Skip to main content
  • Research article
  • Open access
  • Published:

Risk of classic Kaposi sarcoma with exposures to plants and soils in Sicily

Abstract

Background

Ecologic and in vitro studies suggest that exposures to plants or soil may influence risk of Kaposi sarcoma (KS).

Methods

In a population-based study of Sicily, we analyzed data on contact with 20 plants and residential exposure to 17 soils reported by 122 classic KS cases and 840 sex- and age-matched controls. With 88 KS-associated herpesvirus (KSHV) seropositive controls as the referent group, novel correlates of KS risk were sought, along with factors distinguishing seronegatives, in multinomial logistic regression models that included matching variables and known KS cofactors - smoking, cortisone use, and diabetes history. All plants were summed for cumulative exposure. Factor and cluster analyses were used to obtain scores and groups, respectively. Individual plants and soils in three levels of exposure with Ptrend ≤ 0.15 were retained in a backward elimination regression model.

Results

Adjusted for known cofactors, KS was not related to cumulative exposures to 20 plants [per quartile adjusted odds ratio (ORadj) 0.96, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.73 - 1.25, Ptrend = 0.87], nor was it related to any factor scores or cluster of plants (P = 0.11 to 0.81). In the elimination regression model, KS risk was associated with five plants (Ptrend = 0.02 to 0.10) and with residential exposure to six soils (Ptrend = 0.01 to 0.13), including three soils (eutric regosol, chromic/pellic vertisol) used to cultivate durum wheat. None of the KS-associated plants and only one soil was also associated with KSHV serostatus. Diabetes was associated with KSHV seronegativity (ORadj 4.69, 95% CI 1.97 - 11.17), but the plant and soil associations had little effect on previous findings that KS risk was elevated for diabetics (ORadj 7.47, 95% CI 3.04 - 18.35) and lower for current and former smokers (ORadj 0.26 and 0.47, respectively, Ptrend = 0.05).

Conclusions

KS risk was associated with exposure to a few plants and soils, but these may merely be due to chance. Study of the effects of durum wheat, which was previously associated with cKS, may be warranted.

Background

Kaposi sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV, also known as human herpesvirus 8) is considered a necessary but insufficient cause of Kaposi sarcoma (KS)[1]. Without overt immunosuppression such as AIDS or allogeneic transplant, the annual incidence rate of classic KS (cKS) after age 50 is only about 6.2/100,000 and 2.5/100,000 for KSHV-seropositive men and women, respectively [2]. Non-smoking, diabetes, and use of corticosteroid medications have 2- to 4-fold effects on the risk of cKS [3, 4], but additional cofactors remain to be identified.

Because it has unusual clinical and geographic features, at least four categories of environmental cofactors for KS have been proposed. Noting similarities to podoconiosis, Ziegler postulated that KS may result from volcanic soil chronically embedded in the skin [5]. Mbulaiteye suggested that KS may result from enhancement of T-helper type 2 immunity due to chronic schistosome or other parasite infections [6]. Coluzzi thought that KS may result from alterations of cellular immunity induced by biting flies [7]. Lastly, Whitby postulated that KS may result from increased KSHV lytic replication induced by contact with phorbol esters or other constituents of plants [8].

We conducted a population-based study of cKS in Sicily, where KSHV seroprevalence is approximately 10% [4]. In addition to non-smoking, diabetes, and use of corticosteroid medications, cKS risk was independently increased 2.7-fold with residential exposure to chromic luvisol [9]. Soils are only one component of a complex ecology that includes insects, microbial organisms, and plants. Herein, we began to dissect these issues by investigating whether cKS or KSHV serostatus among controls was related to residential exposure to various soils or to direct contact with plants that have postulated biologic effects.

Results

The analysis was restricted to 962 subjects: 122 cases, 752 KSHV seronegative controls, and 88 KSHV seropositive controls with childhood residence in a Sicilian community and with complete data on contact with all 20 plants. From the parent study of 1374 subjects, the 412 excluded subjects included 48 with childhood residence outside Sicily, 299 with incomplete plant data, 3 with incomplete cortisone data, 59 controls with indeterminate KSHV serostatus, and 3 with residence in a community that lacked soil data. Table 1 presents the core model with the distributions for sex and age group (the matching variables) and three cofactors for the 962 included subjects. The associations of cKS with non-smoking (Ptrend = 0.05), cortisone use and diabetes were similar to those reported previously [4]. Cumulative work with plants or soils (none, ≤900 weeks, >900 weeks) was not associated with cKS (Ptrend = 0.81) and thus not retained in the core model.

