3989 Section of Epidemiology and Population Sciences, Department of Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA.
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston School of Public Health, Houston, TX, USA.
Public Health Rep. 2020 Nov/Dec;135(6):805-812. doi: 10.1177/0033354920954497. Epub 2020 Oct 20.
The International Agency for Research on Cancer has classified 13 infectious agents as carcinogenic or probably carcinogenic to humans. We aimed to estimate the percentage (ie, population-attributable fraction) and number of incident cancer cases in Texas in 2015 that were attributable to oncogenic infections, overall and by race/ethnicity.
We calculated population-attributable fractions for cancers attributable to human papillomavirus (HPV), , hepatitis C virus (HCV), hepatitis B virus (HBV), and human herpesvirus 8 (HHV-8) infections using prevalence estimates from National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey laboratory data and relative risks associated with infection from previous epidemiological studies. The Texas Cancer Registry provided cancer incidence data.
We estimated that 3603 excess cancer cases, or 3.5% of all cancers diagnosed in 2015, among adults aged ≥25 in Texas were attributable to oncogenic infections. Hispanic adults had the highest proportion of cancer cases attributable to infections (5.6%), followed by non-Hispanic Black (5.4%) and non-Hispanic White (2.3%) adults. HPV infection caused the highest proportion of all cancer cases (1.8%) compared with other oncogenic infections (HCV, 0.8%; , 0.5%; HBV, 0.3%; HHV-8, 0.1%). Hispanic adults had the highest proportions of all cancers caused by HPV infection (2.6%) and (1.1%), and non-Hispanic Black adults had the highest proportions of all cancers caused by HCV infection (1.7%), HBV infection (0.7%), and HHV-8 (0.3%).
Preventable oncogenic infections contribute to cancer incidence in Texas and may affect racial/ethnic minority groups disproportionately. Infection control and prevention should be stressed as an important component of cancer prevention.
国际癌症研究机构已将 13 种传染因子归类为对人类致癌或可能致癌。我们旨在评估 2015 年德克萨斯州归因于致癌感染的癌症病例的百分比(即人群归因分数)和数量,总体上以及按种族/族裔进行评估。
我们使用国家健康和营养检查调查实验室数据中的流行率估计值和先前流行病学研究中与感染相关的相对风险,计算了归因于人类乳头瘤病毒(HPV)、乙型肝炎病毒(HBV)、丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)和人类疱疹病毒 8 型(HHV-8)感染的癌症归因于 HPV、HBV 和 HCV 感染的人群归因分数。德克萨斯癌症登记处提供了癌症发病率数据。
我们估计,在德克萨斯州≥25 岁的成年人中,有 3603 例额外的癌症病例,即 2015 年诊断出的所有癌症的 3.5%,归因于致癌感染。西班牙裔成年人归因于感染的癌症病例比例最高(5.6%),其次是非西班牙裔黑人(5.4%)和非西班牙裔白人(2.3%)。与其他致癌感染(HCV,0.8%;HBV,0.5%;HHV-8,0.1%)相比,HPV 感染导致的所有癌症病例比例最高(1.8%)。西班牙裔成年人归因于 HPV 感染的所有癌症病例比例最高(2.6%)和 (1.1%),而非西班牙裔黑人成年人归因于 HCV 感染、HBV 感染和 HHV-8 感染的所有癌症病例比例最高(分别为 1.7%、0.7%和 0.3%)。
可预防的致癌感染导致德克萨斯州癌症发病率上升,并且可能不成比例地影响少数族裔群体。应将感染控制和预防作为癌症预防的重要组成部分加以强调。