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Soluble B‐cell activation marker of sCD27 and sCD30 and future risk of B‐cell lymphomas: A nested case‐control study and meta‐analyses
Author(s) -
Hosnijeh Fatemeh Saberi,
Portengen Lutzen,
Späth Florentin,
Bergdahl Ingvar A.,
Melin Beatrice,
Mattiello Amalia,
Masala Giovanna,
Sacerdote Carlotta,
Naccarati Alessio,
Krogh Vittorio,
Tumino Rosario,
ChadeauHyam Marc,
Vineis Paolo,
Vermeulen Roel
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
international journal of cancer
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.475
H-Index - 234
eISSN - 1097-0215
pISSN - 0020-7136
DOI - 10.1002/ijc.29969
Subject(s) - medicine , quartile , lymphoma , prospective cohort study , population , immunology , oncology , follicular lymphoma , case control study , t cell lymphoma , confidence interval , environmental health
Prediagnostic serum/plasma concentrations of B‐cell activation markers have been associated with future risk of B‐cell lymphomas (BCL) in HIV‐infected patients and in the general population. Current evidence for the general population is however limited and relies on relatively small numbers of observations, especially for specific histologies. We carried out a nested case‐control study, including 218 BCL and 218 matched controls, within two prospective cohorts, to investigate the association between plasma levels of soluble (s)CD27 and sCD30 and future risk of BCL, and main histologic subtypes separately. To expand the evidence further, we performed meta‐analyses of the published data on these associations from prospective studies among the general population. Our study revealed a significant relationship between sCD30 concentration and BCL risk (OR = 0.86, 1.53, 1.76, for the 2nd–4th quartiles respectively, p trend = 0.01). Similar increased risks were observed for diffuse large B‐cell lymphoma and follicular lymphoma. Analyses of sCD27 blood concentrations did not show significant associations with BCL, (OR = 0.90, 1.26, 1.65 for the 2nd–4th quartiles, respectively, p trend = 0.17), but significant associations were observed for chronic lymphocytic leukaemia and for the group of “other BCL” subtypes. Our findings involving sCD30 were confirmed within our meta‐analyses of five prospective cohorts, while results were more heterogeneous for sCD27 with the exception of CLL which was found consistently in all studies. Data to date suggest that chronic B‐cell stimulation might be an important mechanism involved in B‐cell lymphomagenesis both in HIV‐infected and in the general population.