Table 1 Population-weighted multinomial logistic regression model for association of classic Kaposi sarcoma (KS) and KS-associated herpesvirus with core variables.*

Plant and soil associations with cKS

Adjusted for the "core model" variables, Table 2 presents the risk estimates for cKS in three models that differ in plant categorization and quantification. In the first model, cKS risk was unrelated to cumulative exposure to all 20 plants [per quartile adjusted odds ratio (ORadj) 0.96, Ptrend = 0.87]. In the second model, cKS risk also was unrelated to uncommon types of plant exposures, as represented in cluster B (ORadj 2.10, 95% CI 0.83-5.29) and cluster C (ORadj 0.72, 95% CI 0.19-2.80), compared to the common cluster A. Likewise, in the third model, cKS risk was unrelated to four factors of the plant exposure data, descriptively labeled Asteraceae factor (ORadj 1.12), Euphorbia/Datura/Agave factor (ORadj 0.77), Hypericum factor (ORadj 0.92), and food/beverage/gladiolus factor (ORadj 1.23, range of P = 0.44-0.81).

Table 2 Three multinomial logistic regression models for association of classic Kaposi sarcoma (cKS) and KS-associated herpesvirus with aggregate exposures to plants, adjusted for core-model variables.*

Table 3 presents the five individual plants and six soils that were associated with cKS risk in the elimination regression model. No other plants or soils met the criterion of Ptrend ≤ 0.15, adjusted for the core-model and other variables. Results (not presented) differed negligibly when the model was modified by deleting diabetes or by adding asthma history or attained education level. Three plants were associated with elevated risk. One of these, Taraxacum officinale (dandelion), had a higher odds ratio (ORadj 3.59) with <100 contacts than with ≥100 contacts (ORadj 1.50). The second, Datura stramonium (jimson weed), had a high odds ratio (ORadj 4.26, 95% CI 1.09-16.70) based on only 11 exposed cases. The third, Lupinus albus (white lupine), had a high odds ratio with ≥100 contacts (ORadj 3.58) but marginal significance (Ptrend = 0.07). Risk of cKS was significantly lower with Matricaria chamomilla compositae (chamomile, Ptrend = 0.02), and it tended to be lower with Acanthus mollis (bear's breech, Ptrend = 0.10).

Table 3 Multinomial logistic regression model for association of classic Kaposi sarcoma (cKS) and KS-associated herpesvirus with exposures to individual plants and soils, adjusted for core-model variables.*

Childhood residence in a community with eutric regosol and/or lithosol was associated with an approximately 8-fold higher risk of cKS (Ptrend = 0.01, Table 3). Risk also was increased with exposure to chromic and/or pellic vertisol (Ptrend = 0.04). Risk of cKS risk was significantly lower with childhood residential exposure to rendzina (Ptrend = 0.01) and orthic luvisol (Ptrend = 0.01), and non-significantly lower with vertic cambisol (Ptrend = 0.10) and eutric cambisol (Ptrend = 0.13).

When adulthood, rather than childhood, residential soils were used, the elimination model retained the identical variables shown in Table 3, except eutric cambisol which did not meet the Ptrend criterion. Figure 1 illustrates the geography of one high-risk soil (eutric regosol and/or lithosol), one low-risk soil (orthic luvisol), and the overlap of these.

Figure 1
figure 1

Political (community boundaries) map of Sicily, with superimposed heat maps of nocturnal luminescence and selected soils. A. Nocturnal luminescence. B. Orthic luvisol distribution, not weighted for luminescence. C. Luminescence-weighted concentration of orthic luvisol. D. Luminescence-weighted concentration of eutric regosol and/or lithosol. E. Luminescence-weighted concentrations of eutric regosol and/or lithosol (red/pink) and orthic luvisol (green), irrespective of community boundaries. F. Luminescence-weighted concentrations (levels as in Table 3) of eutric regosol and/or lithosol (red/pink), orthic luvisol (green), and overlaps of these (tan) by community

