Peveling-Oberhag J, Arcaini L, Bankov K, Zeuzem S, Herrmann E
Department of Internal Medicine 1, Goethe-University Hospital, Frankfurt, Germany.
Department of Hematology Oncology, Fondazione IRCCS Policlinico San Matteo, Pavia, Italy.
J Viral Hepat. 2016 Jul;23(7):536-44. doi: 10.1111/jvh.12518. Epub 2016 Feb 29.
Many epidemiological studies provide solid evidence for an association of chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection with B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (B-NHL). However, the most convincing evidence for a causal relationship between HCV infection and lymphoma development is the observation of B-NHL regression after HCV eradication by antiviral therapy (AVT). We conducted a literature search to identify studies that included patients with HCV-associated B-NHL (HCV-NHL) who received AVT, with the intention to treat lymphoma and viral disease at the same time. The primary end point was the correlation of sustained virological response (SVR) under AVT with lymphoma response. Secondary end points were overall lymphoma response rates and HCV-NHL response in correlation with lymphoma subtypes. We included 20 studies that evaluated the efficacy of AVT in HCV-NHL (n = 254 patients). Overall lymphoma response rate through AVT was 73% [95%>confidence interval, (CI) 67-78%]. Throughout studies there was a strong association between SVR and lymphoma response (83% response rate, 95%>CI, 76-88%) compared to a failure in achieving SVR (53% response rate, 95%>CI, 39-67%, P = 0.0002). There was a trend towards favourable response for AVT in HCV-associated marginal zone lymphomas (response rate 81%, 95%>CI, 74-87%) compared to nonmarginal zone origin (response rate 71%, 95%>CI, 61-79%, P = 0.07). In conclusion, in the current meta-analysis, the overall response rate of HCV-NHL under AVT justifies the recommendation for AVT as first-line treatment in patients who do not need immediate conventional treatment. The strong correlation of SVR and lymphoma regression supports the hypothesis of a causal relationship of HCV and lymphomagenesis.
许多流行病学研究为慢性丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)感染与B细胞非霍奇金淋巴瘤(B-NHL)之间的关联提供了确凿证据。然而,HCV感染与淋巴瘤发生之间存在因果关系的最有说服力的证据是观察到抗病毒治疗(AVT)根除HCV后B-NHL病情缓解。我们进行了文献检索,以确定纳入接受AVT治疗的HCV相关B-NHL(HCV-NHL)患者的研究,旨在同时治疗淋巴瘤和病毒性疾病。主要终点是AVT下持续病毒学应答(SVR)与淋巴瘤应答的相关性。次要终点是总体淋巴瘤应答率以及与淋巴瘤亚型相关的HCV-NHL应答情况。我们纳入了20项评估AVT对HCV-NHL疗效的研究(n = 254例患者)。通过AVT的总体淋巴瘤应答率为73% [95%置信区间(CI),67 - 78%]。在各项研究中,与未实现SVR(应答率53%,95% CI,39 - 67%,P = 0.0002)相比,SVR与淋巴瘤应答之间存在强关联(应答率83%,95% CI,76 - 88%)。与非边缘区起源的淋巴瘤(应答率71%,95% CI,61 - 79%,P = 0.07)相比,HCV相关边缘区淋巴瘤对AVT有良好应答的趋势(应答率81%,95% CI,74 - 87%)。总之,在当前的荟萃分析中,AVT下HCV-NHL的总体应答率证明了对于不需要立即进行传统治疗的患者,推荐AVT作为一线治疗是合理的。SVR与淋巴瘤消退之间的强相关性支持了HCV与淋巴瘤发生存在因果关系的假说。