Oncologists should consider testing all patients with newly diagnosed cancers for infection with the hepatitis B and C viruses, a multicenter team has recommended.
A prospective study of hepatitis B virus (HBV), hepatitis C virus (HCV), and HIV infections among 3,051 patients with newly diagnosed cancers showed that 6.5% of patients tested positive for previous HBV and 0.6% had chronic HBV infection. In addition, 2.4% of patients were positive for HCV, and 1.1% for HIV infections, reported Scott D. Ramsey, MD, PhD, from the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, and colleagues.
“Many patients had no known risk factors for infection, suggesting that current risk-based models for screening may be insufficient. Thus, we believe our results warrant consideration of universal testing of patients with newly diagnosed cancer for HBV and HCV infection, particularly if such an approach is shown to be cost effective,” they wrote in JAMA Oncology.
The investigators noted that patients with undiagnosed hepatitis and/or HIV infections could transmit them to unsuspecting caregivers, adding that “with effective treatments available, not screening for these viruses misses an opportunity to reduce future morbidity associated with these infections and to avoid viral reactivation during treatment, with resulting morbidity and mortality.”
To estimate the prevalence of the infections in patients with newly diagnosed cancers, investigators looked at a cohort of 3,051 patients with a cancer diagnosis made within the previous 120 days at nine academic medical centers and nine community oncology centers representing a total of 41 cancer clinics affiliated with the SWOG Cancer Research Network (formerly the Southwest Oncology Group).
The median patient age was 60.6 years. Female patients constitute 60.4% of the sample; 18.1% were black, and 18.3% were of Hispanic heritage.
Of 3,050 patients for whom HBV testing results were available, 6.5% (197) were positive for previous HBV infection, compared with an estimated U.S. population prevalence of 4.7%. In addition, 0.6% (19 patients) were found to have chronic HBV, compared with an estimated 0.3% US population prevalence.
HCV infections were detected in 2.4% (71 of 2990 patients), compared with an estimated population prevalence of 1.3%, and HIV infections were detected in 1.1%, compared with a background estimated population prevalence of 0.3%.
In all, 32 patients were diagnosed with viral infections by testing performed for the study, including 8 patients with chronic HBV, 22 with HCV, and 2 with HIV.
Additionally, the authors found that 4 patients with chronic HBV, 23 with HCV, and 7 with HIV had no identifiable risk factors.
The highest prevalence of infections occurred among patients with liver cancer, nonliver and noncolorectal cancers of the gastrointestinal tract, head and neck cancers, lung cancers, and prostate cancer. A finding of viral positivity changed the treatment plan in only 8% of all infected patients, however.
“Given that most HIV-infected patients in our study knew their viral status, the yield of universal HIV testing among patients with newly diagnosed cancer may likely be low. Although age-directed screening is recommended for HIV and HCV, uptake rates in primary care are variable and low overall,” Dr. Ramsey and his colleagues wrote.
The study was supported by grants from the National Cancer Institute. Dr. Ramsey and several co-authors reported receiving NCI grants, and multiple co-authors reported grants and/or consulting fees from various companies.
SOURCE: Ramsey SD et al. JAMA Oncol. 2019 Jan 17. doi: 10.1001/jamaoncol.2018.6437.