Associations with KSHV serostatus among controls

As shown in Table 1, history of diabetes was much more common in KSHV seronegative compared to seropositive controls (ORadj 4.69, 95% CI 1.97 - 11.17). Adjusted for diabetes and the other core model variables, aggregate plant exposure was significantly associated with KSHV seronegativity (Table 2). KSHV seronegatives tended to have more cumulative exposure to the 20 plants (Ptrend = 0.04), and they were 3-fold more likely (95% CI 1.31-6.92) to be in cluster B (high exposures to plants other than Hypericum/Euphorbia) than in cluster A (relatively few plant exposures). KSHV seroprevalence was not related to cluster C (high exposures including Hypericum/Euphorbia), nor was it associated with any of the four plant factors (Table 2). When diabetes was eliminated from the model to test for confounding, the associations of KSHV seronegativity with higher cumulative plant exposure and with plant cluster B were essentially unaltered (results not presented). Except for seronegativity with Taraxacum officinale (Ptrend = 0.06) and seropositivity with rendzina (Ptrend = 0.02), none of the individual plants or soils associated with cKS was also associated with KSHV serostatus (Table 3).

Discussion

Our primary objective was to determine whether exposures to plants or soils were associated with cKS. Neither cumulative nor categorical contacts with plants were related to cKS. Cases with cKS did report more contacts with three individual plants, and they were more likely to have residential exposure to eutric regosol and chromic/pellic vertisol.

For our secondary objective, we found that KSHV seroprevalence among controls was modestly lower with overall exposure to plants (Table 2). This contrasts with our previous observation of higher KSHV seroprevalence with occupational or recreational exposure to plants or soil [10]. Because the earlier seroprevalence analysis was adjusted only for sex and age group, we examined whether the discrepancy might relate to adjusting for diabetes, which was strongly associated with KSHV seronegativity (Table 1). No confounding by diabetes was found. Specifically, exclusion of diabetes from the regression models yielded associations with seronegativity that were almost identical to those presented in Tables 2 and 3.

One soil (rendzina) and one plant (Taraxacum officinale) had mirror-image associations with KSHV seroprevalence and cKS risk, which probably appeared by chance. No plant or soil was associated with high seroprevalence and high cKS risk, or with low seroprevalence and low cKS risk.

Soils and cKS risk

KS risk has repeatedly been associated with soils [5, 9, 11, 12], and an effect of iron has been proposed [13]. Table 4 summarizes the characteristics of the six soils associated with cKS risk in our study [14]. Risk of cKS was elevated in communities with high levels of eutric regosol or chromic/pellic vertisol, all of which are used for cultivation of durum wheat, thereby supporting the higher risk of cKS observed for cereal farmers in Sardinia [15].

Table 4 Characteristics of soils associated with risk of classic Kaposi sarcoma (cKS).

Chromic luvisol was associated with cKS in our previous study [9] but not in the current one. Unlike the previous study, the current one simultaneously considered many plants and soils. Of these, orthic luvisol was strongly associated with decreased cKS risk. Areas with luvisols are widely used for vineyards, orchards and citrus groves. Despite this commonality, chromic luvisol generally has a higher content of iron and kaolinite compared to orthic luvisol [14].

Although not offering a simple ecologic pattern, these soil associations can serve to focus future studies. For example, Does cKS risk differ by direct contact with eutric regosol versus orthic luvisol? To address this, much better exposure assessment would be needed. We had only residential data and not occupational or other types of soil exposures. In addition, we collected merely community of residence, not exact location. We used objective data on population density (Figure 1A) to improve the assessment of exposure to soils, but lifetime residential history with exact addresses would be highly desirable.

Plants and cKS risk

Contact with jimson weed (Datura stramonium) was associated with a 4-fold higher risk of cKS; it was not significantly associated with KSHV seroprevalence, but the data were sparse. Higher cKS risk with dandelion (Taraxacum officinale) contact was nominally significant but inconsistent with respect to dose-response, and dandelion had a marginal association with KSHV seroprevalence that suggests confounding. The 3-fold lower risk with chamomile (Matricaria chamomilla compositae, Ptrend = 0.02), which was unrelated to seroprevalence, is noteworthy. Bear's breech (Acanthus mollis) had only a marginal association with cKS (Ptrend = 0.10). The likelihood of residual confounding by an unmeasured variable, as well as small numbers of exposed cases (for jimson weed and bear's breech) and no difference in cKS risk with cumulative or grouped exposures to plants (Table 2), implies that the 20 plants that we evaluated are irrelevant to the risk of cKS. Notably, we found no associations with any of the four Euphorbia species that we queried, despite the ability of some of their phorbol esters (notably 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate, TPA) to promote tumor growth and induce replication of herpesviruses in vitro [reviewed in refs. [8] and [16]]. We did not ask about contact with durum wheat.

