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ABSTRACT: Background
We aimed to describe the prevalence and spectrum of second primary cancer (SPC) in HIV-positive cancer survivors.Methods
A multicenter retrospective study was performed using longitudinal data from the French Dat'AIDS cohort. Subjects who had developed at least two primary cancers were selected. The spectrum of SPCs was stratified by the first primary cancer type and by sex.Results
Among the 44,642 patients in the Dat'AIDS cohort, 4855 were diagnosed with cancer between 1 December 1983 and 31 December 2015, of whom 444 (9.1%) developed at least two primary cancers. The most common SPCs in men were non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) (22.8%), skin carcinoma (10%) and Kaposi sarcoma (KS) (8.4%), and in women the most common SPCs were breast cancer (16%), skin carcinoma (9.3%) and NHL (8%). The pattern of SPCs differed according to first primary cancer and by sex: in men, NHL was the most common SPC after primary KS and KS was the most common SPC after primary NHL; while in women, breast cancer was the most common SPC after primary NHL and primary breast cancer.Conclusion
The frequency and pattern of subsequent cancers among HIV-positive cancer survivors differed according to the first primary cancer type and sex.
SUBMITTER: Poizot-Martin I
PROVIDER: S-EPMC8773756 | biostudies-literature |
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature