Non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) incidence is greatly increased after kidney transplantation. NHL risk was investigated in a nationwide cohort of 8164 kidney transplant recipients registered on the Australia and New Zealand Dialysis and Transplant Registry. NHL diagnoses were ascertained using linkage with national cancer registry records. Multivariate Poisson regression was used to compute incidence rate ratios (IRRs) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) comparing risk by transplant function, and risk factors for early (< 2 years) and late (≥ 2 years) NHL during the first transplantation. NHL occurred in 133 patients. Incidence was strikingly lower after transplant failure and cessation of immunosuppression than during transplant function (IRR, 0.25; 95% CI, 0.08-0.80; P = .019). Early NHL (n = 27) was associated with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) seronegativity at transplantation (IRR, 4.66; 95% CI, 2.10-10.36, P < .001) and receipt of T cell–depleting antibodies (IRR, 2.39; 95% CI, 1.08-5.30; P = .031). Late NHL (n = 79) was associated with increasing year of age (IRR, 1.02; 95% CI, 1.01-1.04; P = .006), increasing time since transplantation (P < .001), and current use of calcineurin inhibitors (IRR, 3.13; 95% CI, 1.53-6.39; P = .002). These findings support 2 mechanisms of lymphomagenesis, one predominantly of primary EBV infection in the context of intense immunosuppression, and another of dysregulated lymphoid proliferation in a prolonged immunosuppressed state.

Non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) occurs at markedly increased rates after solid organ transplantation and represents the most serious form of posttransplant lymphoproliferative disorder (PTLD). Most cases, particularly those arising shortly after transplantation, are associated with infection by the herpesvirus Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) in the setting of impaired T-cell function brought about by iatrogenic immunosuppression.1  Although several large cohort studies of PTLD have been conducted,2-9  there has been considerable inconsistency in the assessment of potentially relevant exposures, such as the duration of immunosuppression and the use of specific immunosuppressive agents

Herein, we report an examination of incidence and risk factors for NHL in Australian kidney transplant recipients on the Australia and New Zealand Dialysis and Transplant Registry (ANZDATA). Particular focus is on the comparison of risk factors for cases arising early (< 2 years) and late (≥ 2 years) after transplantation, because they appear to differ clinically and pathologically.10-13 

Study population

The study population and method of cancer ascertainment have been described in detail previously.14,15  Briefly, the ANZDATA Registry contains comprehensive information on all patients who commence chronic dialysis or receive a kidney transplant in Australia and New Zealand, as collected by biannual surveys of patients' treating dialysis or transplant units.16  For this analysis, the study population was restricted to patients registered on the ANZDATA Registry in Australia who received their first transplant between January 1, 1982, and September 30, 2003 (n = 8173). Patients with NHL before transplantation were excluded (n = 9); patients were not excluded based on a history of other types of cancer.

Cancer data collection

NHL diagnoses were ascertained through data linkage with the Australian National Cancer Statistics Clearing House with the use of an established probabilistic matching technique.17  Full details of the data linkage algorithm used have been documented previously.14  The National Cancer Statistics Clearing House compiles information on all diagnoses of primary invasive cancer, excepting non–melanoma skin cancer, as notified by statute to each of the 8 state and territory cancer registries of Australia.18  Cancer data were available from January 1, 1982, until December 31, 2001, 2002, or 2003, depending on the jurisdiction of cancer registration.

For each case, the date of diagnosis, and topography and morphology coding (ICDO-3; ICD10) were obtained. Monomorphic PTLDs are classified as per the current World Health Organization guidelines for the classification of NHL.1  Therefore, all cases designated as NHL were included (ICDO-3 9670-9729, 9820-9837, 9940, 9948, 9591, and 9596). Cases of lymphoma for which the precise morphology was unspecified (ICDO-3 9590; n = 11) were included only if NHL was indicated by the corresponding ICD10 code (ICD10 C82-C85). Cases of multiple myeloma and plasmacytoma (ICDO-3 9731-9734) were not included. Polymorphic PTLD (ICDO-3 9970/1, lymphoproliferative disorder) were not included because they are not routinely registered by Australian cancer registries.

General population NHL incidence rates were obtained by 5-year age group, sex, calendar year, and state or territory, for each year since 1982.

Ethical approval was obtained from all relevant institutional ethics committees. The requirement for informed consent from patients was waived because the researchers received only de-identified data.

Statistical analysis

NHL incidence by transplant function.

For each patient, person-years (PYs) of follow-up were accumulated from the date of first transplantation until the date of first NHL diagnosis, death, last contact, or the latest date for which cancer data were available, whichever occurred first. The incidence of NHL was compared for periods of transplant function and dialysis after transplant failure, reflective of the presumed receipt or nonreceipt of immunosuppressive agents,19  thereby allowing analysis of the effect of currency of immunosuppression. For this analysis only, PYs and incident cases diagnosed during the first 3 months of each period of transplant function or dialysis were disregarded (n = 1 case during transplant function and n = 7 during dialysis), because cases arising within this time were probably present in the preceding period. For comparison purposes, NHL incidence was also examined during the period of dialysis before transplantation for all patients on the ANZDATA Registry first dialyzed between January 1, 1982, and September 30, 2003 (n = 23764), irrespective of subsequent transplantation.

Multivariate Poisson regression was used to compute incidence rate ratios (IRRs) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) comparing NHL incidence during periods of dialysis after transplant failure and second or higher-order transplantation to that during the first functioning transplant, adjusted for current age (time dependent; single years), sex, and the cumulative duration of transplant function (time dependent; years). Standardized incidence ratios (SIRs) with 95% CIs were also calculated for each period by comparing the number of observed cases with that expected based on the application of 5-year age-, sex-, calendar year-, and state or territory-specific general population incidence rates.

NHL incidence and risk factors during the first functioning transplant.

NHL incidence and risk factors were examined in detail for the first functioning transplant. For this analysis, follow-up was censored at first transplant failure and the reinstitution of dialysis; follow-up during the first 3 months was not excluded. The cumulative incidence at 2, 5, and 10 years after transplantation was examined for descriptive purposes based on the Kaplan-Meier failure estimate. SIRs with 95% CIs were calculated by current age (time dependent; < 20, 20-49, 50-69, ≥ 70 years) to examine risk among pediatric (< 20 years) and adult patients relative to the general population. SIRs were also calculated by time since transplantation (time dependent; < 1, 1-1.99, 2-4.99, 5-9.99, 10-14.99, and ≥ 15 years after transplantation). Because of the possibility that statistical comparison of SIRs over time since transplantation may be confounded by age, multivariate Poisson regression was also used to determine IRRs with 95% CIs, adjusted for current year of age and sex.