Strengths and limitations

The strengths of this study include sampling the entire population of the island of Sicily, as well as state-of-the-art KSHV serology and statistical methods. The limitations of our study are several. First, we did not narrowly define an exposure hypothesis. For this reason, exposure was not restricted to dermal contact. Foods and beverages from plants, such as chamomile tea, may have true biologic effects on cKS risk, but they also may be surrogates for socioeconomic or other unmeasured confounding variables. Our latent factor analysis, with one factor heavily weighted to foods and beverages, should have mitigated this problem. Moreover, inclusion or exclusion of education level, as a surrogate for socioeconomic status, did not substantially alter the associations. Second, dermal contact with plants could not be distinguished from dermal contact with soil. Agricultural and gardening work was not related to cKS risk (Ptrend = 0.81) [9], but we did not collect data on cereal farming per se [15]. Third, the critical exposure time for a true cKS cofactor is unknown. By including plant exposures occurring over several decades, rather than within a few years of cKS onset, we may have missed a true association. Fourth, although this is the largest cKS case-control study thus far, we had sparse data for some comparisons due to relatively small numbers of cKS cases and KSHV seropositive controls. Finally, some of the associations that we found may have arisen merely by chance from the multiple comparisons that we performed.

Conclusions

The risk of cKS, compared to KSHV seropositive controls, differed with reported contacts with a few plants and with residential exposure to certain soils. These associations could have arisen by chance due to the multiple comparisons that we performed. Reassuringly, most of these plants and soils were not associated with KSHV serostatus. Future studies might focus on how contacts with farm animals, pesticides and parasites, as well as soils and plants such as durum wheat, affect KSHV viremia, which is strongly associated with risk for KS incidence and progression [1721]. Associations of cKS and KSHV viremia with human genetic polymorphisms, most of which have not been consistently replicated,[2225] should also be considered. Understanding these environmental and host interactions will lead to novel insights and means to prevent KS and other herpesvirus-associated malignancies.

Materials and methods

Population, Specimen and Data Collection

Detailed methods for the case-control study of cKS in Sicily during 2002-2006 have been published [4]. Briefly, incident cases were ascertained from all histopathology laboratories on the island. Population-based controls, aged 30-99 years were selected using stratified two-stage cluster sampling. As all residents of Italy are assigned to a primary care physician, 450 physicians were randomly selected with the probability proportional to the number of patients on the roster. Up to 12 controls, frequency matched to cKS cases by sex and age in 5-year strata, were selected from each roster.

Institutional review board approval was obtained from the U.S. National Cancer Institute, local institutions in Sicily (Ragusa and Palermo), and the coordinating center (RTI International). Following signed informed consent, recruited participants provided a blood sample and responses to a standardized questionnaire that included demographic, clinical and exposure variables.

Serologic Classification

KSHV serostatus was defined using immunofluorescence assays (IFA) for antibodies to KSHV lytic and latent nuclear antigens, as well as enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA) for antibodies to the KSHV K8.1 and ORF73 gene products [4]. Subjects were considered KSHV seropositive if the latent IFA was positive or the K8.1 optical density (OD) was >1.2. KSHV seronegative was defined as latent IFA negative, K8.1 OD ≤ 0.8, and ORF73 OD ≤ 0.8 [4]. Other controls (n = 59) were seroindeterminate and excluded from the current analysis.

Classification of Exposure to Plants

Participants were shown color photographs of 20 plants, labeled with common Italian names, and they were asked "Have you ever used or had direct contact with this plant?" Participants who answered "yes" were classified as exposed to that plant. If the participant was uncertain about a particular plant, prompts included common uses of the plant. The 20 specific plant species (listed in footnote of Table 2) were selected on the advice of local botanists based on the prevalence and likelihood of contact in Sicily, known medicinal or cosmetic uses, toxicities, or genetic relatedness to plants reported to induce KSHV lytic replication [8, 16]. The questionnaire quantified cumulative exposure, during adulthood, to each plant in categories (zero, <10, 10-100, 100-1000, >1000 contacts).

