Sigel Keith, Wisnivesky Juan, Shahrir Shahida, Brown Sheldon T, Justice Amy, Kim Joon, Rodriguez-Barradas Maria C, Akgün Kathleen M, Rimland David, Hoo Guy W Soo, Crothers Kristina
aThe Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York bUniversity of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington cJames J. Peters VA Medical Center, Bronx, New York dVA Connecticut Healthcare System, West Haven, Connecticut eYale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut fMichael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center and Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas gAtlanta VA Medical Center and Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia hVA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System and Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, California, USA.
AIDS. 2014 Apr 24;28(7):1007-14. doi: 10.1097/QAD.0000000000000189.
HIV-infected persons have a two-fold to five-fold increased unadjusted risk of lung cancer. In the National Lung Screening Trial (NLST), computed tomography (CT) screening was associated with a reduction in lung cancer mortality among high-risk smokers. These results may not generalize to HIV-infected persons, particularly if they are more likely to have false-positive chest CT findings.
We utilized data including standardized chest CT scans from 160 HIV infected and 139 uninfected Veterans enrolled between 2009 and 2012 in the multicenter Examinations of HIV Associated Lung Emphysema (EXHALE) Study. Abnormal CT findings were abstracted from clinical interpretations of the scans and classified as positive by NLST criteria vs. other findings. Clinical evaluations and diagnoses that ensued were abstracted from the medical record.
There was no significant difference by HIV in the proportion of CT scans classified as positive by NLST criteria (29% of HIV infected and 24% of HIV uninfected, P=0.3). However, HIV-infected participants with CD4 cell counts less than 200 cells/μl had significantly higher odds of positive scans, a finding that persisted in multivariable analysis. Evaluations triggered by abnormal CT scans were also similar in HIV-infected and uninfected participants (all P>0.05).
HIV status was not associated with an increased risk of abnormal findings on CT or increased rates of follow-up testing in clinically stable outpatients with CD4 cell count more than 200. These data reflect favorably on the balance of benefits and harms associated with lung cancer screening for HIV-infected smokers with less severe immunodeficiency.
HIV感染者患肺癌的未调整风险增加了2至5倍。在国家肺癌筛查试验(NLST)中,计算机断层扫描(CT)筛查与高危吸烟者肺癌死亡率的降低相关。这些结果可能不适用于HIV感染者,特别是如果他们更有可能出现胸部CT假阳性结果。
我们利用了多中心HIV相关肺气肿检查(EXHALE)研究中2009年至2012年间登记的160名HIV感染退伍军人和139名未感染退伍军人的标准化胸部CT扫描数据。CT异常结果从扫描的临床解读中提取,并根据NLST标准与其他结果分类为阳性。随后的临床评估和诊断从病历中提取。
根据NLST标准分类为阳性的CT扫描比例在HIV感染者和未感染者之间无显著差异(HIV感染者为29%,未感染HIV者为24%,P=0.3)。然而,CD4细胞计数低于200个/μl的HIV感染参与者扫描阳性的几率显著更高,这一发现在多变量分析中持续存在。HIV感染和未感染参与者中由CT扫描异常引发的评估也相似(所有P>0.05)。
对于CD4细胞计数超过200的临床稳定门诊患者,HIV状态与CT异常发现风险增加或后续检测率增加无关。这些数据对肺癌筛查给免疫缺陷较轻的HIV感染吸烟者带来的利弊平衡反映良好。