Risk factor analyses were conducted separately for early (< 2 years) and late (≥ 2 years) NHL. Two years was chosen to delineate early and late cases based on the distribution of cases and the well-documented increase in risk in the 1 to 2 years after transplantation.2,5,7,8  Risk factor data, including patient demographics and medical and immunosuppressive history, were obtained or derived from data held on the ANZDATA Registry. Demographic factors assessed included current age (time dependent; single years), sex, self-reported race (White, Nonwhite), and country of birth (Australia or New Zealand, Europe, Asia, other or unknown). Data were available on the receipt of individual immunosuppressive agents at transplantation and at 1, 2, 3, 6, 12, 24, 36, and 60 months after transplantation, and at 5-yearly intervals thereafter. With the use of this information, a time-dependent variable was constructed to represent the current receipt of each of the major classes of immunosuppressive agents, including the calcineurin inhibitors (CNIs) cyclosporine and tacrolimus, and the antiproliferative agents azathioprine and mycophenolate. Of the newer immunosuppressive agents, only sirolimus was considered and only for early NHL, because of insufficient PYs beyond this time. Receipt of the steroid prednisolone was not examined, given its near universal (95%) use within the cohort. Combination therapy (CNI ± antiproliferative agents) was examined for descriptive purposes. The blood levels of individual immunosuppressive agents were not available. Patients for whom the type of immunosuppressive agent was unknown at 2 or more consecutive time points (n = 335 patients; n = 2 with NHL) were excluded from risk factor analyses.

Other immunosuppression-related factors examined were duration of immunosuppression, approximated by time since transplantation (time dependent; < 1, 1-1.99 years for early NHL; 2-4.99, 5-9.99, 10-14.99, ≥ 15 years for late NHL); the receipt of T cell–depleting antibodies, specifically the polyclonal agents antithymocyte globulin and antilymphocyte globulin, and the monoclonal agent muromonab-CD3 (time dependent from time of receipt, given for either induction immunosuppression or for the treatment of acute rejection); donor source (living-related, cadaveric/living-unrelated); the number of human leukocyte antigen mismatches between the recipient and the donor (0-1, 2-3, 4-6); and the receipt of a different organ transplant in addition to a kidney, either at the time of, or after, kidney transplantation (time-dependent, yes or no).

Data on EBV-antibody IgG serostatus at the time of transplantation were available for 3559 patients (44%). A summary variable was constructed to represent potential primary infection. Patients who were EBV negative at transplantation were considered to be at risk of primary infection. Given the high seroprevalence of EBV, it is likely that most patients with unknown EBV serostatus at transplantation would have been EBV positive. Thus, patients who were either EBV positive or of unknown EBV serostatus at transplantation were considered not to be at risk of primary infection. Data on the EBV serostatus of the donor, available for 558 patients (15%) with known EBV status, were examined for descriptive purposes only. Patient CMV IgG serostatus at the time of transplantation (positive, negative, unknown) was also examined, as was history of infection with HCV (time dependent; positive, negative, unknown).

Other factors examined included history of another type of cancer before transplantation (yes or no, excluding non–melanoma skin cancer), cause of primary renal disease leading to renal failure (diabetic nephropathy, primary or secondary glomerulonephritis, hypertensive or arteriopathic, other or unknown), the number of years of dialysis before first transplantation (< 1, 1-1.99, ≥ 2), and smoking history (never, former, current) and diabetes comorbidity (none, type 1, type 2) at entry onto the ANZDATA Registry.

Poisson regression modeling was used to determine IRRs with 95% CIs for each risk factor. All variables with univariate 2-sided statistical significance (P < .10) were considered in multivariate analysis. The final multivariate models were determined with the use of a forwards stepwise approach, retaining only those covariates with 2-sided statistical significance (P < .05) after adjustment for each other and for current year of age, sex, time since transplantation, current receipt of immunosuppressive agents, receipt of T cell–depleting antibodies, and EBV serostatus at transplantation, which were included a priori. On the basis of previous reports, statistical interaction was assessed between the receipt of CNI and T cell–depleting antibodies,7  as well as between concomitant EBV- and CMV-negative status at transplantation.20,21  For all variables, missing data were analyzed as unknown, unless otherwise stated.

It has been argued that histologically benign PTLD can act in a biologically malignant manner in the immunosuppressed host.22  This, together with the likelihood that polymorphic and monomorphic PTLD are essentially one disease presenting at different stages of evolution,23  has led to the suggestion that epidemiologic analyses should not be restricted to malignant disease.22  Cases of lymphoproliferative disease are notified to the ANZDATA Registry; therefore, sensitivity analyses were conducted to determine the effect on risk factor analyses of the inclusion of these cases (11 early, 4 late) in addition to the cases of NHL ascertained from the cancer registry.

All analyses were performed with the use of Stata version 10 (StataCorp LP).

The study population consisted of 8164 eligible patients (4827 males, 3337 females). As summarized in Table 1, most patients (88%) were of White race. The median age at first transplantation was 43 years; 710 patients (9%) patients were younger than 20 years at transplantation. Of the 3559 patients with known EBV IgG serostatus at transplantation, 891 (25%) were EBV negative and were therefore considered to be at risk of primary infection. Of the EBV-negative patients, 33 (4%) were known to have received a kidney from an EBV-negative donor. CMV IgG serostatus at transplantation was known for 5010 patients (61%), of whom one-third were CMV negative. Most patients (81%) had at some stage received combination therapy with CNI and antiproliferative agents, and 1829 (22%) were administered T cell–depleting antibodies (48% antithymocyte globulin or antilymphocyte globulin, 59% muromonab-CD3). Antibodies were mostly (63%) administered for the treatment of acute rejection, at a median of 12 days after transplantation. First transplant failure with resumption of dialysis occurred in 2074 patients (25%) patients, and 800 (10%) underwent retransplantation. Three or more transplants were received by 82 patients (1%).

