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HIV-infected individuals who have experienced a nonmelanoma skin cancer may be at significantly greater risk of subsequent new squamous cell carcinoma if they have a lower CD4 cell count, a new study suggests.

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HIV-infected individuals who have experienced a nonmelanoma skin cancer may be at significantly greater risk of subsequent new squamous cell carcinoma if they have a lower CD4 cell count, a new study suggests.

 

HIV-infected individuals who have experienced a nonmelanoma skin cancer may be at significantly greater risk of subsequent new squamous cell carcinoma if they have a lower CD4 cell count, a new study suggests.

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FROM JAMA DERMATOLOGY

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Key clinical point: HIV-infected people who have had a previous nonmelanoma skin cancer are at significantly higher risk of subsequent SCC if they have a lower CD4 count or higher viral load.

Major finding: HIV-infected people with a low CD4 cell count or high viral load have a greater than twofold increased risk of subsequent SCC after a primary nonmelanoma skin cancer than do uninfected people who have had a previous nonmelanoma skin cancer.

Data source: A retrospective cohort study in 455 HIV-infected and 1,945 HIV-uninfected patients.

Disclosures: The study was partly supported by Kaiser Permanente, Northern California, and one author was supported by a grant from the National Cancer Institute. Two authors had previously served as investigators on studies funded by the pharmaceutical industry, one author declared research funding from the pharmaceutical industry, and one declared shares in two medical companies.

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