articleJNCI Journal of the National Cancer InstituteApr 11, 2011BRONZE OA

Cancer Burden in the HIV-Infected Population in the United States

Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics · National Cancer Institute · +3 more institutions

PubMed
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Abstract

Background

Effective antiretroviral therapy has reduced the risk of AIDS and dramatically prolonged the survival of HIV-infected people in the United States. Consequently, an increasing number of HIV-infected people are at risk of non-AIDS-defining cancers that typically occur at older ages. We estimated the annual number of cancers in the HIV-infected population, both with and without AIDS, in the United States.

Methods

Incidence rates for individual cancer types were obtained from the HIV/AIDS Cancer Match Study by linking 15 HIV and cancer registries in the United States. Estimated counts of the US HIV-infected and AIDS populations were obtained from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention surveillance data. We obtained estimated counts of AIDS-defining (ie, Kaposi sarcoma, non-Hodgkin lymphoma, and cervical cancer) and non-AIDS-defining cancers in the US AIDS population during 1991-2005 by multiplying cancer incidence rates and AIDS population counts, stratified by year, age, sex, race and ethnicity, transmission category, and AIDS-relative time. We tested trends in counts and standardized incidence rates using linear regression models. We multiplied overall cancer rates and HIV-only (HIV infected, without AIDS) population counts, available from 34 US states during 2004-2007, to estimate cancers in the HIV-only population. All statistical tests were two-sided.

Citation impact

775
total citations
FWCI
30.94
Percentile
100%
References
44
Citations per year

Authors

11

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Medicine
  • Population
  • Cancer
  • Demography
  • Incidence (geometry)
  • Cervical cancer
  • Immunology
  • Environmental health
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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