Table 1

Characteristics of cohort

CharacteristicPatients, n (%)PY*
TotalMean (SD)
Total 8164 (100) 49058 6.0 (5.1) 
Sex    
    Male 4827 (59) 28938 6.0 (5.1) 
    Female 3337 (41) 20120 6.0 (5.2) 
Race (self-reported)    
    White 7214 (88) 44414 6.2 (5.2) 
    Nonwhite 950 (12) 4644 4.9 (4.4) 
Country of birth    
    Australia or New Zealand 5727 (70) 35876 6.3 (5.1) 
    Europe 1015 (12) 6561 6.5 (5.1) 
    Asia 431 (5) 2387 5.5 (4.6) 
    Other or unknown 991 (12) 4234 4.3 (4.9) 
Cause of primary renal disease    
    Diabetic nephropathy 801 (10) 4177 5.2 (4.6) 
    Primary or secondary glomerulonephritis 2931 (36) 17259 5.9 (5.2) 
    Hypertensive or arteriopathic 484 (6) 2754 5.7 (5.0) 
    All other and unknown causes 3948 (48) 24868 6.3 (5.2) 
Age at first transplantation    
    Younger than 20 y 710 (8.7) 4572 6.4 (5.4) 
    20-50 y 4639 (56.8) 29477 6.4 (5.3) 
    50-70 y 2784 (34.1) 14925 5.4 (4.6) 
    70 y or older 31 (0.4) 84 2.7 (2.9) 
Source of first transplant    
    Living related donor 1694 (21) 9068 5.4 (4.6) 
    Cadaver or living unrelated donor 6470 (79) 39990 6.2 (5.2) 
Calendar year at first transplantation    
    Before 1985 930 (11) 7162 7.8 (7.5) 
    1985-1995 4084 (50) 32322 7.9 (4.9) 
    1996 or later 3150 (39) 9475 3.0 (2.1) 
EBV IgG serostatus at transplantation    
    Positive 2668 (33) 9941 3.7 (3.0) 
    Unknown 4605 (56) 34860 7.6 (5.7) 
    Negative 891 (11) 4258 4.8 (3.8) 
Selected immunosuppression regimen    
    CNI + Aza/MMF 6320 (81) 30960 4.9 (4.2) 
    CNI, no Aza/MMF 2101 (27) 6545 3.1 (4.0) 
    Aza/MMF, no CNI 1726 (22) 10140 5.9 (6.8) 
    Other combination 160 (2) 147 0.9 (1.4) 
Received T cell–depleting antibodies    
    No 6664 (94) 38072 5.0 (5.1) 
    Yes§ 1829 (22) 10986 6.0 (5.4) 
        Monoclonal (monomurab-CD3) 1083 (59) 6208 5.7 (5.1) 
        Polyclonal (ATG/ALG) 880 (48) 5501 6.3 (6.2) 
CharacteristicPatients, n (%)PY*
TotalMean (SD)
Total 8164 (100) 49058 6.0 (5.1) 
Sex    
    Male 4827 (59) 28938 6.0 (5.1) 
    Female 3337 (41) 20120 6.0 (5.2) 
Race (self-reported)    
    White 7214 (88) 44414 6.2 (5.2) 
    Nonwhite 950 (12) 4644 4.9 (4.4) 
Country of birth    
    Australia or New Zealand 5727 (70) 35876 6.3 (5.1) 
    Europe 1015 (12) 6561 6.5 (5.1) 
    Asia 431 (5) 2387 5.5 (4.6) 
    Other or unknown 991 (12) 4234 4.3 (4.9) 
Cause of primary renal disease    
    Diabetic nephropathy 801 (10) 4177 5.2 (4.6) 
    Primary or secondary glomerulonephritis 2931 (36) 17259 5.9 (5.2) 
    Hypertensive or arteriopathic 484 (6) 2754 5.7 (5.0) 
    All other and unknown causes 3948 (48) 24868 6.3 (5.2) 
Age at first transplantation    
    Younger than 20 y 710 (8.7) 4572 6.4 (5.4) 
    20-50 y 4639 (56.8) 29477 6.4 (5.3) 
    50-70 y 2784 (34.1) 14925 5.4 (4.6) 
    70 y or older 31 (0.4) 84 2.7 (2.9) 
Source of first transplant    
    Living related donor 1694 (21) 9068 5.4 (4.6) 
    Cadaver or living unrelated donor 6470 (79) 39990 6.2 (5.2) 
Calendar year at first transplantation    
    Before 1985 930 (11) 7162 7.8 (7.5) 
    1985-1995 4084 (50) 32322 7.9 (4.9) 
    1996 or later 3150 (39) 9475 3.0 (2.1) 
EBV IgG serostatus at transplantation    
    Positive 2668 (33) 9941 3.7 (3.0) 
    Unknown 4605 (56) 34860 7.6 (5.7) 
    Negative 891 (11) 4258 4.8 (3.8) 
Selected immunosuppression regimen    
    CNI + Aza/MMF 6320 (81) 30960 4.9 (4.2) 
    CNI, no Aza/MMF 2101 (27) 6545 3.1 (4.0) 
    Aza/MMF, no CNI 1726 (22) 10140 5.9 (6.8) 
    Other combination 160 (2) 147 0.9 (1.4) 
Received T cell–depleting antibodies    
    No 6664 (94) 38072 5.0 (5.1) 
    Yes§ 1829 (22) 10986 6.0 (5.4) 
        Monoclonal (monomurab-CD3) 1083 (59) 6208 5.7 (5.1) 
        Polyclonal (ATG/ALG) 880 (48) 5501 6.3 (6.2) 

PY indicates person-years; CNI, calcineurin inhibitor; Aza, azathioprine; MMF, mycophenolate; ATG, antithymocyte globulin; and ALG, antilymphocyte globulin.

*

PYs during first functioning transplantation.

Time-dependent; antibodies Yes from first receipt.

Excludes 335 patients with incomplete drug history.

§

Patients (n = 134) received both agents; total exceeds 100%.

NHL incidence by transplant function

In total, 133 cases of NHL were identified. After the exclusion of follow-up and incident cancers during the first 3 months of each period of transplant function and reinstitution of dialysis, 125 cases were identified; most cases (107; 86%) occurred during the first functioning transplant, and 15 (12%) occurred during a higher-order transplant. As shown in Table 2, after adjustment for current year of age, sex, and the cumulative duration of transplant function, incidence of NHL during dialysis subsequent to transplant failure was significantly lower than during the first functioning transplant (IRR, 0.25; 95% CI, 0.08-0.80), returning to a rate (51 per 100000 PYs; 95% CI, 16-158 per 100000 PYs) similar to that seen during dialysis before transplantation (56 per 100000 PYs; 95% CI, 39-79 per 100000 PYs). Risk on retransplantation was not significantly different from that during the first functioning transplant (IRR, 1.50; 95% CI, 0.87-2.60).

