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1 Division of Cancer Prevention and Control, H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center and Research Institute, Tampa, Florida; Departments of 2 Epidemiology, 3 International Health, 4 Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, and 5 Department of Pediatrics, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine; 6 Center for Prevention and Research, Mercy Medical Center, Baltimore, Maryland; and 7 Viral Epidemiology Branch, Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland
Requests for reprints: Dana E. Rollison, H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center and Research Institute, 12902 Magnolia Drive, Tampa, FL 33612. Phone: 813-745-6530; Fax: 813-745-6525. E-mail: rollisde{at}moffit.usf.edu
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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JC virus (JCV) and BK virus (BKV) comprise the human polyomaviruses and are common viral infections, with antibody seroprevalences among U.S. adults ranging from 44% (5) to 75% (6, 7) for JCV and 63% (5) to 80% (7) for BKV. JCV seroprevalence increases with age throughout adulthood, whereas BKV seroprevalence peaks in early adulthood and declines with subsequent age (5, 7, 8). Initial infections with JCV and BKV are thought to be asymptomatic and usually occur in early childhood (BKV) or later childhood and adolescence (JCV), after which the viruses remain latent in the kidneys (7). Other sites of latency have been proposed, including the brain and B-lymphocytes for JCV (7). Both viruses can reactivate with immunosuppression, resulting in disease. For example, JCV causes progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy in AIDS patients (9), and BKV is associated with nephropathy in kidney transplant recipients (7). Reactivation of JCV and BKV infections also occurs in individuals without severe immunosuppression, with JCV and BKV detected in 37% to 47% (10-12) and 0% to 5% (11, 12) of urine samples from immunocompetent individuals (10-12), respectively. However, no overt disease associated with reactivation of polyomavirus infection in immunocompetent individuals has yet been identified.
Infections with JCV and BKV have been proposed as potential risk factors for cancer, due in part to the ability of these viruses to induce tumors in experimentally infected laboratory animals (13). Both viruses encode for a nonstructural protein called the large tumor (T) antigen, which initiates viral DNA replication and modulates gene transcription (7). Large T-antigen can also bind to and inactivate the tumor suppressor proteins p53 and pRb (13), inhibiting apoptosis. JCV has been shown to infect B-lymphocytes (14, 15), and Neel and colleagues have described chromosomal damage in lymphocytes associated with both JCV (16, 17) and BKV (16) infections. Some investigators have detected polyomavirus sequences from NHL tissues, including one laboratory that detected JCV and BKV sequences in 5% and 6% of 83 lymphomas, respectively (18) and a recent report that showed the presence of JCV DNA sequences in 22 of 27 B-cell lymphomas of the central nervous system, a subset of which also contained EBV DNA (19).
Although these data suggest a potential role for JCV in NHL, other studies have not detected JCV or BKV sequences in lymphoma tissues, including three studies that primarily investigated the presence of SV40 (20-22). Additionally, a recent multicenter case-control study observed a decreased risk of NHL associated with antibodies to JCV and no association with antibodies to BKV (23). However, antibodies measured at the time of NHL diagnosis may not accurately reflect antibodies that would have been circulating in the early stages of lymphomagenesis. To investigate the association between infection with JCV and BKV and the risk of NHL diagnosed up to 30 years later, we conducted a population-based case-control study of serum antibodies to JCV and BKV and NHL nested within the CLUE cohort studies in Washington County, Maryland.
