Presence of autoimmune disease affects not only risk but also survival in patients with B ‐cell non‐Hodgkin lymphoma

We examined associations between autoimmunity and B‐cell NHL onset by comparing AID history (determined by self‐report and medication review and supplemented by chart review where possible) among 435 adult B‐NHL patients in Hadassah‐Hebrew University Medical Center, diagnosed 2009‐2014, and 414 age‐and‐sex frequency‐matched controls. We examined AIDs as a whole, B‐ and T‐cell–mediated AIDs, and autoimmune thyroid diseases. Among cases, we used Kaplan‐Meier and Cox regression models to assess the association of AID with overall survival and relapse‐free survival, adjusting for prognostically important patient and disease characteristics such as Ki67% staining, International Prognostic Index, rituximab treatment, and histological subgroup. Autoimmune diseases were associated with B‐NHL (odds ratio [OR] = 1.95; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.31‐2.92), especially AIDs mediated by B‐cell activation (OR = 5.20; CI, 1.90‐14.3), which were particularly associated with marginal zone lymphoma (OR = 19.3; CI, 4.59‐80.9). We found that time to relapse for all B‐NHL patients with AIDs was significantly shorter (mean of 49.21 mo [±3.22]) than among patients without AID (mean of 59.74 mo [±1.62]), adjusted hazard ratio [HRadj] = 1.69 (CI, 1.03‐2.79). Specifically, in patients with diffuse large B‐cell lymphoma, of whom 91.8% had received rituximab, a history of B‐cell–mediated AIDs was associated with shorter relapse‐free survival...
Source: Hematological Oncology - Category: Hematology Authors: Tags: ORIGINAL RESEARCH ARTICLE Source Type: research