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Lung cancer in scleroderma: results from an Italian rheumatologic center and review of the literature

Lung cancer in scleroderma: results from an Italian rheumatologic center and review of the literature
Lung cancer in scleroderma: results from an Italian rheumatologic center and review of the literature
The association between systemic sclerosis (SSc) and cancer was widely described, particularly with breast and lung carcinoma; while, data regarding possible associations between cancer and SSc features are still scarce. We retrospectively evaluated the prevalence of lung cancer in our SSc patient cohort (318 SSc patients, 31 M and 287 F, age 51.5±14.5SD years, disease duration 10.3±6.5SD years) and clinico-serological factors potentially associated to the development of this malignancy. A review of the world literature about this topic was also done. We found that lung cancer complicated 16/318 (5%) SSc patients; namely 11/287 females (4%) and 5/31 males (16.1%). Median age of SSc patients with lung cancer was 54 (range 38-72) years for female patients, and 63 (range 40-73) for males; 13/16 patients died because of the neoplasia. Considering the incidence of lung carcinoma in sex/age-matched general population of the same geographical area, the percentages of lung cancer in our SSc series are about 2.5 and >5 times higher for male and female patients, respectively. The presence of lung cancer significantly correlated with male sex (p=0.011), presence of anti-Scl70 antibodies (p=0.0007), cyclophosphamide therapy (p=0.0001), forced vital capacity (FVC) <75% (p=0.0001), and lung fibrosis (p=0.0127); moreover patients with cancer have a significantly lower age at the diagnosis of SSc (p=0.009) and longer disease duration (p=0.0175). The logistic regression analysis confirmed a significant association with the anti-Scl70 antibodies (OR 6.4, 95%IC 1.7-24.1; p=0.006) and the reduction of FVC (OR 6.7, 95%IC 2.2-20.7; p=0.001) only. Overall, the prevalence of lung cancer in the subset of SSc patients with anti-Scl70 antibodies was 12/105 (11.4%), 9/40 (22.5%) in patients with FVC% reduction, and 7/22 (31.8%) in patients with both. In literature, the median prevalence of lung cancer in SSc series was 2.4% (range 0-4.2%); even if sporadic, associations with lung involvement or antiScl70 autoantibodies were raised, according to our findings. Our study confirmed the higher frequency of lung cancer among SSc patients compared to general population, particularly within patients' subset with serum anti-Scl70 antibodies and lung involvement.
1568-9972
374-379
Colaci, Michele
b11b8710-e4c6-4ec9-9d9a-258230c7b66c
Giuggioli, Dilia
21f12275-9a6a-4a5a-9de0-796d58eca38d
Sebastiani, Marco
23539fed-c5c4-4507-8ccd-3140c9d3fcea
Manfredi, Andreina
eeac13ac-c663-4c0b-9957-17f25ab37c26
Vacchi, Caterina
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Spagnolo, Paolo
402ffcfa-f566-48e8-986a-5b0b2930d4ae
Cerri, Stefania
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Luppi, Fabrizio
63b544e0-fbe9-490a-8bcd-e5452a46a234
Richeldi, Luca
47177d9c-731a-49a1-9cc6-4ac8f6bbbf26
Ferri, Clodoveo
a821e93c-3a44-4eea-8096-fbef5df05ebc
Colaci, Michele
b11b8710-e4c6-4ec9-9d9a-258230c7b66c
Giuggioli, Dilia
21f12275-9a6a-4a5a-9de0-796d58eca38d
Sebastiani, Marco
23539fed-c5c4-4507-8ccd-3140c9d3fcea
Manfredi, Andreina
eeac13ac-c663-4c0b-9957-17f25ab37c26
Vacchi, Caterina
0d3e1f12-5367-4d42-88bf-18111122b5b8
Spagnolo, Paolo
402ffcfa-f566-48e8-986a-5b0b2930d4ae
Cerri, Stefania
7ea9bc28-eaf2-46ce-8433-b9e732484b5f
Luppi, Fabrizio
63b544e0-fbe9-490a-8bcd-e5452a46a234
Richeldi, Luca
47177d9c-731a-49a1-9cc6-4ac8f6bbbf26
Ferri, Clodoveo
a821e93c-3a44-4eea-8096-fbef5df05ebc

Colaci, Michele, Giuggioli, Dilia, Sebastiani, Marco, Manfredi, Andreina, Vacchi, Caterina, Spagnolo, Paolo, Cerri, Stefania, Luppi, Fabrizio, Richeldi, Luca and Ferri, Clodoveo (2013) Lung cancer in scleroderma: results from an Italian rheumatologic center and review of the literature. Autoimmunity Reviews, 12 (3), 374-379. (doi:10.1016/j.autrev.2012.06.003). (PMID:22743031)

Record type: Article

Abstract

The association between systemic sclerosis (SSc) and cancer was widely described, particularly with breast and lung carcinoma; while, data regarding possible associations between cancer and SSc features are still scarce. We retrospectively evaluated the prevalence of lung cancer in our SSc patient cohort (318 SSc patients, 31 M and 287 F, age 51.5±14.5SD years, disease duration 10.3±6.5SD years) and clinico-serological factors potentially associated to the development of this malignancy. A review of the world literature about this topic was also done. We found that lung cancer complicated 16/318 (5%) SSc patients; namely 11/287 females (4%) and 5/31 males (16.1%). Median age of SSc patients with lung cancer was 54 (range 38-72) years for female patients, and 63 (range 40-73) for males; 13/16 patients died because of the neoplasia. Considering the incidence of lung carcinoma in sex/age-matched general population of the same geographical area, the percentages of lung cancer in our SSc series are about 2.5 and >5 times higher for male and female patients, respectively. The presence of lung cancer significantly correlated with male sex (p=0.011), presence of anti-Scl70 antibodies (p=0.0007), cyclophosphamide therapy (p=0.0001), forced vital capacity (FVC) <75% (p=0.0001), and lung fibrosis (p=0.0127); moreover patients with cancer have a significantly lower age at the diagnosis of SSc (p=0.009) and longer disease duration (p=0.0175). The logistic regression analysis confirmed a significant association with the anti-Scl70 antibodies (OR 6.4, 95%IC 1.7-24.1; p=0.006) and the reduction of FVC (OR 6.7, 95%IC 2.2-20.7; p=0.001) only. Overall, the prevalence of lung cancer in the subset of SSc patients with anti-Scl70 antibodies was 12/105 (11.4%), 9/40 (22.5%) in patients with FVC% reduction, and 7/22 (31.8%) in patients with both. In literature, the median prevalence of lung cancer in SSc series was 2.4% (range 0-4.2%); even if sporadic, associations with lung involvement or antiScl70 autoantibodies were raised, according to our findings. Our study confirmed the higher frequency of lung cancer among SSc patients compared to general population, particularly within patients' subset with serum anti-Scl70 antibodies and lung involvement.

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Published date: January 2013
Organisations: Clinical & Experimental Sciences

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Local EPrints ID: 369092
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/369092
ISSN: 1568-9972
PURE UUID: f760f51d-707f-428c-8952-f72fba15ba8c

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Date deposited: 24 Sep 2014 12:13
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 17:57

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Contributors

Author: Michele Colaci
Author: Dilia Giuggioli
Author: Marco Sebastiani
Author: Andreina Manfredi
Author: Caterina Vacchi
Author: Paolo Spagnolo
Author: Stefania Cerri
Author: Fabrizio Luppi
Author: Luca Richeldi
Author: Clodoveo Ferri

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