| Materials and Methods |
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The cases and controls included in the present study are the same individuals previously investigated for antibodies to the primate polyomavirus, SV40 (24). Cases of NHL occurring among CLUE cohort members through 2002 were identified by linkage to the Washington County Registry [International Classification of Diseases (ICD)-8 code 200 or 202] and, since 1992, the Maryland State Cancer Registry. Cases were defined as participants of one or both of the CLUE cohorts who were Washington County residents at the times of both blood donation and diagnosis with NHL. NHL had to have been the cases' first cancer diagnosis, with the possible exceptions of nonmelanoma skin cancer or cervical cancer in situ. NHL subtypes were classified using ICD-9/-10 morphology codes: diffuse large B-cell lymphomas (ICD 9680/3, 9682/3, 9684/3, and 9680), follicular B-cell lymphomas (9675/3, 9690/3, 9691/3, 9695/3, 9696/3, 9698/3, and 9690), T-cell lymphomas (9700/3), and others/not specified (9590/3, 9591/3, 9592/3, 9593/3, 9595/3, 9670/3, 9672/3, 9673/3, 9686/3, 9687/3, 9694/3, 9699/3, 9711/3, 9823/3, 9940/3, 9533/1, 9693/3, and 9685/3). One hundred seventy-four cases were identified, two of which were determined to be Hodgkin's disease and were excluded. Two additional cases were excluded due to inadequate amounts of available serum, yielding a final case sample size of 170. Of these 170 NHL cases, 91 participated in CLUE I only, 32 participated in CLUE II only, and 47 participated in both CLUE I and II, contributing a total of 217 blood samples for polyomavirus antibody analysis.
Two controls were matched to each case on sex, race, age within 1 year, freeze/thaw status of the serum or plasma, and participation in CLUE I, CLUE II, or both. Controls were residents of Washington County at the time of blood donation who were not known to have died or developed cancer (except for possibly nonmelanoma skin cancer or cervical cancer in situ) as of the date of diagnosis of the case. Matching criteria were relaxed in certain cases to achieve a match: seven controls were up to 2 years older than their matched cases, and for four case-control pairs, date of blood draw differed as much as 1 month. In accordance with case matching, 182 controls participated in CLUE I only, 64 participated in CLUE II only, and 94 participated in both cohorts, contributing a total of 434 blood samples for polyomavirus antibody analysis.
A subset of cases (n = 87) diagnosed through 1994 and their matched controls (n = 150) were included from a previous study in which an association between prediagnostic EBV antibody seropositivity and NHL was observed (25). Because both latent EBV and polyomavirus infections can reactivate under conditions of immunosuppression to cause disease, and JCV and EBV sequences have been shown to be present in NHL tissues simultaneously (19), we also assessed whether there was an additive effect of EBV and JCV or BKV infection on the risk of NHL in the subset of participants for whom both EBV and polyomavirus antibody data were available. This subset differs slightly from the previous study due to missing EBV data and replacement of controls from the 1994 study who were subsequently diagnosed with cancer or whose banked serum was depleted. In the present study, EBV antibody data were thus available for 96 blood samples from 84 NHL cases and 167 blood samples from 148 controls.
Laboratory Methods
Recombinant baculoviruses expressing the VP1 major capsid protein of JCV or BKV were kindly provided by Stephen Frye and Peter Jensen (Laboratory of Molecular Medicine and Neuroscience, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, Bethesda, MD) (ref. 26). Insect cells (sf9) were infected with the recombinant baculoviruses and virus-like particles were purified from cell lysates by CsCl density gradient ultracentrifugation and cation exchange or gel exclusion liquid chromatography as previously described (27, 28).
Wells of PolySorp microtiter plates (Nunc, Naperville, IL) were coated overnight at 4°C with 20 to 30 ng BKV or JCV virus-like particle protein in PBS (pH 7.2) and blocked for 3 hours at room temperature with 0.5% (w/v) polyvinyl alcohol, MW 30,000 to 70,000 (Sigma, St. Louis, MO), in PBS (0.5% polyvinyl alcohol). Before use and following each incubation step, the plates were washed four times with PBS containing 0.05% (v/v) Tween 20 (Sigma) in an automatic plate washer (Skanwasher 300, Skatron, Lier, Norway). Serum samples diluted 1:400 in 0.5% polyvinyl alcohol were left to react for 1 hour at 37°C. Antigen-bound immunoglobulin was detected with peroxidase-conjugated goat antibodies against human IgG (Zymed, San Francisco, CA), diluted 1:4,000 in 0.5% polyvinyl alcohol 0.0025% Tween 20, 0.8% (w/v) polyvinylpyrrolidone, MW 360,000 (Sigma) in PBS. After 30 minutes at 37°C, color development was initiated by the addition of 2,2'-azino-di-(3-ethylbenzthiazoline-6-sulfonate) hydrogen peroxide solution (Kirkegaard and Perry, Gaithersburg, MD). The reaction was stopped after 20 minutes by addition of 1% dodecyl sulfate and absorbance was measured at 405 nm in an automated microtiter plate reader (Molecular Devices, Menlo Park, CA).