Classification of Exposure to Soils

As described previously, exposure to soil was ecologic.(9) Briefly, the questionnaire ascertained each participant's community of residence at birth, during childhood (up to age 12), during adulthood (for 10 years prior to study enrollment), and at enrollment. Exact address was not collected. A map with the boundaries of all 390 communities in Sicily was projected onto the soil map of Sicily [26]. The proportion of each soil was then calculated as the area (the number of pixels) of each soil type in each community. For the current analysis, the previous methods were modified to reduce misclassification of exposure, by weighting for population density in each soil area. Population density was estimated by projecting the map of nocturnal illumination of Sicily (http://ngdc.noaa.gov/dmsp/downloadV4composites.html) onto the soil and community boundary maps (Figure 1A). The type of soil in each pixel (approximately 250 m2) was multiplied by that pixel's luminescence (range 0-63, http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/dmsp/gcv2_readme.txt) (Figure 1C-E), generating luminescence-weighted soil values that were summed for each community (Figure 1F).

Statistical Analysis Strategy and Methods

The primary objective was to identify cofactors for cKS among people with KSHV infection. The secondary objective was to identify variables that distinguished KSHV seropositive from KSHV seronegative people without cKS. To address these objectives, KSHV seropositive controls were used as the referent group, and the multinomial logistic regression procedure was used to calculate the odds ratio (OR) and 95% confidence interval (CI) for each variable's association with cKS and, among the controls, with KSHV seronegativity.

As described [4], weights were included in each regression model to adjust for the multi-stage sampling of the controls. Base weights were calculated as the product of the reciprocal of the selection probabilities at each stage of sampling. Non-response adjusted weights were then calculated as the product of these base weights and cross-classified categories of age, gender, and (for controls) region (eastern/western Sicily). These non-response adjusted weights were further adjusted by using post-stratification to constrain the weights to reflect the population totals by age, gender and six zones (three community sizes × 2 regions). These non-response/post-stratification-adjusted weights, that were rescaled to sum to the sample sizes of the cases and controls, are the final sample weights for each participant's data. PROC MULTILOG in SUDAAN statistical software (SAS-Callable SUDAAN Release 10.0.1, Research Triangle Institute) was used to conduct weighted multinomial logistic regression analyses that incorporated the sample weights and accounted for the stratified cluster sampling of the controls.

Prior to considering plant and soil exposures, a core model was developed with 5 variables: sex and age category (<68, 68-74, 75-80, ≥81 years) to account for matching variables, plus diabetes, use of oral or topical corticosteroid medication in past 10 years, and cigarette smoking (current, former, never). Cumulative time working with plants or soils, previously noted to be associated with elevated KSHV seroprevalence among women [9, 10], was considered but not retained in the core model. All plant and soil analyses were built on this core model, and all models included the identical participants. To assess confounding, plant and soil models were repeated with exclusion of the one core variable (diabetes) found to be associated with KSHV seronegativity. History of asthma [3], level of attained education [4], and both of these were added to the final model to further assess possible confounding or effect modification.

To evaluate how exposures to multiple plants might relate to cKS risk, three dimension-reducing methods were employed. Total contacts with all 20 plants, assuming values of 0, 2, 20, 200, and 2000 for each plant for the exposure categories (zero, <10, 10-100, 100-1000, >1000), were summed (range of values, 0 - 23,224) then divided into quartiles for regression analysis.

Factor analysis uses covariance relationships among multiple observed variables to generate a few underlying, but unobservable, quantities called factors. Four factors were generated with an orthogonal rotation method (VARIMAX and PROC FACTOR, SAS Institute, Cary, NC) based on the proportion of variance explained in the exposures to the 20 plants. These factors were labeled descriptively (Asteraceae, Euphorbia/Datura/Agave, Hypericum, and food/beverage/gladiolus) based on the interpretation of the factors from their factor loadings. The score for each factor was dichotomized at its median value for inclusion as an independent variable in the multinomial regression analysis.

PROC FASTCLUS in SAS was used to partition participants into clusters based on the Euclidean distances computed from the levels of contact with the 20 plants. The uncommon clusters, labeled C (high exposures including Hypericum and Euphorbia) and B (high exposures to plants other than Hypericum and Euphorbia), were compared to the more common cluster (relatively few plant exposures).

