PO.PS01.06 · 人群科学
A multi-center hospital-based case-control study of lymphoid and myeloid neoplasms (AsiaLymph): Study design and initial findings for education, body mass index, and family history
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摘要 Abstract
Background: Epidemiologic and other studies have identified environmental, occupational, and genetic risk factors for lymphoid and myeloid malignancies, but most studies have been conducted in Western populations. Investigations in populations with differing exposure patterns, distributions of disease subtypes, and genetic architecture are needed to fully understand hematopoietic tumor etiology. Methods: We conducted a large, multicenter, hospital-based case-control study of lymphoid and myeloid neoplasms in East Asia (AsiaLymph), including 5,671 lymphoid cases, 1,879 myeloid cases, and 3,858 controls. Participants completed a computer-assisted personal interview and provided biospecimens. Cases underwent central pathology review and were coded into the WHO Classification. Herein, we describe the study methods in detail and report association results for education, body mass index, and family history. Results: Greater BMI at age 20 but not at age 40 was associated with odds of total lymphoid neoplasm (per 5 kg/m 2 increase: OR [95% CI]: 1.18 [1.09-1.27]), total myeloid neoplasm (OR [95% CI]: 1.17 [1.05-1.29]), and several subtypes. Greater educational attainment was associated with increased odds of total lymphoid neoplasm (for college vs. less than primary education: OR [95% CI]: 1.41 [1.21-1.65]) but not myeloid neoplasm (OR [95% CI]: 1.17 [0.95-1.45]; p-heterogeneity=0.02). There were also positive associations between family history of hematologic cancer in first degree relatives and odds of lymphoid neoplasm (OR [95% CI]: 1.53 [1.15-2.03]) and myeloid neoplasm (OR [95% CI]: 1.65 [1.11-2.44]) and specific subtypes. None of the evaluated risk factors were associated with NK/T-cell lymphoma, which supports a distinct etiology for this subtype. Conclusion: The AsiaLymph Study is one of the largest molecular epidemiology studies of both lymphoid and myeloid neoplasms with standardized World Health Organization classification of histopathologic subtypes and will serve as a valuable resource for etiologic investigations into risk factors for these malignancies.
利益披露 Disclosure
Q. Lan, None..
L. M. Hurwitz, None..
J. K. Chan, None..
T. Lam, None..
K. Chen, None..
Y. Kwong, None..
X. Caigang, None..
R. Liang, None..
I. Dennis, None..
W. Hu, None..
B. Bassig, None..
M. Purdue, None..
J. Xu, None..
S. Locke, None..
S. Berndt, None..
J. N. Hofmann, None..
J. Shi, None..
K. Yu, None..
S. Gadalla, None..
L. J. McReynolds, None..
R. Jones, None..
H. Dai, None..
Z. Lyu, None..
L. Qiu, None..
W. Liu, None..
H. Zhang, None..
X. Wang, None..
L. M. Morton, None..
S. Chanock, None..
M. Linet, None..
M. C. Friesen, None..
N. Rothman, None.