Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD.
EMBLEM Study, St. Mary's Hospital Lacor, Gulu, Uganda.
Int J Cancer. 2020 Feb 15;146(4):953-969. doi: 10.1002/ijc.32390. Epub 2019 May 20.
Endemic Burkitt lymphoma (eBL) is the most common childhood cancer in sub-Saharan African countries, however, few epidemiologic studies have been undertaken and none attempted enrolling cases from multiple countries. We therefore conducted a population-based case-control study of eBL in children aged 0-15 years old in six regions in Northern Uganda, Northern Tanzania and Western Kenya, enrolling 862 suspected cases and 2,934 population controls (response rates 98.5-100%), and processing ~40,000 vials of samples using standardized protocols. Risk factor questionnaires were administered, and malaria period prevalence was measured using rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs). A total of 80.9% of the recruited cases were diagnosed as eBL; 61.4% confirmed by histology. Associations with eBL risk were computed using logistic regression models adjusted for relevant confounders. Associations common in at least two countries were emphasized. eBL risk was decreased with higher maternal income and paternal education and elevated with history of inpatient malaria treatment >12 months before enrollment. Reporting malaria-attributed fever up to 6 months before enrollment and malaria-RDT positivity at enrollment were associated with decreased eBL risk. Conversely, reporting exposure to mass malaria suppression programs (e.g., indoor residual insecticide) was associated with elevated risk. HIV seropositivity was associated with elevated eBL risk, but the relative impact was small. The study shows that it is feasible to conduct networked, multisite population-based studies of eBL in Africa. eBL was inversely associated with socioeconomic status, positively associated with inpatient malaria treatment 12 months ago and with living in areas targeted for malaria suppression, which support a role of malaria in eBL.
地方性伯基特淋巴瘤(eBL)是撒哈拉以南非洲国家中最常见的儿童癌症,但进行的流行病学研究很少,而且没有尝试在多个国家招募病例。因此,我们在乌干达北部、坦桑尼亚北部和肯尼亚西部的六个地区开展了一项针对 0-15 岁儿童的 eBL 基于人群的病例对照研究,招募了 862 例疑似病例和 2934 例人群对照(响应率 98.5-100%),并使用标准化方案处理了约 40000 份样本。我们还进行了问卷调查,并使用快速诊断测试(RDT)测量疟疾流行期患病率。共招募了 80.9%的病例被诊断为 eBL;61.4%的病例通过组织学证实。使用逻辑回归模型计算与 eBL 风险相关的因素,并根据相关混杂因素进行调整。强调了至少在两个国家中存在的关联。与 eBL 风险呈负相关的因素包括母亲收入较高、父亲受教育程度较高,而在招募前 12 个月内有住院疟疾治疗史的风险较高。在招募前 6 个月报告与疟疾相关的发热和招募时疟疾-RDT 阳性与降低 eBL 风险相关。相反,报告接触大规模疟疾抑制计划(例如室内滞留杀虫剂)与增加的风险相关。HIV 血清阳性与 eBL 风险增加相关,但相对影响较小。该研究表明,在非洲开展网络式、多地点基于人群的 eBL 研究是可行的。eBL 与社会经济地位呈负相关,与 12 个月前的住院疟疾治疗以及生活在疟疾抑制目标地区呈正相关,这支持疟疾在 eBL 中的作用。