Each case and its two matched controls were maintained in their matched triplet (or "set") to ensure simultaneous processing. Laboratory personnel were masked as to the case-control status of each sample. Seven pooled serum samples and eight pooled plasma samples were masked and placed across sets to test interset reliability of the ELISA assay. All seven pooled serum samples and all eight pooled plasma samples tested positive for JCV and BKV. Similarly, nine duplicate pairs of sera and eight duplicate pairs of plasma were placed within matched sets to assess intraset reliability, each pair drawn from a cohort member not included in the study. Both samples in all nine duplicate pairs of sera tested positive for JCV, and both samples in eight of nine pairs tested positive for BKV, with both samples in the remaining pair testing negative for BKV. Both samples in each of eight duplicate pairs of plasma tested positive for both JCV and BKV.
EBV antibodies were measured for a nested case-control study of NHL conducted within the CLUE cohorts in 1994 using immunofluoresence assays to measure IgG antibodies to EBV early antigen and viral capsid antigen as previously described (29). Positive early antigen antibodies were defined as reciprocal titers of
20, and reciprocal viral capsid antigen antibody titers of
640 were considered to be elevated.
Statistical Methods
CLUE baseline characteristics were compared between cases and controls using the
2 test. Geometric mean absorbance values were calculated for cases and controls and compared using a t test. Individuals were defined as positive or negative for polyomavirus antibodies using an absorbance value cutpoint of 0.1, as determined from previous results (27). Associations between polyomavirus seropositivity and age at blood draw were assessed separately for controls at two time points using logistic regression, with serostatus as the outcome and age at blood draw as a continuous independent variable. The associations between polyomavirus antibody seropositivity and NHL were estimated by matched odds ratios (OR) calculated using conditional logistic regression. The initial analysis was stratified by cohort participation. ORs were similar using either serum samples collected in 1974 or plasma samples collected in 1989; thus, all samples were combined in further analyses. Forty-seven cases and their matched controls donated blood to both CLUE I and II, and repeated measures of JCV and BKV antibody levels in this subgroup were accounted for in the regression models using robust sandwich estimation (30).
Similar conditional logistic regression models were also used to calculate matched ORs for the association between EBV seropositivity and NHL among the subset of participants for whom EBV antibody data were available. ORs were calculated separately for antibody seropositivity to each viral antigen (JCV virus-like particle, BKV virus-like particle, EBV early antigen, and EBV viral capsid antigen), with and without adjustment for antibody seropositivity to the other viruses.
To investigate differences in risk across NHL subtypes, matched ORs for seropositivity to JCV, BKV, and EBV early antigen were calculated separately for diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, follicular lymphoma, and other/not specified subtypes. To investigate the previously raised hypothesis that JCV may contribute to the earliest stages of NHL development, possibly through a hit-and-run mechanism (23, 31), associations between polyomavirus antibodies and NHL were compared across three 10-year strata of time between blood draw and diagnosis (i.e., hypothetical induction period).
Additional analyses were conducted within the subgroup of CLUE participants who donated blood in both 1974 and 1989. Individuals were first considered positive or negative for polyomavirus antibodies at both time points, using the absorbance value of 0.1 (24). To assess quantitative changes, antibody levels from both time points were plotted against age at blood draw, with a line connecting the antibody levels at the two time points for each individual. These longitudinal plots were generated separately for NHL cases versus controls. To evaluate the risk of NHL associated with quantitative changes in antibody levels over time in the plots, we first calculated the absolute difference in absorbance values between 1974 and 1989 by subtracting the absorbance value in 1974 from the absorbance value in 1989. Thus, negative differences indicated a decrease in antibody levels over time, whereas positive differences indicated an increase over time. Antibody levels to JCV and BKV decreased over time for
75% of this subgroup, and these negative changes were categorized into thirds, based on the distributions in the controls. Using as a reference group those individuals whose antibody levels declined the greatest, matched ORs were calculated to investigate a trend in risk of NHL associated with change in antibody levels. P values for trends were calculated by assigning the median absorbance value for the appropriate category into which each individual fell and including this variable in the regression model.
