Carreira Helena, Strongman Helen, Peppa Maria, McDonald Helen I, Dos-Santos-Silva Isabel, Stanway Susannah, Smeeth Liam, Bhaskaran Krishnan
Department of Non-communicable Disease Epidemiology, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Keppel Street, London WC1 7HT, United Kingdom.
Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Keppel Street, London WC1 7HT, United Kingdom.
EClinicalMedicine. 2020 Nov 30;29-30:100656. doi: 10.1016/j.eclinm.2020.100656. eCollection 2020 Dec.
People with active cancer are recognised as at risk of COVID-19 complications, but it is unclear whether the much larger population of cancer survivors is at elevated risk. We aimed to address this by comparing cancer survivors and cancer-free controls for (i) prevalence of comorbidities considered risk factors for COVID-19; and (ii) risk of severe influenza, as a marker of susceptibility to severe outcomes from epidemic respiratory viruses.
We included survivors (≥1 year) of the 20 most common cancers, and age, sex and general practice-matched cancer-free controls, derived from English primary care data linked to cancer registrations, hospital admissions and death registrations. Comorbidity prevalences were calculated 1 and 5 years from cancer diagnosis. Risk of hospitalisation or death due to influenza was compared using Cox models adjusted for baseline demographics and comorbidities.
108,215 cancer survivors and 523,541 cancer-free controls were included. Cancer survivors had more diabetes, asthma, other respiratory, cardiac, neurological, renal, and liver diseases, and less obesity, compared with controls, but there was variation by cancer site. There were 205 influenza hospitalisations/deaths, with cancer survivors at higher risk than controls (adjusted HR 2.78, 95% CI 2.04-3.80). Haematological cancer survivors had large elevated risks persisting for >10 years (HR overall 15.17, 7.84-29.35; HR >10 years from cancer diagnosis 10.06, 2.47-40.93). Survivors of other cancers had evidence of raised risk up to 5 years from cancer diagnosis only (HR >5 years 2.22, 1.31-3.74).
Risks of severe COVID-19 outcomes are likely to be elevated in cancer survivors. This should be taken into account in policies targeted at clinical risk groups, and vaccination for both influenza, and, when available, COVID-19, should be encouraged in cancer survivors.
活动性癌症患者被认为有发生新冠并发症的风险,但尚不清楚数量多得多的癌症幸存者是否风险更高。我们旨在通过比较癌症幸存者和无癌对照人群,来解决以下两个问题:(i)被视为新冠风险因素的合并症的患病率;(ii)严重流感的风险,以此作为对流行性呼吸道病毒严重后果易感性的一个指标。
我们纳入了20种最常见癌症的幸存者(≥1年),以及年龄、性别匹配且与普通医疗实践匹配的无癌对照人群,这些数据来自与癌症登记、住院和死亡登记相关联的英国初级医疗数据。从癌症诊断起1年和5年时计算合并症患病率。使用针对基线人口统计学和合并症进行调整的Cox模型比较因流感住院或死亡的风险。
纳入了108,215名癌症幸存者和523,541名无癌对照人群。与对照组相比,癌症幸存者有更多的糖尿病、哮喘、其他呼吸道疾病、心脏病、神经疾病、肾脏疾病和肝脏疾病,肥胖者较少,但不同癌症部位存在差异。有205例流感住院/死亡病例,癌症幸存者的风险高于对照组(调整后风险比2.78,95%置信区间2.04 - 3.80)。血液系统癌症幸存者在超过10年的时间里风险大幅升高(总体风险比15.17,7.84 - 29.35;癌症诊断后>10年的风险比10.06,2.47 - 40.93)。其他癌症的幸存者仅在癌症诊断后长达5年时有风险升高的证据(>5年的风险比2.22,1.31 - 3.74)。
癌症幸存者发生严重新冠后果的风险可能会升高。在针对临床风险群体的政策中应考虑到这一点,并且应鼓励癌症幸存者接种流感疫苗,以及在有新冠疫苗时接种新冠疫苗。