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Published in: Cancer Causes & Control 4/2017

01-04-2017 | Original paper

Antihypertensive medication use and risk of renal cell carcinoma

Authors: Joanne S. Colt, Jonathan N. Hofmann, Kendra Schwartz, Wong-Ho Chow, Barry I. Graubard, Faith Davis, Julie Ruterbusch, Sonja Berndt, Mark P. Purdue

Published in: Cancer Causes & Control | Issue 4/2017

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Abstract

Purpose

Use of antihypertensive medications has been associated with renal cell carcinoma (RCC), but it is unclear whether specific types of medications increase RCC risk independent of the effect of hypertension, or whether the association varies by histologic subtype. To address this question, we analyzed data from a U.S. population-based case–control study of RCC.

Methods

We collected information on participants’ use of drugs to treat hypertension, heart problems, weight control, and swelling. We computed odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for each of four major drug classes, separately for participants with (643 cases, 443 controls) and without (500 cases, 718 controls) a history of hypertension, using unconditional logistic and polytomous regression models.

Results

None of the antihypertensive drug types was associated with RCC overall. Among participants with a history of hypertension, papillary RCC was associated with long-term use of diuretics (OR = 3.1, 95% CI = 1.4–6.7 for 16+ years, 16 cases, 31 controls; P-trend = 0.014) and calcium channel blockers (OR = 2.8, 95% CI = 1.1–7.4 for 16+ years, 8 cases, 14 controls; P-trend = 0.18), while corresponding ORs for clear cell RCC were weaker (ORs 0.9 and 1.5, respectively) and nonsignificant. The only significant finding among those with no hypertension history was an association between calcium channel blockers and papillary RCC (OR = 17.9, 95% CI = 5.9–54.5) that was based on small numbers (8 cases, 9 controls). There was little evidence of an association between RCC and use of ACE inhibitors or beta blockers.

Conclusions

Our study, while inconclusive for overall RCC, provides, to our knowledge, the first evidence supporting an association between antihypertensive medications and papillary RCC. These subtype-specific findings, although based on small numbers, warrant further investigation.
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Metadata
Title
Antihypertensive medication use and risk of renal cell carcinoma
Authors
Joanne S. Colt
Jonathan N. Hofmann
Kendra Schwartz
Wong-Ho Chow
Barry I. Graubard
Faith Davis
Julie Ruterbusch
Sonja Berndt
Mark P. Purdue
Publication date
01-04-2017
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Published in
Cancer Causes & Control / Issue 4/2017
Print ISSN: 0957-5243
Electronic ISSN: 1573-7225
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10552-017-0857-3

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