For the subgroup of participants in the 1994 study, EBV early antigen reciprocal antibody titers were plotted as ordinal values against age at blood draw: reciprocal titers of <10, 10, 20, 40, 80, 160, and 320 were assigned ordinal values of 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6, respectively. To calculate matched ORs for the risk of NHL associated with change in EBV titers, we considered four categories of change in antibodies over time, based on pairwise combinations of being seronegative or seropositive at the two time points (1974 and 1989). There were too few observations to conduct a matched analysis; thus, we estimated unmatched ORs for change in EBV early antigen antibody serostatus using logistic regression, adjusted for age at blood draw, sex, and race (i.e., matching factors).
All statistical tests were two-sided. Analyses were conducted using SAS, version 8 (SAS Institute, Inc., Cary, NC). Longitudinal plots were produced using Stata, version 8.2 (StataCorp, College Station, TX).
| Results |
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The associations with antibodies for JCV, BKV, or EBV early antigen were not different by NHL subtype (Table 3). No statistically significant associations were observed between JCV or BKV seropositivity and NHL within any hypothetical induction period (Table 3). A 2-fold increased risk of NHL was associated with EBV early antigen seropositivity among cases diagnosed <10 years after blood draw (OR, 2.59; 95% CI, 0.99-6.74), as well as for cases diagnosed 10 to 19 years after blood draw (OR, 2.26; 95% CI, 0.82-6.22; Table 3).
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| Discussion |
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One mechanism by which JCV reactivation may be involved in NHL development is through infection of B lymphocytes. Reactivation of JCV from the kidney could lead to infection of B lymphocytes (15, 32), whereby the virus could directly contribute to lymphomagenesis. For example, expression of JCV large T antigen in infected lymphocytes might modulate gene transcription and inhibit apoptosis (7, 13). This concept is supported by the previously observed correlation between JCV antibody titers and increased frequency of chromosomal aberrations in peripheral blood lymphocytes (16).
The mechanism underlying the association between changing JCV antibody levels and NHL could also be more indirect. Somewhat surprisingly, we found no association between overall JCV seropositivity and NHL, and Engels et al. (23) observed a statistically significant 30% reduction in NHL risk associated with JCV antibody seropositivity among newly diagnosed population-based NHL cases and matched controls. Results from PCR-based studies to date have been inconsistent. Three studies that were primarily investigations of SV40 in lymphoma tissues detected no JCV or BKV DNA sequences in NHL tissues (20-22). Another laboratory reported JCV and BKV sequences in 5% and 6% of 83 lymphomas, respectively (18). Finally, a report of JCV DNA sequences identified 81% of 27 central nervous system lymphomas analyzed (19). Some investigators have proposed that JCV may contribute to the development of cancer through a "hit-and-run" mechanism, whereby the virus is involved in the early stages of carcinogenesis and is eventually lost from malignant cells through subsequent mutations (31). Under this hit-and-run scenario, JCV DNA would not necessarily be present in lymphoma tissues. Alternatively, if JCV infection at early stages of carcinogenesis could be measured by circulating antibodies to the virus, then an association with NHL risk might have been seen among those whose blood was drawn in the critical time period before NHL diagnosis (i.e., induction period). However, our analysis of prospective data by induction period showed no increased risks of NHL associated with JCV antibodies detected in serum collected up to 29 years before diagnosis.
The observed increased risk of NHL associated with rises in JCV antibody levels over time may indicate that JCV reactivation arises due to subtle immune dysregulation, a possible early disease effect. Along these lines, the risk of NHL associated with increasing versus decreasing levels of JCV antibodies was strongest among the 17 cases diagnosed within 5 years of their second blood draw (OR, 4.30; 95% CI, 0.88-21.06), compared with the 20 cases diagnosed 5 to 10 years after their second blood draw (OR, 1.44; 95% CI, 0.44-4.60) and the 10 cases diagnosed >10 years after their second blood draw (OR, 1.00; 95% CI, 0.21-4.81), although none of these associations were statistically significant. Arguing against an early disease effect as the explanation for increasing JCV antibody levels among cases, we observed no relationship between NHL risk and changes in antibodies to BKV, a closely related polyomavirus. The >2-fold risk of NHL associated with EBV early antigen seropositivity was consistently observed among those diagnosed <10 and 10+ years after blood draw, indicating that EBV reactivation is not an early disease effect. Sample size was too small to investigate whether NHL risk was independently associated with change in JCV antibody levels by EBV early antigen serostatus, although changes in JCV antibody levels over 15 years were not correlated with changes in EBV titers (Spearman correlation coefficient = 0.03, P = 0.84).