Table 2

Incidence of non-Hodgkin lymphoma, by transplant function

Transplant functionO (E)PYCrude rate/100000 PY95% CISIR95% CIIRR*95% CIP
First transplant functioning 107 (11.68) 47187 227 188-274 9.16 7.50-11.07 1.00   
First transplant failed, dialysis reinstituted 3 (1.26) 5885 51 16-158 2.37 0.49-6.94 0.25 0.08-0.80 .019 
Second or higher-order transplant functioning 15 (0.85) 4224 339 204-562 17.65 9.88-29.11 1.50 0.87-2.60 .148 
Higher-order transplant failure, dialysis reinstituted 0 (0.20) 1181 — — 18.37 — — — 
Transplant functionO (E)PYCrude rate/100000 PY95% CISIR95% CIIRR*95% CIP
First transplant functioning 107 (11.68) 47187 227 188-274 9.16 7.50-11.07 1.00   
First transplant failed, dialysis reinstituted 3 (1.26) 5885 51 16-158 2.37 0.49-6.94 0.25 0.08-0.80 .019 
Second or higher-order transplant functioning 15 (0.85) 4224 339 204-562 17.65 9.88-29.11 1.50 0.87-2.60 .148 
Higher-order transplant failure, dialysis reinstituted 0 (0.20) 1181 — — 18.37 — — — 

Excludes PY and incident cancers during first 3 of each period; by definition this also excludes patients who died within the first 3 months of transplantation (n = 249) or with early transplant failure who died within 3 months of reinstitution of dialysis (n = 117).

O indicates observed; E, expected; PY, person-years; SIR, standardized incidence ratio; CI, confidence interval; IRR, incidence rate ratio; and —, incalculable because of 0 observed cases.

*

Adjusted for current age (in years), sex, cumulative duration of transplant function (in years).

P for difference with first functioning transplant.

Zero cases; upper CI presented.

NHL incidence and risk factors during the first functioning transplantation

During the first functioning transplant 108 cases of NHL were identified, with 27 cases diagnosed during the first 2 years and 81 cases thereafter. The median age at transplantation was 44 years (interquartile range, 19-64 years) for patients diagnosed with early NHL, and 47 years (interquartile range, 20-63 years) for patients with late NHL. Of patients with early NHL, 10 (37%) were EBV negative at transplantation compared with 5 (6%) of patients with late NHL (χ2 = 16.13; P < .001). All patients who were EBV negative at transplantation and who developed NHL had received a kidney from an EBV-positive or EBV-unknown donor. Diffuse large B-cell lymphomas comprised almost half of both early and late cases, and only a few cases were of T-cell origin, although data on the precise morphology of cases were unspecified for a large proportion (38%) of cases. A greater proportion of early cases were nodal; only 3 (14%) of 22 early cases for which topography was specified involved extranodal sites compared with 26 (38%) late cases (see Table 3).

Table 3

Morphology and topography of early and late non-Hodgkin lymphoma during the first functioning transplant

Early (n=27), n (%)Late (n=81), n (%)
Morphology*   
    B-cell lymphoma 13 (48) 49 (60) 
    T-cell and NK lymphoma 1 (4) 3 (4) 
    NHL, NOS 7 (26) 24 (30) 
    Lymphoma, NOS 6 (22) 5 (6) 
Topography   
    Nodal 19 (70) 43 (53) 
        Node, NOS 17 (63) 38 (50) 
    Extranodal 3 (11) 26 (32) 
    Unspecified/missing 5 (19) 12 (15) 
Early (n=27), n (%)Late (n=81), n (%)
Morphology*   
    B-cell lymphoma 13 (48) 49 (60) 
    T-cell and NK lymphoma 1 (4) 3 (4) 
    NHL, NOS 7 (26) 24 (30) 
    Lymphoma, NOS 6 (22) 5 (6) 
Topography   
    Nodal 19 (70) 43 (53) 
        Node, NOS 17 (63) 38 (50) 
    Extranodal 3 (11) 26 (32) 
    Unspecified/missing 5 (19) 12 (15) 

Incident cancers during the first functioning transplant only.

NK indicates natural killer cell; NHL, non-Hodgkin lymphoma; and NOS, not otherwise specified.

*

B-cell lymphoma ICDO-3 9670-9699, 9728, 9823, 9826, 9833, 9836, 9940; T-cell and NK lymphoma ICDO-3 9700-9719, 9729, 9827, 9831, 9834, 9837, 9948; NHL, NOS ICDO-3 9591, 9727, 9820, 9832, 9835; lymphoma, NOS ICDO-3 9590 if ICD10 C82-C85.

Lymph node ICDO-3 C77.0-C77.9.

The cumulative incidence of NHL during the first functioning transplant was 0.4%, 0.7%, and 2.2% at 2, 5, and 10 years, respectively. Relative risk varied substantially with age. The SIR was greatest for patients aged younger than 20 years (SIR, 55.27; 95% CI, 17.95-128.98) and declined significantly with increasing age (P < .001); the SIR was 18.55 (95% CI, 13.43-24.99) for patients aged 20 to 49 years, 6.43 (95% CI, 4.75-8.29) for patients aged 50 to 69 years, and 5.56 (95% CI, 2.24-11.46) for patients aged 70 years or older.

Incidence was bimodally distributed by time since transplantation; in analyses adjusted for current year of age and sex, incidence was significantly lower during the period 2 to 4.99 years after transplantation (IRR, 0.40; 95% CI, 0.21-0.76; P = .005) than during the first 2 years. Incidence during the period 5 to 9.99 years (IRR, 1.23; 95% CI, 0.76-2.00; P = .399) and more than 10 years (IRR, 1.32; 95% CI, 0.75-2.31; P = .322) was not significantly different from that during the first 2 years. As shown in Figure 1, compared with the Australian general population, relative risk was 10-fold higher during the first 2 years (SIR, 10.66; 95% CI, 7.03-15.51). The SIR was 4.24 (95% CI, 2.32-7.11) during the period 5 to 9.99 years, and from 10 years it was 10.31 (95% CI, 6.61-15.34).

Figure 1

Standardized incidence ratio for non-Hodgkin lymphoma by time since transplantation. Shows incidence during the first functioning transplant by time since transplantation, relative to that in the Australian general population, standardized by 5-year age, sex, calendar year, and state or territory.

Figure 1

Standardized incidence ratio for non-Hodgkin lymphoma by time since transplantation. Shows incidence during the first functioning transplant by time since transplantation, relative to that in the Australian general population, standardized by 5-year age, sex, calendar year, and state or territory.

Close modal

In multivariate analysis, early NHL (Table 4) was significantly associated with EBV-negative status at transplantation (IRR, 4.66; 95% CI, 2.10-10.36) and with the receipt of T cell–depleting antibodies (IRR, 2.39; 95% CI, 1.08-5.30). No statistically significant difference in risk was observed between patients receiving only monoclonal (IRR, 2.81; 95% CI, 1.17-6.78) or polyclonal (IRR, 1.11; 95% CI, 0.26- 4.82; Pdiff = .248) agents in univariate analysis, or whether given for prophylaxis (IRR, 3.09; 95% CI, 1.04-9.18) or rejection (IRR, 2.15; 95% CI, 0.84-5.46; Pdiff = .576). There were insufficient cases with which to assess statistical interaction between receipt of T cell–depleting antibodies and CNI. No significant interaction was observed between concomitant EBV and CMV seronegative status at transplantation and risk of NHL in univariate analysis (IRR, 1.45; 95% CI, 0.21-9.94; P = .707).

