DLBCL survivors at greater risk of autoimmune, infectious diseases
DLBCL vs prostate cancer
“We saw some of the same diagnoses come up as top-scoring hits, including viral [4.5-fold] and fungal pneumonia [8.2-fold], and meningitis [3.9-fold], and, in this case, Staphylococcal meningitis [8.6-fold],” Dr Shree said.
Deficiency of humoral immunity (14.8-fold), autoimmune hemolytic anemia (8.9-fold), Sicca syndrome (8.6-fold), and immune thrombocytopenia (4.8-fold) were also higher in the male DLBCL survivors than in prostate cancer survivors.
“No diagnoses were statistically more common in the prostate cancer survivors [than in male DLBCL survivors],” Dr Shree noted.
DLBCL vs head and neck cancer
“Again, the top 4 hits were the same 4 diagnoses we have been seeing repeatedly,” Dr Shree said.
Deficiency of humoral immunity (12.5-fold), autoimmune hemolytic anemia (9.3-fold), Sicca syndrome (5.5-fold), and immune thrombocytopenia (4.5-fold) were increased for DLBCL survivors compared to survivors of head and neck cancer.
DLBCL survivors also had an increased risk of respiratory infections, especially viral (4.4-fold) and fungal pneumonias (4.0-fold), meningitis (3.0-fold), and chronic lymphocytic thyroiditis (2.8-fold), also known as Hashimoto’s thyroiditis.
On the other hand, bacterial pneumonias and skin infections were more common in the head and neck cancer survivors than in DLBCL survivors.
DLBCL vs melanoma
“Interestingly, we did not see an increased risk for immune thrombocytopenias [in DLBCL survivors] compared to melanoma survivors in this comparison, which we had in all the other comparisons,” Dr Shree noted.
“But we did see [an increased risk for] the other diagnoses that we had been tracking, including, again, fungal pneumonia [6.9-fold], viral pneumonia [4.7-fold], and miscellaneous viral infections [2.6-fold].”
The only diagnosis that was statistically more common among melanoma survivors than DLBCL survivors was vitiligo.
Risks persist over time
The investigators assessed whether the elevated risks were static over the 1- to 10-year analysis period.
They took the top diagnoses—humoral deficiency, autoimmune hemolytic anemia, Sicca syndrome, and immune thrombocytopenia—and reviewed them for all cohorts to determine the rate of new cases.
“[F]or 3 out of these 4 diagnoses [humoral deficiency, autoimmune hemolytic anemia, and Sicca syndrome], increased incident rates are highest in the first 1 to 3 years after diagnosis in the lymphoma patients,” Dr Shree said.
“But even at 5 to 10 years out, these patients continue to have increased incidence of these diagnoses compared to the other cohorts, suggesting that these risks really do remain elevated over some time.”
The investigators repeated the analysis using broader categories of diagnoses with each category encompassing many ICD-9 codes.
“[I]n 12 out of 18 broad categories that we looked at, we can still find statistically significant differences in the incident rates for these diagnoses, and they were all increased in the lymphoma patients compared to the other cohorts,” Dr Shree explained.
“[T]hese increases were seen across multiple comparisons, suggesting that this phenomenon seems to be really lymphoma-specific and not specific to any of the individual comparisons we had chosen to perform.”
The findings, she said, have a lot of implications.
“We are particularly interested in which features of patients’ treatment contribute most to these elevated risks,” Dr Shree said. “And, of course, we want to know what to be able to tell our patients and how to follow them during survivorship.”
The investigators are currently validating their findings with further analysis of the Stanford lymphoma survivors cohort of approximately 3500 patients. ![]()
*Data in the abstract differ from the presentation.