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Etiologic Heterogeneity Among Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma Subtypes: The InterLymph Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma Subtypes Project

Authors :
Paige M. Bracci
Thomas M. Habermann
Kenneth P. Cantor
Stefania Rodella
John J. Spinelli
Brenda M. Birmann
Paul Brennan
Alain Monnereau
Christina A. Clarke
Eva Negri
Susan L. Slager
Elizabeth A. Holly
Patricia Hartge
Silvia Franceschi
Sonja I. Berndt
Silvia de Sanjosé
Paolo Vineis
Qing Lan
Anneclaire J. De Roos
Paolo Crosignani
Jennifer Turner
Randy D. Gascoyne
Joanne S. Colt
Eve Roman
Richard K. Severson
Alexandra M. Levine
Emanuele Stagnaro
Bengt Glimelius
Marc Maynadié
Jonathan W. Friedberg
Yawei Zhang
Theodore R. Holford
Angela Brooks-Wilson
Oriana Nanni
Dennis D. Weisenburger
Joshua N. Sampson
Nathaniel Rothman
Yolanda Benavente
Andrew L. Feldman
Leslie Bernstein
Pierluigi Cocco
Marshall E. Kadin
Luigino Dal Maso
Valerio Ramazzotti
Lenka Foretova
Lucia Miligi
Sophia S. Wang
Rosario Tumino
Hans-Olov Adami
Wendy Cozen
Tracy Lightfoot
Sam M. Mbulaiteye
Jacqueline Clavel
Tongzhang Zheng
Paolo Boffetta
Anne Kricker
Martha S. Linet
Alexandra Nieters
Christine F. Skibola
Claire M. Vajdic
Nikolaus Becker
Laurent Orsi
Eleanor Kane
Diego Serraino
Carlo La Vecchia
Alex Smith
James M. Foran
Lindsay M. Morton
Anthony Staines
Simonetta Di Lollo
Mads Melbye
Jennifer L. Kelly
James R. Cerhan
Timothy G. Call
Henrik Hjalgrim
Christopher R. Flowers
Bruce K. Armstrong
Joseph M. Connors
Mark Liebow
Ora Paltiel
Ellen T. Chang
Aaron Blair
Karin E. Smedby
Carla Vindigni
Brian C.-H. Chiu
Adele Seniori Costantini
Scott Davis
Morton, L.M.
Slager, S.L.
Cerhan, J.R.
Wang, S.S.
Vajdic, C.M.
Skibola, C.F.
Bracci, P.M.
de Sanjosé, S.
Smedby, K.E.
Chiu, B.C.H.
Zhang, Y.
Mbulaiteye, S.M.
Monnereau, A.
Turner, J.J.
Clavel, J.
Adami, H.-O.
Chang, E.T.
Glimelius, B.
Hjalgrim, H.
Melbye, M.
Crosignani, P.
di Lollo, S.
Miligi, L.
Nanni, O.
Ramazzotti, V.
Rodella, S.
Costantini, A.S.
Stagnaro, E.
Tumino, R.
Vindigni, C.
Vineis, P.
Becker, N.
Benavente, Y.
Boffetta, P.
Brennan, P.
Cocco, P.
Foretova, L.
Maynadié, M.
Nieters, A.
Staines, A.
Colt, J.S.
Cozen, W.
Davis, S.
de Roos, A.J.
Hartge, P.
Rothman, N.
Severson, R.K.
Holly, E.A.
Call, T.G.
Feldman, A.L.
Habermann, T.M.
Liebow, M.
Blair, A.
Cantor, K.P.
Kane, E.V.
Lightfoot, T.
Roman, E.
Smith, A.
Brooks-Wilson, A.
Connors, J.M.
Gascoyne, R.D.
Spinelli, J.J.
Armstrong, B.K.
Kricker, A.
Holford, T.R.
Lan, Q.
Zheng, T.
Orsi, L.
Dal Maso, L.
Franceschi, S.
La Vecchia, C.
Negri, E.
Serraino, D.
Bernstein, L.
Levine, A.
Friedberg, J.W.
Kelly, J.L.
Berndt, S.I.
Birmann, B.M.
Clarke, C.A.
Flowers, C.R.
Foran, J.M.
Kadin, M.E.
Paltiel, O.
Weisenburger, D.D.
Linet, M.S.
Sampson, J.N.
Source :
JNCI Monographs. 2014:130-144
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2014.

Abstract

Non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) is the most common hematologic malignancy and the fifth most common type of cancer in more developed regions of the world (1). Numerous NHL subtypes with distinct combinations of morphologic, immunophenotypic, genetic, and clinical features are currently recognized (2,3). The incidence of NHL subtypes varies substantially by age, sex, and race/ethnicity (4–7). However, the etiological implications of this biological, clinical, and epidemiological diversity are incompletely understood. The importance of investigating etiology by NHL subtype is clearly supported by research on immunosuppression, infections, and autoimmune diseases, which are the strongest and most established risk factors for NHL. Studies of solid organ transplant recipients and individuals infected with HIV demonstrate that risks are markedly increased for several—but not all—NHL subtypes (8–13). Some infections and autoimmune diseases are associated with a single specific subtype [eg, human T-cell lymphotropic virus, type I (HTLV-I) with adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma (14), celiac disease with enteropathy-type peripheral T-cell lymphoma (PTCL) (15–17)], whereas others [eg, Epstein–Barr virus, hepatitis C virus (HCV), Sjogren’s syndrome (18–21)] have been associated with multiple subtypes. In the last two decades, reports from individual epidemiological studies of NHL have suggested differences in risks among NHL subtypes for a wide range of risk factors, but most studies have lacked the statistical power to assess any differences quantitatively and have not systematically evaluated combinations of subtypes. One study assessed multiple risk factors and found support for both etiologic commonality and heterogeneity for NHL subtypes, with risk factor patterns suggesting that immune dysfunction is of greater etiologic importance for diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) and marginal zone lymphoma than for chronic lymphocytic leukemia/small lymphocytic lymphoma (CLL/SLL) and follicular lymphoma (22). However, that analysis was limited to approximately 1300 NHL cases and considered only the four most common NHL subtypes. Pooling data from multiple studies through the International Lymphoma Epidemiology Consortium (InterLymph) have provided substantial insight into associations between specific risk factors and NHL subtypes, with evidence that family history of hematologic malignancy, autoimmune diseases, atopic conditions, lifestyle factors (smoking, alcohol, anthropometric measures, and hair dye use), and sun exposure are associated with NHL risk (19,21,23–32). However, no previous study has compared patterns of risk for a range of exposures for both common and rarer NHL subtypes. We undertook the InterLymph NHL Subtypes Project, a pooled analysis of 20 case–control studies including 17 471 NHL cases and 23 096 controls, to advance understanding of NHL etiology by investigating NHL subtype-specific risks associated with medical history, family history of hematologic malignancy, lifestyle factors, and occupation. The detailed risk factor profiles for each of 11 NHL subtypes appear in this issue (15–17,33–40). In this report, we assess risk factor heterogeneity among the NHL subtypes and identify subtypes that have similar risk factor profiles.

Details

ISSN :
17456614 and 10526773
Volume :
2014
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JNCI Monographs
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....908ac68ea66bd19a5f83caa7c539af19
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/jncimonographs/lgu013