Table 4

Multivariate risk factors for early (< 2 years after transplantation) and late (≥ 2 years) non-Hodgkin lymphoma during the first functioning transplant

Early (n = 27)*
Late (n = 79)
nPYIRR95% CIPnPYIRR95% CIP
Current age (single y)§ 27 12746 1.01 0.98-1.04 .453 79 35046 1.02 1.01-1.04 .006 
Sex           
    Male 16 7601 1.00   44 20589 1.00   
    Female 11 5145 1.00 0.47-2.17 .992 35 14457 1.09 0.70-1.70 .710 
EBV IgG status at transplantation           
    Positive or unknown 17 11314 1.00   74 32250 1.00   
    Negative 10 1432 4.66 2.12-10.36 <.001 2796 0.91 0.37-2.28 .846 
Time since transplantation§           
    Less than 1 y 17 6758 1.00        
    1-1.99 y 10 5988 0.66 0.30-1.44 .295      
    2-4.99 y      12 14348 1.00   
    5-9.99 y      43 13868 3.63 1.91-6.90 <.001 
    10-14.99 y      20 5504 4.56 2.19-9.47  
    15 y or more      1326 5.58 1.69-18.40  
Receipt of CNI (CyA, Tac)§           
    No 1635 1.00   10 8652 1.00   
    Yes 25 11110 1.36 0.31-5.96 .682 69 26394 3.13 1.53-6.39 .002 
Receipt of antiproliferatives (Aza, MMF)§           
    No 1729 1.00   14 4963 1.00   
    Yes 21 11016 0.50 0.17-1.23 .120 65 30083 1.14 0.63-2.07 .665 
Receipt of sirolimus§           
    No 26 12358 1.00        
    Yes 388 0.67 0.08-5.69 .716      
Receipt of T cell–depleting antibodies§           
    No 17 10120 1.00   59 26971 1.00   
    Yes 10 2625 2.39 1.08-5.30 .031 20 8075 1.21 0.37-2.28 .846 
Early (n = 27)*
Late (n = 79)
nPYIRR95% CIPnPYIRR95% CIP
Current age (single y)§ 27 12746 1.01 0.98-1.04 .453 79 35046 1.02 1.01-1.04 .006 
Sex           
    Male 16 7601 1.00   44 20589 1.00   
    Female 11 5145 1.00 0.47-2.17 .992 35 14457 1.09 0.70-1.70 .710 
EBV IgG status at transplantation           
    Positive or unknown 17 11314 1.00   74 32250 1.00   
    Negative 10 1432 4.66 2.12-10.36 <.001 2796 0.91 0.37-2.28 .846 
Time since transplantation§           
    Less than 1 y 17 6758 1.00        
    1-1.99 y 10 5988 0.66 0.30-1.44 .295      
    2-4.99 y      12 14348 1.00   
    5-9.99 y      43 13868 3.63 1.91-6.90 <.001 
    10-14.99 y      20 5504 4.56 2.19-9.47  
    15 y or more      1326 5.58 1.69-18.40  
Receipt of CNI (CyA, Tac)§           
    No 1635 1.00   10 8652 1.00   
    Yes 25 11110 1.36 0.31-5.96 .682 69 26394 3.13 1.53-6.39 .002 
Receipt of antiproliferatives (Aza, MMF)§           
    No 1729 1.00   14 4963 1.00   
    Yes 21 11016 0.50 0.17-1.23 .120 65 30083 1.14 0.63-2.07 .665 
Receipt of sirolimus§           
    No 26 12358 1.00        
    Yes 388 0.67 0.08-5.69 .716      
Receipt of T cell–depleting antibodies§           
    No 17 10120 1.00   59 26971 1.00   
    Yes 10 2625 2.39 1.08-5.30 .031 20 8075 1.21 0.37-2.28 .846 

PY and incident cancers during the first functioning transplant only; excludes 335 patients (n = 2 with late NHL) with incomplete data on immunosuppressive agents.

PY indicates person-years; IRR, incidence rate ratio; CI, confidence interval; CNI, calcineurin inhibitors; CyA, cyclosporine; Tac, tacrolimus; Aza, azathioprine; and MMF, mycophenolate.

*

Adjusted for current age, sex, EBV IgG status, time since transplantation, receipt of CNI, antiproliferative agents, sirolimus, and T cell–depleting antibodies.

Adjusted for current age, sex, EBV IgG status, time since transplantation, receipt of CNI, antiproliferative agents, and T cell–depleting antibodies.

P for homogeneity for categorical variables; P for trend for ordinal variables.

§

Time dependent; T cell–depleting antibodies Yes from time of first receipt.

Risk of late NHL (Table 4) was significantly associated with increasing year of age (IRR, 1.02; 95% CI, 1.01-1.04), increasing time since transplantation (P < .001), and with the current receipt of CNI (IRR, 3.13; 95% CI, 1.53-6.39). When agents were modeled individually, the IRR was 5.15 (95% CI, 0.63-41.98; P = .126) for receipt of tacrolimus and 3.30 (95% CI, 1.62-6.72; P = .001) for cyclosporine. No increase in risk was observed with receipt of antiproliferative agents (IRR, 1.14; 95% CI, 0.63-2.07); when agents were modeled individually, the IRR was 0.19 (95% CI, 0.02-1.47; P = .110) for receipt of mycophenolate and 1.23 (95% CI, 0.68-2.24; P = .489) for azathioprine.

Sensitivity analyses, in which cases of lymphoproliferative disease notified to ANZDATA were also included, strengthened but did not substantially alter the observed associations (data not shown).

Risk of NHL in this Australian cohort of kidney transplant recipients was strongly related to the current receipt of immunosuppression and reverted quickly to pretransplantation level on transplant failure, when immunosuppression is usually ceased. Relative risk remained substantially elevated after 10 years of continuous transplant function and was comparable with that observed during the first 2 years. Early NHL was independently associated with EBV-seronegative status at transplantation and with the receipt of T cell–depleting antibodies. Late NHL was associated with increasing age, with increasing duration of continuous immunosuppression, and with the receipt of CNI, but not with antiproliferative agents. These findings provide evidence in support of 2 mechanisms of lymphomagenesis after transplantation, one driven predominantly by primary EBV infection in the context of profound immunosuppression and another by prolonged immunosuppression, aging, and, probably, exposure to specific immunosuppressive agents.

