Roughly 60,000 of the 644,200 adults aged 20 to 64 currently in
treatment for HIV in the U.S. will die of lung cancer by age 80 if
current smoking habits don’t change, researchers estimate.
“Today, the number one killer of people with HIV on treatment in the
U.S. is not the virus, it’s smoking,” said lead study author Dr.
Krishna Reddy of Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical
School in Boston.
“The widespread use of antiviral medicines today is enabling people
with HIV to live longer, but they are now dying from cancer at rates
often higher than those among the general population,” Reddy said by
email. “Lung cancer is chief among these cancers.”
More than 40 percent of people living with HIV in the U.S. smoke
cigarettes, more than double the prevalence in the general
population, researchers note in JAMA Internal Medicine.
For the study, researchers estimated the odds of dying from lung
cancer based on whether people starting HIV care at age 40 were
current smokers, and if so, whether or not they quit.
Overall, they found, people with HIV who continued to smoke were 6
to 13 times more likely to die from lung cancer than from
traditional AIDS-related causes.
Among men who smoked and continued to do so, researchers estimated
that 29 percent of the heavy smokers would die of lung cancer by age
80, as would 23 percent of moderate smokers and 19 percent of light
smokers.
For women who smoked and continued to do so, researchers estimated
that 29 percent of heavy smokers would die of lung cancer by age 80,
as would 21 percent of moderate smokers and 17 percent of light
smokers.
Men and women with HIV who quit smoking would see their risk of
dying from lung cancer go down dramatically, however.
The study wasn’t a controlled experiment designed to prove how
smoking influences mortality in people living with HIV, the authors
note.
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People with HIV may have worse survival odds with lung cancer
because they’re diagnosed when tumors are more advanced or because
their immune systems are less able to tolerate cancer treatments,
said Dr. Ronald Mitsuyasu of the David Geffen School of Medicine at
the University of California, Los Angeles.
“This may also be due in part or primarily to higher tobacco use,
and should strongly support quitting,” Mitsuyasu, who wasn’t
involved in the study, said by email.
With effective treatment, people living with HIV have a similar life
expectancy to people not infected with the virus, said Dr. Anthony
Olszanski of Fox Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia.
“HIV-infected people have taken charge of their fate by being
compliant with their antiretroviral medication,” Olszanski, who
wasn’t involved in the study, said by email.
“It is important for them now to take charge of their other
health-related risks,” Olszanski added. “Quitting smoking is likely
to drastically decrease their risk of developing lung cancer as well
as other smoking-related illnesses.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2fvfM4A JAMA Internal Medicine, online
September 18, 2017.
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