Department of Medicine and Surgery, University of Parma, Parma, Italy;
Department of General Surgery, di Vaio Hospital, Fidenza, Italy.
Anticancer Res. 2021 Jun;41(6):2745-2757. doi: 10.21873/anticanres.15056.
BACKGROUND/AIM: Seventy-six years after Auschwitz Liberation, the Holocaust keeps on persecuting its surviving victims. As witnessed by the psychiatric and medical literature in the last decades, in fact, the Holocaust survivors (HS) appear to suffer from several Shoah-related late-onset diseases impacting their survival, such as internal illnesses and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Cancer represents a further severe pathology which seems to be connected with the Holocaust experience. Our aim was to review the existing knowledge of Holocaust-related cancer in HS in order to assess its real incidence and clinicoprognostic significance.
We systematically reviewed the literature dealing with Israeli Jewish and non-Jewish non-Israeli HS developing cancer. We also reviewed and analyzed the cancer data of noted Jewish HS not resident or having resided in Israel available as public information.
We found 16 and 15 studies on Israeli Jews and non-Jewish non-Israeli survivors, respectively. A statistically significant association between the Holocaust and development of late-onset cancer in HS was seen in most studies with cancer adversely impacting the survival. We also selected 330 noted Jewish non-Israeli HS: genocide-related late-onset cancer resulted to be a significant and independent risk factor of poor prognosis (p<0.0001) imparting shorter survival in affected versus non-cancer subjects (57 versus 64 years, respectively, p=0.0001).
Although 76 years have passed, our review shows how the Holocaust keeps on burdening its survivors. Moreover, we offered the first analysis of Jewish HS not resident or having resided in Israel in terms of genocide-related late-onset diseases focusing on cancer. Further studies on Jewish non-Israeli HS are needed in order to corroborate our findings on late-onset cancer occurring in this targeted population.
背景/目的:在奥斯维辛解放 76 年后,大屠杀仍在迫害其幸存的受害者。事实上,正如过去几十年的精神医学和医学文献所见证的那样,大屠杀幸存者(HS)似乎患有几种与大屠杀相关的迟发性疾病,这些疾病影响他们的生存,例如内科疾病和创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)。癌症是另一种严重的疾病,似乎与大屠杀经历有关。我们的目的是回顾现有的关于大屠杀相关癌症在 HS 中的知识,以评估其真实发病率和临床预后意义。
我们系统地回顾了涉及以色列犹太人和非犹太非以色列 HS 发生癌症的文献。我们还审查和分析了作为公共信息提供的著名犹太 HS 的癌症数据,这些 HS 不住在或曾经居住在以色列。
我们发现了 16 项关于以色列犹太人的研究和 15 项关于非犹太非以色列幸存者的研究。大多数研究表明,大屠杀与 HS 中迟发性癌症的发展之间存在统计学上的关联,癌症对生存有不利影响。我们还选择了 330 名著名的非以色列犹太 HS:与种族灭绝有关的迟发性癌症是预后不良的显著和独立危险因素(p<0.0001),在受影响的患者与非癌症患者相比,生存时间更短(分别为 57 年和 64 年,p=0.0001)。
尽管已经过去了 76 年,但我们的综述表明,大屠杀仍在给幸存者带来负担。此外,我们首次分析了不在或曾经居住在以色列的犹太 HS ,重点关注与种族灭绝有关的迟发性疾病中的癌症。需要对非以色列犹太 HS 进行进一步的研究,以证实我们在这一特定人群中发生迟发性癌症的发现。