The rapid and complete reversal of NHL risk on cessation of immunosuppression strongly supports a direct role of immunosuppression24  and shows the important contribution of current functional immunity to lymphomagenesis. This finding accords with the regression of some, primarily polymorphic, lesions shortly after the reduction of immunosuppression, both in transplanted25,26  and other populations, such as those immunosuppressed with methotrexate for the treatment of autoimmune disease.27  It is also consistent with the regression of Kaposi sarcoma, another herpesvirus-related cancer, on cessation of immunosuppression.28,29 

The increased risk of NHL early after transplantation has been well described. In this study, relative risk at 5 and 10 years after transplantation was comparable with that observed during the first 2 years. This bimodal distribution, noted previously for physician-notified PTLD in the ANZDATA cohort,7  contrasts with that reported for other registry-based30,31  and large-scale cohort studies with similar follow-up,2,5  in which relative risk declined after the first year after transplantation. Emerging evidence from clinic-based studies suggests that late NHL differs pathologically and clinically from early disease, being less frequently associated with EBV, and less amenable to treatment.10-13  The possibility of a distinct causative mechanism for early and late NHL is supported in this study by several observations.

A near 5-fold risk of early NHL was observed with EBV-negative status at transplantation; receipt of T cell–depleting antibodies was associated with a 2-fold risk. In the immunosuppressed state, patients undergoing primary EBV infection are unable to mount an adequate EBV-specific immune response, lacking the requisite EBV-specific CD8+ T cells and producing few anti-EBNA antibodies.32  This may be exacerbated in patients receiving T cell–depleting antibodies, the effect of which is greatest within the first 3 months of receipt.33,34  Restoration of functional immunity over time, particularly EBV-specific immunity, may therefore explain the lack of association between primary EBV infection and late NHL. This may also account for the observation in clinic-based data that the EBV genome is less frequently detected in late cases.11,13,35 

The risk profile for late NHL differed starkly from that for early NHL. Risk increased with increasing age, as noted in the Collaborative Transplant Study cohort for cases arising after the first year.5  Age is a strong risk factor for NHL in the general population,36  and this may reflect age-related loss of immunosurveillance brought about by senescence of the immune system.37,38  Risk also increased with duration of immunosuppression, even after adjustment for cohort aging, suggesting a role for prolonged, continuous T-cell immunosuppression and immune dysregulation. Chronic antigenic stimulation, resulting from antigenic differences with the transplanted organ or from repeated infection, has been postulated to play a role, as has infection with an as yet undescribed virus.26,29,37  However, neither of these hypotheses could be directly evaluated in the present study.

Late NHL was also associated with the current receipt of CNI. However, a direct carcinogenic effect of these agents is difficult to establish because of the interrelationship between T-cell suppression and control over EBV infection. Both cyclosporine and tacrolimus inhibit T-cell activation, including that of EBV-specific CD8+ T cells.39,40  In addition, cyclosporine enhances the expression of interleukin-6, which promotes the growth of EBV-transformed B cells in vitro.41,42  Prior epidemiologic data are inconclusive. No increase in risk of PTLD was observed with use of cyclosporine or cyclosporine-based regimens in the United States Renal Data System or Collaborative Transplant Study cohorts.5,6  However, those studies examined NHL risk in relation to agents received for maintenance immunosuppression on hospital discharge rather than on current receipt. However, receipt of mycophenolate, a potent suppressor of B-cell proliferation,43  was associated with significantly reduced risk of NHL in 2 prior cohorts.3,6  In the present study, no increase in NHL risk was observed with receipt of antiproliferative agents.

This study had several strengths, including the use of population-based registers of both transplant recipients and incident cancers. Although several large cohort studies of PTLD have been conducted,2-9  few have involved population-based registers of transplant recipients,4,7,8  and none have used cancer registry-based lymphoma diagnoses. The large cohort size and the long period of follow-up enabled the examination of risk during periods of higher-order transplantation and dialysis, as well as of risk factors for early and late cases. Data on the receipt of individual immunosuppressive agents were also sufficiently detailed so as to allow time-dependent examination, which is important, given the changes in the availability and use of immunosuppressive agents over time and the practice of switching between treatment regimens.44 

There were also some limitations. It is possible that some misclassification may have occurred because of the recognized difficulty of accurate PTLD diagnosis and classification, as well as secular changes in diagnostic criteria and classification of lymphoid neoplasms. Thus, it is also possible that improvements in diagnosis of lymphoma over time may have contributed to the pattern we observed with increasing time since transplantation. Some have argued that analyses should include all cases of PTLD.22  Australian national cancer registration is restricted to malignant disease; however, the risk profile of early and late NHL was not altered in this study by the inclusion of a small number of physician-notified and presumably polymorphic lymphoproliferative lesions notified to ANZDATA.

Risk factor analyses were limited to the information contained on the ANZDATA Registry. Data on EBV IgG serostatus were incomplete; however, because patients with unknown serostatus were categorized together with those who were EBV positive at transplantation, our estimate of the effect of primary infection is probably conservative. No data were available on EBV prophylaxis, EBV viral load, reactivated EBV infection, or EBV detection in tumors. In terms of immunosuppressive agents, we could not consider the effect of drug dose. Because this was an observational study, we cannot exclude the possibility that patient-specific factors taken into account when prescribing drug type and dose may have contributed to the findings. For instance, the diagnosis of reactive plasmacytic hyperplasia or infectious mononucleosis may have resulted in a change in immunosuppression.

To conclude, NHL risk after kidney transplantation is closely related to the currency of immunosuppression and reverts to the pretransplantation level when immunosuppression is ceased, reinforcing the role of functional immunity in lymphomagenesis. This study extends previous clinical observations to provide epidemiologic support for 2 distinct causative mechanisms of NHL. The strong association between EBV-negative status at transplantation, receipt of T cell–depleting antibodies and risk of early NHL confirms the importance of primary EBV infection in the context of profound immunodeficiency. The combined role of age and duration of immunosuppression in late NHL supports a model of unchecked lymphoid proliferation in the setting of prolonged immunosuppression and immune dysregulation. This appears to be exacerbated or mediated by certain immunosuppressive agents. Population-based analysis of biologic host and tumor characteristics may help inform the complex interplay between immune function, lymphocyte proliferation, and lymphoma development in the long-term immunosuppressed, as well as in the immunocompetent.

The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. Therefore, and solely to indicate this fact, this article is hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 USC section 1734.

We thank the dialysis and transplantation units throughout Australia for the dedication and care with which they have regularly submitted the information on which this analysis has been performed, and the ANZDATA Registry staff who have created and maintained the database so accurately. We thank the staff of the state and territory cancer registries for the use of their data. We also thank the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare and the Cancer Council Victoria for assistance in the conduct of this study.

