What is it about?

HIV-positive men who have sex with men are almost 100-times higher risk of developing anal cancer when compared with the general population of men. Our study is the first to recommend age-specific management of anal precancerous lesions for prevention of anal cancer among these individuals. We found that timely surgical treatment or active monitoring by patient age has the potential to decrease lifetime risk of anal cancer by 80% and such a strategy is cost-effective. Our findings suggest that younger individuals should be managed using the conservative approach such as active monitoring whereas surgical approaches like ablation should be targeted towards older at-risk individuals.

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Why is it important?

Anal precancer treatment is controversial. We believe that our findings will help set future guidelines for precancer treatment. Our study also highlights the importance of decision-analytic modeling as an approach to inform clinical questions that otherwise could take years and be prohibitively expensive.

Perspectives

Writing this article was a great pleasure as it has co-authors with whom I have had long-standing collaborations and overlapping research interests. The article also focuses on a rare disease and an underserved population that is at highest risk for anal cancer.

Ashish Deshmukh
University of Florida

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: Management of precancerous anal intraepithelial lesions in human immunodeficiency virus-positive men who have sex with men: Clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness, Cancer, September 2017, Wiley,
DOI: 10.1002/cncr.31035.
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