Hepatitis C virus and B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas: an Italian multicenter case-control study

Alfonso Mele(University of Bergamo), Alessandro Pulsoni(University of Bergamo), Elvira Bianco(University of Bergamo), Pellegrino Musto(University of Bergamo), André Salem Szklo(University of Bergamo), Maria Grazia Sanpaolo(University of Bergamo), Emilio Iannitto(University of Bergamo), Amalia De Renzo(University of Bergamo), Bruno Martino(University of Bergamo), Vincenzo Liso(University of Bergamo), Cristina Andrizzi(University of Bergamo), Simona Pusterla(University of Bergamo), Fausto Dore(University of Bergamo), Maddalena Maresca(University of Bergamo), Maria Rapicetta(University of Bergamo), Fabrizio Marcucci(University of Bergamo), Franco Mandelli(University of Bergamo), Silvia Franceschi(University of Bergamo)
Blood
April 29, 2003
Cited by 302

Abstract

The existence of an association between infection with hepatitis C virus (HCV) and B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma (B-NHL) remains controversial, largely because previous studies were based on prevalent case series or comparisons with less than optimal control groups. This hospital-based case-control study was conducted from January 1998 through February 2001 to evaluate the association between HCV infection and B-NHL of different types. Cases were consecutive patients with a new diagnosis of B-NHL; controls were patients from other departments of the same hospitals. Both groups were interviewed using a standardized questionnaire. The prevalence of HCV infection was calculated by histologic type of B-NHL and clinical behavior (indolent or aggressive). Adjusted odds ratio (OR) and HCV-attributable risk (AR) were estimated. HCV prevalence was 17.5% among the 400 lymphoma patients and 5.6% among the 396 controls. The OR of B-NHL (patients vs controls), adjusted by age, sex, level of education, and place of birth, was 3.1 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.8-5.2); an OR indicative of positive association was found for indolent and aggressive B-NHL. The estimated AR was 4.6%. This study confirms an association between HCV and B-NHL. In Italy, 1 of 20 instances of B-NHL may be attributable to HCV infection and may, thus, benefit from antiviral treatment.


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