This work was supported by the Cancer Council NSW (New South Wales; RG 47/03); the National Health and Medical Research Council (ID 510346 to C.M.V.; ID 401131 to M.T.v.L.); and the Cancer Institute New South Wales (07/CDF/1-38 to C.M.V.; 06/RSA/1/28 to M.T.v.L). The ANZDATA Registry administrative office is supported by funding from the Australian government Department of Health and Ageing, the New Zealand Ministry of Health, and Kidney Health Australia; data collection costs are borne by contributing renal units.

The interpretation and reporting of these data are the responsibility of the authors and in no way should be seen as official policy or interpretation of the Australia and New Zealand Dialysis and Transplant Registry.

Contribution: M.T.v.L., A.E.G., A.C.W., M.R.E.M., J.H.S., S.P.M., J.A., J.M.K., J.R.C., and C.M.V. designed the research, analyzed and interpreted data, and revised and reviewed the final manuscript; M.T.v.L. and J.A. performed statistical analysis; and M.T.v.L., C.M.V., and A.E.G. were responsible for drafting the manuscript.

Conflict-of-interest disclosure: J.R.C. is on advisory boards and speaker panels for Astellas, Novartis, Wyeth, and Hoffmann la Roche, and he has received research support from the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation International, Novartis, Wyeth, Jannsen-Cilag, and Hoffmann la Roche. A.E.G. is on the advisory board for the Gardasil human papillomavirus vaccine for the Commonwealth Serum Laboratories. The remaining authors declare no competing financial interests.

Correspondence: Claire M. Vajdic, UNSW Cancer Research Centre, Prince of Wales Clinical School, UNSW, Level 1, South Wing, Edmund Blacket Bldg, Prince of Wales Hospital, Randwick NSW 2031, Australia; e-mail: claire.vajdic@unsw.edu.au.

1
Harris
 
N
Swerdlow
 
AJ
Frizzera
 
G
Knowles
 
D
Jaffe
 
ES
Harris
 
NL
Stein
 
H
Vardiman
 
JW
Post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorders.
World Health Organization Classification of Tumours Pathology and Genetics of Tumours of Haematopoietic and Lymphoid Tissues
2001
, vol. 
Vol 3
 
Lyon, France
IARC Press
(pg. 
264
-
269
)
2
Opelz
 
G
Henderson
 
R
Incidence of non-Hodgkin lymphoma in kidney and heart transplant recipients.
Lancet
1993
, vol. 
342
 (pg. 
1514
-
1516
)
3
Cherikh
 
WS
Kauffman
 
HM
McBride
 
MA
Maghirang
 
J
Swinnen
 
LJ
Hanto
 
DW
Association of the type of induction immunosuppression with posttransplant lymphoproliferative disorder, graft survival, and patient survival after primary kidney transplantation.
Transplantation
2003
, vol. 
76
 (pg. 
1289
-
1293
)
4
Bustami
 
RT
Ojo
 
AO
Wolfe
 
RA
, et al. 
Immunosuppression and the risk of post-transplant malignancy among cadaveric first kidney transplant recipients.
Am J Transplant
2004
, vol. 
4
 (pg. 
87
-
93
)
5
Opelz
 
G
Dohler
 
B
Lymphomas after solid organ transplantation: a collaborative transplant study report.
Am J Transplant
2004
, vol. 
4
 (pg. 
222
-
230
)
6
Caillard
 
S
Dharnidharka
 
V
Agodoa
 
L
Bohen
 
E
Abbott
 
K
Posttransplant lymphoproliferative disorders after renal transplantation in the United States in era of modern immunosuppression.
Transplantation
2005
, vol. 
80
 (pg. 
1233
-
1243
)
7
Faull
 
RJ
Hollett
 
P
McDonald
 
SP
Lymphoproliferative disease after renal transplantation in Australia and New Zealand.
Transplantation
2005
, vol. 
80
 (pg. 
193
-
197
)
8
Caillard
 
S
Lelong
 
C
Pessione
 
F
Moulin
 
B
Post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorders occurring after renal transplantation in adults: report of 230 cases from the French Registry.
Am J Transplant
2006
, vol. 
6
 (pg. 
2735
-
2742
)
9
Smith
 
JM
Rudser
 
K
Gillen
 
D
, et al. 
Risk of lymphoma after renal transplantation varies with time: an analysis of the United States Renal Data System.
Transplantation
2006
, vol. 
81
 (pg. 
175
-
180
)
10
Armitage
 
JM
Kormos
 
RL
Stuart
 
RS
, et al. 
Posttransplant lymphoproliferative disease in thoracic organ transplant patients: ten years of cyclosporine-based immunosuppression.
J Heart Lung Transplant
1991
, vol. 
10
 (pg. 
877
-
886
)
11
Leblond
 
V
Davi
 
F
Charlotte
 
F
, et al. 
Posttransplant lymphoproliferative disorders not associated with Epstein-Barr virus: a distinct entity?
J Clin Oncol
1998
, vol. 
16
 (pg. 
2052
-
2059
)
12
Dotti
 
G
Fiocchi
 
R
Motta
 
T
, et al. 
Epstein-Barr virus-negative lymphoproliferate disorders in long-term survivors after heart, kidney, and liver transplant.
Transplantation
2000
, vol. 
69
 (pg. 
827
-
833
)
13
Ghobrial
 
IM
Habermann
 
TM
Macon
 
WR
, et al. 
Differences between early and late posttransplant lymphoproliferative disorders in solid organ transplant patients: are they two different diseases?
Transplantation
2005
, vol. 
79
 (pg. 
244
-
247
)
14
Vajdic
 
CM
McDonald
 
SP
McCredie
 
MR
, et al. 
Cancer incidence before and after kidney transplantation.
JAMA
2006
, vol. 
296
 (pg. 
2823
-
2831
)
15
van Leeuwen
 
MT
Grulich
 
AE
McDonald
 
SP
, et al. 
Immunosuppression and other risk factors for lip cancer after kidney transplantation.
Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev
2009
, vol. 
18
 (pg. 
561
-
569
)
16
McDonald
 
SP
Russ
 
GR
Kerr
 
PG
Collins
 
JF
ESRD in Australia and New Zealand at the end of the millennium: a report from the ANZDATA registry.
Am J Kidney Dis
2002
, vol. 
40
 (pg. 
1122
-
1131
)
17
Jaro
 
MA
Probabilistic linkage of large public health data files.
Stat Med
1995
, vol. 
14
 (pg. 
491
-
498
)
18
Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) and Australasian Association of Cancer Registries (AACR)
Cancer in Australia: An Overview, 2006
Canberra, Australia
AIHW
pg. 
2007
 
19
Marcen
 
R
Teruel
 
JL
Patient outcomes after kidney allograft loss.
Transplant Rev
2008
, vol. 
22
 (pg. 
62
-
72
)
20
Walker
 
