review focuses on the epidemiology of ATL and the risk factors for the development of ATL from HTLV-1 carriers, while keeping information on the epidemiology of HTLV-1 to a minimum. The main lines of epidemiological evidence are: (1) ATL occurs mostly in adults, at least 20-30 years after the HTLV-1 infection, (2) age at onset differs across geographic areas: the average age in the Central and South America (around 40 years old) is younger than that in Japan (around 60 years old), (3) ATL occurs in those infected in childhood, but seldom occurs in those infected in adulthood, (4) male carriers have about a three- to fivefold higher risk of developing ATL than female, (5) the estimated lifetime risk of developing ATL in HTLV-1 carriers is 6-7% for men and 2-3% for women in Japan, (6) a low anti-Tax reactivity, a high soluble interleukin-2 receptor level, a high anti-HTLV-1 titer, and high levels of circulating abnormal lymphocytes and white blood cell count are accepted risk factors for the development of ATL, and (7) a higher proviral load (more than 4 copies/100 peripheral blood mononuclear cells) is an independent risk factor for progression of ATL. Nevertheless, the current epidemiological evidence is insufficient to fully understand the oncogenesis of ATL. Further well-designed epidemiological studies are needed.
成人T细胞白血病(ATL)是一种由I型人类T细胞白血病病毒(HTLV-1)感染引起的侵袭性T细胞恶性肿瘤,常发生于HTLV-1流行地区,如日本西南部、加勒比群岛、中南美洲、热带非洲和中东。迄今为止,已经开展了许多流行病学研究,以调查普通人群或HTLV-1携带者中ATL的发病率,并确定各种实验室、分子和宿主特异性标志物,作为可能的ATL发病预测因素,因为仅HTLV-1感染并不足以引发ATL。本综述聚焦于ATL的流行病学以及HTLV-1携带者发生ATL的危险因素,同时尽量减少关于HTLV-1流行病学的信息。主要的流行病学证据如下:(1)ATL大多发生于成人,至少在HTLV-1感染后20至30年;(2)发病年龄因地理区域而异:中南美洲的平均发病年龄(约40岁)比日本(约60岁)年轻;(3)ATL发生于儿童期感染者,但很少发生于成年期感染者;(4)男性携带者发生ATL的风险比女性高约三至五倍;(5)在日本,HTLV-1携带者发生ATL的终生估计风险男性为6-7%,女性为2-3%;(6)抗Tax反应性低、可溶性白细胞介素-2受体水平高、抗HTLV-1滴度高以及循环异常淋巴细胞水平高和白细胞计数高是公认的ATL发病危险因素;(7)较高的前病毒载量(超过4拷贝/100个外周血单个核细胞)是ATL进展的独立危险因素。然而目前的流行病学证据尚不足以完全理解ATL的肿瘤发生机制仍需要进一步设计完善的流行病学研究。