For 14 typical soils, the likelihood of each participant's exposure was categorized as none (childhood community with zero for soil or luminescence), low (<median of non-zero luminescence-weighted soil value) or high (≥ non-zero median). For two widely distributed soils (lithosol and eutric regosol) that were present in nearly all communities (<200 controls with zero exposure), tertiles of luminescence-weighted values were used. One uncommon soil (gleyic arenosol) was dichotomized as any versus no exposure.

Lastly, all 20 plants in levels (zero, <100, ≥100 contacts; except any/none for Datura stramonium, Euphorbia characias euphorbiaceae, Hypericum perforatum guttiferae, and Hypericum hiricinum to which fewer than 20 participants reported ≥100 contacts) and all 17 soils (classified as in the preceding paragraph) were included in a backward-elimination stepwise regression model. In addition to 5 variables in the core model, individual plants and soil with Ptrend ≤ 0.15 were retained. As a sensitivity analysis, childhood residential soil exposures were substituted with adulthood soil exposures. Overlaps of the soils that were strongly associated with cKS risk were illustrated (Figure 1E and 1F). In all models, P ≤ 0.05 was considered statistically significant.

Abbreviations

AIDS:

(Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome)

CI:

(confidence interval)

cKS:

(classical Kaposi sarcoma)

ELISA:

(enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays)

IFA:

(immunofluorescence assays)

KS:

(Kaposi sarcoma)

KSHV:

(KS-associated herpesvirus).

References

  1. Moore PS, Chang Y: Kaposi's sarcoma (KS), KS-associated herpesvirus, and the criteria for causality in the age of molecular biology. Am J Epidemiol. 1998, 147: 217-221.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  2. Vitale F, Briffa DV, Whitby D, Maida I, Grochowska A, Levin A, Romano N, Goedert JJ: Kaposi's sarcoma herpes virus and Kaposi's sarcoma in the elderly populations of 3 Mediterranean islands. Int J Cancer. 2001, 91 (4): 588-591. 10.1002/1097-0215(200002)9999:9999<::AID-IJC1089>3.0.CO;2-8.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  3. Goedert JJ, Vitale F, Lauria C, Serraino D, Tamburini M, Montella M, Messina A, Brown EE, Rezza G, Gafà L, Romano N, classical Kaposi's sarcoma working group: Risk factors for classical Kaposi's sarcoma. J Natl Cancer Inst. 2002, 94: 1712-1718.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  4. Anderson LA, Lauria C, Romano N, Brown EE, Whitby D, Graubard BI, Li Y, Messina A, Gafà L, Vitale F, Goedert JJ: Risk factors for classical Kaposi sarcoma in a population-based case-control study in Sicily. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 2008, 17 (17): 1-9.

    Google Scholar 

  5. Ziegler JL: Endemic Kaposi's sarcoma in Africa and local volcanic soils. Lancet. 1993, 342: 1348-1351. 10.1016/0140-6736(93)92252-O.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  6. Lin CJ, Katongole-Mbidde E, Byekwaso T, Orem J, Rabkin CS, Mbulaiteye SM: Intestinal parasites in Kaposi sarcoma patients in Uganda: indication of shared risk factors or etiologic association. Am J Trop Med Hyg. 2008, 78 (3): 409-412.

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  7. Coluzzi M, Manno D, Guzzinati S, Tognazzo S, Zambon P, Arcà B, Costantini C, Ascoli V: The bloodsucking arthropod bite as possible cofactor in the transmission of human herpesvirus-8 infection and in the expression of Kaposi's sarcoma disease. Parassitologia. 2002, 44 (1-2): 123-129.

    PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  8. Whitby D, Marshall VA, Bagni RK, Miley WJ, McCloud TG, Hines-Boykin R, Goedert JJ, Conde BA, Nagashima K, Mikovits J, Dittmer DP, Newman DJ: Reactivation of Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus by natural products from Kaposi's sarcoma endemic regions. Int J Cancer. 2007, 120 (2): 321-328. 10.1002/ijc.22205.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  9. Pelser C, Dazzi C, Graubard BI, Lauria C, Vitale F, Goedert JJ: Risk of classic Kaposi sarcoma with residential exposure to volcanic and related soils in Sicily. Ann Epidemiol. 2009, 19 (8): 597-601. 10.1016/j.annepidem.2009.04.002.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  10. Pelser C, Vitale F, Whitby D, Graubard BI, Messina A, Gafà L, Brown EE, Anderson LA, Romano N, Lauria C, Goedert JJ: Socio-economic and other correlates of Kaposi sarcoma-associated herpesvirus seroprevalence in Sicily. J Med Virol. 2009, 81: 1938-1944. 10.1002/jmv.21589.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  11. Montesu MA, De Marco R, Cottoni F: Soil silicates and Kaposi's sarcoma in Sardinia. Lancet. 1995, 346: 1436-1437. 10.1016/S0140-6736(95)92457-4.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  12. Montella M, Franceschi S, Geddes M, Arniani S, Cocchiarella G: Classic Kaposi's sarcoma and volcanic soil in southern Italy. Lancet. 1996, 347: 905-10.1016/S0140-6736(96)91388-4.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  13. Ziegler JL, Simonart T, Snoeck R: Kaposi's sarcoma, oncogenic viruses, and iron. J Clin Virol. 2001, 20: 127-30. 10.1016/S1386-6532(00)00137-2.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  14. Dazzi C: Environmental features and land use of Etna (Sicily - Italy). Soils of Volcanic Regions in Europe. Edited by: Arnalds O, Bartoli F, Buurman P, Oskarsson H, Stoops G, Garcia-Rodeja E. 2007, Springer, 629-644. full_text. ISBN 10 3-540-48710-7

    Chapter  Google Scholar 

  15. Cottoni F, Masala MV, Budroni M, Rosella M, Satta R, Locatelli F, Montesu MA, De Marco R: The role of occupation and a past history of malaria in the etiology of classic Kaposi's sarcoma: a case-control study in north-east Sardinia. Br J Cancer. 1997, 76 (11): 1518-1520.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  16. Cho HJ, Yu F, Sun R, Lee D, Song MJ: Lytic induction of Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus in primary effusion lymphoma cells with natural products identified by a cell-based fluorescence moderate-throughput screening. Arch Virol. 2008, 153 (8): 1517-1525. 10.1007/s00705-008-0144-4.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  17. Whitby D, Howard MR, Tenant-Flowers M, Brink NS, Copas A, Boshoff C, Hatzioannou T, Suggett FEA, Aldam DM, Denton AS, Miller RF, Weller IVD, Weiss RA, Tedder RS, Schulz TF: Detection of Kaposi sarcoma associated herpesvirus in peripheral blood of HIV-infected individuals and progression to Kaposi's sarcoma. Lancet. 1995, 346: 799-802. 10.1016/S0140-6736(95)91619-9.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  18. Engels E, Whitby D, Goebel PB, Stossel A, Waters D, Pintus A, Contu L, Biggar RJ, Goedert JJ: Detection and quantification of Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus to predict AIDS-associated Kaposi's sarcoma. AIDS. 2003, 17: 1847-1851. 10.1097/00002030-200308150-00015.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  19. Campbell TB, Borok M, Gwanzura L, MaWhinney S, White IE, Ndemera B, Ndemera B, Gudza I, Fitzpatrick L, Schooley RT: Relationship of human herpesvirus 8 peripheral blood virus load and Kaposi's sarcoma clinical stage. AIDS. 2000, 14: 2109-2116. 10.1097/00002030-200009290-00006.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  20. Cannon M, Dollard S, Black J, Edlin B, Hannah C, Hogan S, Patel MM, Jaffe HW, Offermann MK, Spira TJ, Pellett PE, Gunthel CJ: Risk factors for Kaposi's sarcoma in men seropositive for both human herpesvirus 8 and human immunodeficiency virus. AIDS. 2003, 17: 215-1222. 10.1097/00002030-200301240-00012.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  21. Pellet C, Chevret S, Blum L, Gauvill C, Hurault M, Blanchard G, Agbalika F, Lascoux C, Ponscarme D, Morel P, Calvo F, Lebbé C: Virologic and immunologic parameters that predict clinical response of AIDS-associated Kaposi's sarcoma to highly active antiretroviral therapy. J Invest Dermatol. 2001, 117: 858-863. 10.1046/j.0022-202x.2001.01465.x.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  22. Masala MV, Carcassi C, Cottoni F, Mulargia M, Contu L, Cerimele D: Classic Kaposi's sarcoma in Sardinia: HLA positive and negative associations. Int J Dermatol. 2005, 44 (9): 743-5. 10.1111/j.1365-4632.2004.02206.x.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  23. Brown EE, Fallin D, Goedert JJ, Chen D, Whitby D, Foster CB, Lauria C, Alberg AJ, Messina A, Montella M, Rezza G, Vitale F, Chanock SJ: A common genetic variant in FCGR3A-V158F and risk of Kaposi sarcoma herpesvirus infection and classic Kaposi sarcoma. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 2005, 14: 633-637. 10.1158/1055-9965.EPI-04-0598.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  24. Brown EE, Fallin MD, Goedert JJ, Hutchinson A, Vitale F, Lauria C, Giuliani M, Marshall V, Mbisa G, Serraino D, Messina A, Durum S, Whitby D, Chanock SJ, Kaposi Sarcoma Genetics Working Group: Host immunogenetics and control of human herpesvirus-8 infection. J Infect Dis. 2006, 193: 1054-1062. 10.1086/501470.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  25. Brown EE, Fallin D, Ruczinski I, Hutchinson A, Staats B, Vitale F, Lauria C, Serraino D, Rezza G, Mbisa G, Whitby D, Messina A, Goedert JJ, Chanock SJ: Associations of classic Kaposi sarcoma with common variants in genes that modulate host immunity. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 2006, 15: 926-934. 10.1158/1055-9965.EPI-05-0791.