RC
Marshall
 
WF
Strickler
 
JG
, et al. 
Pretransplantation assessment of the risk of lymphoproliferative disorder.
Clin Infect Dis
1995
, vol. 
20
 (pg. 
1346
-
1353
)
21
Katz
 
BZ
Pahl
 
E
Crawford
 
SE
, et al. 
Case-control study of risk factors for the development of post-transplant lymphoproliferative disease in a pediatric heart transplant cohort.
Pediatr Transplant
2007
, vol. 
11
 (pg. 
58
-
65
)
22
Swerdlow
 
AJ
Higgins
 
CD
Hunt
 
BJ
, et al. 
Risk of lymphoid neoplasia after cardiothoracic transplantation. A cohort study of the relation to Epstein-Barr virus.
Transplantation
2000
, vol. 
69
 (pg. 
897
-
904
)
23
Vakiani
 
E
Basso
 
K
Klein
 
U
, et al. 
Genetic and phenotypic analysis of B-cell post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorders provides insights into disease biology.
Hematol Oncol
2008
, vol. 
26
 (pg. 
199
-
211
)
24
Hill
 
AB
The environment and disease: association or causation?
Proc R Soc Med
1965
, vol. 
58
 (pg. 
295
-
300
)
25
Starzl
 
TE
Nalesnik
 
MA
Porter
 
KA
, et al. 
Reversibility of lymphomas and lymphoproliferative lesions developing under cyclosporin-steroid therapy.
Lancet
1984
, vol. 
1
 (pg. 
583
-
587
)
26
Penn
 
I
The role of immunosuppression in lymphoma formation.
Springer Semin Immunopathol
1998
, vol. 
20
 (pg. 
343
-
355
)
27
Rizzi
 
R
Curci
 
P
Delia
 
M
, et al. 
Spontaneous remission of “methotrexate-associated lymphoproliferative disorders” after discontinuation of immunosuppressive treatment for autoimmune disease. Review of the literature.
Med Oncol
2009
, vol. 
26
 (pg. 
1
-
9
)
28
Barozzi
 
P
Bonini
 
C
Potenza
 
L
, et al. 
Changes in the immune responses against human herpesvirus-8 in the disease course of posttransplant Kaposi sarcoma.
Transplantation
2008
, vol. 
86
 (pg. 
738
-
744
)
29
Penn
 
I
Depressed immunity and the development of cancer.
Cancer Detect Prev
1994
, vol. 
18
 (pg. 
241
-
252
)
30
Adami
 
J
Gabel
 
H
Lindelof
 
B
, et al. 
Cancer risk following organ transplantation: a nationwide cohort study in Sweden.
Br J Cancer
2003
, vol. 
89
 (pg. 
1221
-
1227
)
31
Villeneuve
 
PJ
Schaubel
 
DE
Fenton
 
SS
Shepherd
 
FA
Jiang
 
Y
Mao
 
Y
Cancer incidence among Canadian kidney transplant recipients.
Am J Transplant
2007
, vol. 
7
 (pg. 
941
-
948
)
32
Ho
 
M
Miller
 
G
Atchison
 
RW
, et al. 
Epstein-Barr virus infections and DNA hybridization studies in posttransplantation lymphoma and lymphoproliferative lesions: the role of primary infection.
J Infect Dis
1985
, vol. 
152
 (pg. 
876
-
886
)
33
Thibaudin
 
D
Alamartine
 
E
Mariat
 
C
Absi
 
L
Berthoux
 
F
Long-term kinetic of T-lymphocyte subsets in kidney-transplant recipients: influence of anti-T-cell antibodies and association with posttransplant malignancies.
Transplantation
2005
, vol. 
80
 (pg. 
1514
-
1517
)
34
Müller
 
TF
Grebe
 
SO
Neumann
 
MC
, et al. 
Persistent long-term changes in lymphocyte subsets induced by polyclonal antibodies.
Transplantation
1997
, vol. 
64
 (pg. 
1432
-
1437
)
35
Nelson
 
BP
Nalesnik
 
MA
Bahler
 
DW
Locker
 
J
Fung
 
JJ
Swerdlow
 
SH
Epstein-Barr virus-negative post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorders: a distinct entity?
Am J Surg Pathol
2000
, vol. 
24
 (pg. 
375
-
385
)
36
Alexander
 
DD
Mink
 
PJ
Adami
 
H-O
, et al. 
The non-Hodgkin lymphomas: a review of the epidemiologic literature.
Int J Cancer
2007
, vol. 
120
 
Suppl 12
(pg. 
1
-
39
)
37
Cockfield
 
SM
Identifying the patient at risk for post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder.
Transplant Infect Dis
2001
, vol. 
3
 (pg. 
70
-
78
)
38
Mariani
 
E
Meneghetti
 
A
Formentini
 
I
, et al. 
Telomere length and telomerase activity: effect of ageing on human NK cells.
Mech Ageing Dev
2003
, vol. 
124
 (pg. 
403
-
408
)
39
Burman
 
K
Crawford
 
DH
Effect of FK 506 on Epstein-Barr virus specific cytotoxic T cells.
Lancet
1991
, vol. 
337
 (pg. 
297
-
298
)
40
Crawford
 
D
Edwards
 
JB
Sweny
 
P
Janossy
 
G
Hoffbrand
 
AV
Long-term T-cell-mediated immunity to Epstein-Barr virus in renal-allograft recipients receiving cyclosporin A.
Lancet
1981
, vol. 
317
 (pg. 
10
-
13
)
41
Tanner
 
JE
Menezes
 
J
Interleukin-6 and Epstein-Barr virus induction by cyclosporine A: potential role in lymphoproliferative disease.
Blood
1994
, vol. 
84
 (pg. 
3956
-
3964
)
42
Walz
 
G
Zanker
 
B
Melton
 
L
Suthanthiran
 
M
Strom
 
T
Possible association of the immunosuppressive and B cell lymphoma-promoting properties of cyclosporine.
Transplantation
1990
, vol. 
49
 (pg. 
191
-
194
)
43
Heidt
 
S
Roelen
 
DL
Eijsink
 
C
van Kooten
 
C
Claas
 
FHJ
Mulder
 
A
Effects of immunosuppressive drugs on purified human B cells: evidence supporting the use of MMF and rapamycin.
Transplantation
2008
, vol. 
86
 (pg. 
1292
-
1300
)
44
Chang
 
SH
Russ
 
GR
Chadban
 
SJ
Campbell
 
S
Mcdonald
 
SP
Trends in adult post-kidney transplant immunosuppressive use in Australia, 1991-2005.
Nephrology
2008
, vol. 
13
 (pg. 
171
-
176
)
Sign in via your Institution