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Diabetes is associated with increased liver cancer incidence and mortality in adults: A report from Asia Cohort Consortium.

Authors :
Ho NT
Abe SK
Rahman MS
Islam R
Saito E
Gupta PC
Pednekar MS
Sawada N
Tsugane S
Tamakoshi A
Kimura T
Shu XO
Gao YT
Koh WP
Cai H
Wen W
Sakata R
Tsuji I
Malekzadeh R
Pourshams A
Kanemura S
Kim J
Chen Y
Ito H
Oze I
Nagata C
Wada K
Sugawara Y
Park SK
Shin A
Yuan JM
Wang R
Kweon SS
Shin MH
Poustchi H
Vardanjani HM
Ahsan H
Chia KS
Matsuo K
Qiao YL
Rothman N
Zheng W
Inoue M
Kang D
Boffetta P
Source :
International journal of cancer [Int J Cancer] 2024 Sep 01; Vol. 155 (5), pp. 854-870. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Apr 25.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

There has been growing evidence suggesting that diabetes may be associated with increased liver cancer risk. However, studies conducted in Asian countries are limited. This project considered data of 968,738 adults pooled from 20 cohort studies of Asia Cohort Consortium to examine the association between baseline diabetes and liver cancer incidence and mortality. Cox proportional hazard model and competing risk approach was used for pooled data. Two-stage meta-analysis across studies was also done. There were 839,194 subjects with valid data regarding liver cancer incidence (5654 liver cancer cases [48.29/100,000 person-years]), follow-up time and baseline diabetes (44,781 with diabetes [5.3%]). There were 747,198 subjects with valid data regarding liver cancer mortality (5020 liver cancer deaths [44.03/100,000 person-years]), follow-up time and baseline diabetes (43,243 with diabetes [5.8%]). Hazard ratio (HR) (95% confidence interval [95%CI]) of liver cancer diagnosis in those with vs. without baseline diabetes was 1.97 (1.79, 2.16) (p < .0001) after adjusting for baseline age, gender, body mass index, tobacco smoking, alcohol use, and heterogeneity across studies (n = 586,072; events = 4620). Baseline diabetes was associated with increased cumulative incidence of death due to liver cancer (adjusted HR (95%CI) = 1.97 (1.79, 2.18); p < .0001) (n = 595,193; events = 4110). A two-stage meta-analytic approach showed similar results. This paper adds important population-based evidence to current literature regarding the increased incidence and mortality of liver cancer in adults with diabetes. The analysis of data pooled from 20 studies of different Asian countries and the meta-analysis across studies with large number of subjects makes the results robust.<br /> (© 2024 UICC.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1097-0215
Volume :
155
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
International journal of cancer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38661292
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.34965