    Article  PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  26. Fierotti G, Dazzi C, Raimondi S: A report on the Soil Map of Sicily (scale 1:250.000). 1988, Palermo: Regione Sicilia, Ass. Territorio Ambiente, 5-19.

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Acknowledgements

We thank Prof. Francesco Vitale for his steadfast leadership on this project; Prof.ssa M.R. Melati (Dipartimento Scienze Botaniche - Universitá di Palermo) and Dr. Gaudioso, MD, for help in classification of the plants; Dr. Denise Whitby for KSHV serology; Dr. Sam Mbulaiteye for helpful discussions; Dr. Charles Rabkin for reviewing the manuscript; Filippa Bonura, Anna Maria Perna, Fabio Tramuto, Anna Fidilio, Michele Massimino, Stefania Stella, and Georgina Mbisa for specimen processing and KSHV antibody testing; Enza Viviano, Rosalia Valenti, Elisa Martorana, Prof. Lorenzo Gafà, Giuseppe Arena, Gianclaudio Antonelli, Laura Leggio, Giuliana Buscema, Veronica Paparazzo, MariaChiara DiPasquale, Anna Tortorici, Irene Bocchieri, and Laboratorio Brinch-Battaglia for recruitment and collection of data and specimens; the staff at RTI International, including Mary-Anne Ardini, Dr. Barbara Kroner, and Dr. Mansour Fahimi, for coordination, computation of weights, and analyses; and especially Dr. Santo LoGalbo of the Assessorato Regionale Della Salute for providing the population roster for Sicily.

This study was supported by the Intramural Research Program of the National Cancer Institute, in part under a contract with RTI International (N02-CP-91027).

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to James J Goedert.

Additional information

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Authors' contributions

JJG designed the study, obtained funding, supervised the overall project, and drafted the manuscript. GC managed recruitment, coordinated shipments, and collected the questionnaire data and blood specimens. CD provided the soil map data and the utilization of the soils (Table 4). AP processed the blood specimens and performed the KSHV immunofluorescence assays. CP, LAA and CM performed statistical analyses. LRP managed the data and performed the final statistical analyses. MA obtained the luminescence data and constructed the maps. BIG proposed the clustering, factoring, and multinomial logistic regression approaches and supervised the final statistical analyses. AM supervised the processing of specimens and the laboratory activities in eastern Sicily. CL helped to select the plants and supervised field activities in eastern Sicily. NR supervised the laboratory and field activities in western Sicily. All authors contributed to and approved the final manuscript.

Authors’ original submitted files for images

Below are the links to the authors’ original submitted files for images.

Authors’ original file for figure 1

Rights and permissions

Open Access This article is published under license to BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Goedert, J.J., Calamusa, G., Dazzi, C. et al. Risk of classic Kaposi sarcoma with exposures to plants and soils in Sicily. Infect Agents Cancer 5, 23 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1186/1750-9378-5-23

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Published:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/1750-9378-5-23

Keywords