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              Chronic 
                Hepatitis C Linked to Increased Risk of Kidney Cancer
 
                
                 
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                        | SUMMARY: 
                          People with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection 
                          have double the risk of developing renal cell carcinoma, 
                          or kidney cancer, according to a study published in 
                          the April 
                          2010 issue of Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers and 
                          Prevention. While the reason for this link remains 
                          unclear, the researchers recommended that clinicians 
                          should carefully monitor and follow up on signs of kidney 
                          problems in hepatitis C patients, and people newly diagnosed 
                          with kidney cancer should be tested for HCV. |  |  |  |   
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                By 
                  Liz Highleyman
 
 
  Chronic 
                  hepatitis C is primarily a disease of the liver, but it 
                  can also contribute to problems elsewhere in the body. HCV infection 
                  has been linked to kidney disease in the past. Stuart Gordon 
                  from Henry Ford Hospital and Wayne State University School of 
                  Medicine and colleagues aimed to determined whether this was 
                  true specifically for renal cell carcinoma (RCC). 
 The investigators analyzed data from the large racially/ethnically 
                  diverse Henry Ford healthcare system in Detroit The study cohort 
                  included 67,063 participants who were tested for HCV between 
                  1997 and 2006, and followed to monitor development of RCC until 
                  April 2008; about 5% were HCV positive. The researchers used 
                  the health system's cancer registry to identify patients diagnosed 
                  with kidney cancer.
 
 Results
 
                   
                    |  | 0.6% 
                      of HCV positive patients (17 out of 3057) developed renal 
                      cell carcinoma during follow-up, compared with 0.3% of HCV 
                      negative participants (177 out of 64,006). |   
                    |  | The 
                      RCC cases in HCV positive patients included 8 clear cell 
                      cancers, 6 papillary cancers, 2 mixed clear cell/papillary, 
                      and 1 undifferentiated. |   
                    |  | Among 
                      participants diagnosed with RCC, HCV positive patients were 
                      of a significantly younger average age than HCV negative 
                      patients (54 vs 63 years; P < 0.001). |   
                    |  | In 
                      a univariate analysis, the hazard ratio for developing RCC 
                      among HCV positive patients was 2.20. |   
                    |  | In 
                      a multivariate analysis that adjusted for other known kidney 
                      cancer risk factors including older age, male sex, black 
                      race, and chronic kidney disease, the hazard ratio for hepatitis 
                      C patients was 1.77, or a 77% increase in risk. |   
                    |  | Men 
                      were 2.4 more likely to develop RCC than women. |   
                    |  | African-Americans 
                      had about a 40% higher risk of developing RCC than other 
                      racial/ethnic groups. |   
                    |  | Each 
                      additional year of age increased kidney cancer risk by about 
                      3%. |  Based 
                  on these findings, the study authors concluded, "Chronic 
                  HCV infection confers a risk for the development of RCC."
 "The results of this study would suggest a more careful 
                  surveillance of newly diagnosed RCCs for the presence of HCV 
                  infection," they advised. "It is premature to recommend 
                  more comprehensive screening of HCV positive patients for this 
                  relatively uncommon neoplasm. However, a heightened awareness 
                  of an increased kidney cancer risk should dictate more careful 
                  follow-up of incidental renal defects when detected on imaging 
                  procedures in patients with chronic hepatitis C."
 
 "These results add to growing literature that shows that 
                  the hepatitis C virus causes disease that extends beyond the 
                  liver, and in fact most of our HCV-infected kidney cancer patients 
                  had only minimal liver damage," Dr. Gordon said in a press 
                  release issued by Henry Ford Hospital.
 
 Investigator affiliations: Division of Gastroenterology and 
                  Hepatology, and Departments of Urology and Biostatistics and 
                  Research Epidemiology, Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, MI; Wayne 
                  State University School of Medicine, Detroit, MI.
 
 7/6/10
 ReferenceSC Gordon, D Moonka, KA Brown, and others. Risk for renal cell 
                  carcinoma in chronic hepatitis C infection. Cancer Epidemiology, 
                  Biomarkers and Prevention 19(4): 1066-1073 (Abstract). 
                  April 2010.
 
 Other Source
 Henry 
                  Ford Health System. Hepatitis C Infection Doubles Risk for Kidney 
                  Cancer. Press release. April 6, 2010.
 
 
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