JCV reactivation of infection could be associated with other viral infections. We previously investigated the association between SV40 antibodies and NHL in this case-control study population (24) and initially observed a statistically significant association. SV40-positive samples were then tested for cross-reactivity with JCV and BKV through competitive inhibition assays. Whereas SV40 antibodies were detected by virus-like particle ELISA in 15% of cases and 10% of controls, the SV40 reactivity of 85% of the SV40 antibodypositive sera was decreased by adsorption with BKV and/or JCV virus-like particles. Antibodies specific for SV40 (not cross-reactive) were identified in only 1.8% of cases and 1.6% of controls, and were not associated with NHL. Based on these previous findings, we had hypothesized that JCV and/or BKV may be the source of these cross-reactive antibodies when we undertook the current study. However, overall seropositivity for JCV and BKV were not associated with increased risk of NHL and adjustment for SV40 cross-reacting antibodies did not change these observed associations (data not shown). Additionally, there was no correlation between antibodies to EBV and SV40. The source of the SV40 cross-reactive antibodies in the previous study is presently unknown. If additional human polyomaviruses capable of inducing the production of antibodies that cross-react with the known human polyomaviruses are identified in the future, then infection with these viruses should be investigated as a potential risk factor for NHL.
Serologic patterns may also be markers for other NHL risk factors, including socioeconomic status or age at infection with childhood viruses. For example, later age at onset of infectious diseases among individuals with no sibling or with one sibling has been associated with increased risk of NHL (33). Similarly, a recent case-control study observed a statistically significant trend in increased risk of NHL associated with birth order, with only children having almost half the risk of developing NHL in adulthood compared with individuals who were fourth-born or later (34). This risk was further reduced among first-born/only children who ever had allergies, suggesting that a Th2-dominant immune response may be protective against NHL (34). If delayed childhood infections lead to an immunologic imbalance in adulthood, which, in turn, results in inefficient immune control of latent viruses with transforming capabilities, then all of these factors may be on the same causal pathway to NHL.
Our findings of increased risk of NHL associated with increasing levels of JCV antibodies should be interpreted with caution because the analysis of changes in polyomavirus antibody levels over time was limited by small sample size. Additionally, no tumor tissues were available from these individuals to investigate the correlation between changes in prediagnostic antibody levels and presence of virus in tissues. However, the unique design of this prospective study enabled us to investigate longitudinal changes in antibody levels within individuals associated with future cancer risk. The lower age-adjusted JCV seroprevalence in CLUE II (1989) versus CLUE I (1974) most likely resulted from the differences in sample types collected because plasma samples (collected in CLUE II) contain antibody at slightly lower concentrations than serum (collected in CLUE I), and the positive cutpoint used in the analysis was derived from serum reference samples. However, the relative differences in seroprevalence between cases and controls would be unaffected by the differences in serum versus plasma, as supported by the similar ORs observed for polyomavirus infection and NHL in both cohorts. Additionally, the observed rises in JCV antibody titers over time and their associations with NHL would be underestimated.
Our findings should be replicated in other cohorts that include repeated measurements over time from each participant. In addition to measuring JCV capsid IgG antibodies, JCV capsid IgA antibodies and JCV DNA shedding in the urine could be used as biomarkers of reactivated of JCV infection. Future research is also needed to identify factors associated with reactivation of latent infections to better evaluate potential confounders in epidemiologic studies and to develop prevention strategies for viral infections determined to be causally related to cancer.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked advertisement in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Received 9/19/05; revised 12/ 2/05; accepted 1/ 6/06.
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