Investigator

Freddy Sitas

Chief Operational Officer · University of New South Wales, International Centre for Future Health Systems

FSFreddy Sitas
Papers(2)
Thirteen cancers asso…Usefulness of high‐ri…
Collaborators(10)
Elvira SinghWenlong Carl ChenMazvita MuchengetiNoemi BenderRobert NewtonDebbie BradshawAbram Bunya KamizaChantal Babb de Villi…Melitah MotlhaleMwiza Gideon Singini
Institutions(6)
Unsw SydneySouth African Nationa…German Cancer Researc…University of YorkSouth African Medical…PHG Foundation

Papers

Thirteen cancers associated with HIV infection in a Black South African cancer patient population (1995‐2016)

AbstractSouth Africa's HIV epidemic has evolved over time in terms of numbers of people living with HIV, access to antiretroviral treatment (ART) and age. These changes have profoundly influenced local cancer patterns. The Johannesburg Cancer Study has, over a period of 22 years (1995‐2016), recruited over 20 000 incident black cancer patients who consented to provide answers to a questionnaire and blood samples (serum, DNA). This has presented a unique opportunity to examine the evolving association of HIV with cancer in Africa. We used logistic regression models to explore case‐control associations between specific cancers and HIV, using participants with non‐infection related cancers as controls. Using data of 20 835 cancer patients with confirmed HIV status, we found the following cancers to be associated with HIV: Kaposi's sarcoma (ORadj; 95%CI): (99.1;72.6‐135.1), non‐Hodgkin lymphoma (11.3;9.3‐13.6), cervical cancer (2.7;2.4‐3.0), Hodgkin lymphoma (3.1;2.4‐4.2), cancer of the eye/conjunctiva (18.7;10.1‐34.7), anogenital cancers (anus [2.1;1.4‐3.2], penis [5.4;2.7‐10.5], vulva [4.8;3.5‐6.4], vagina [5.5;3.0‐10.2]), oropharyngeal cancer (1.6;1.3‐1.9), squamous cell carcinoma of the skin (3.5;2.4‐4.9), melanoma (2.0;1.2‐3.5) and cancer of the larynx (1.7;1.3‐2.4). Kaposi's sarcoma odds ratios increased from the pre‐ART (1995‐2004) to the early ART (2005‐2009) period but declined in the late ART (2010‐2016) period. Odds ratios for cancers of the eye/conjunctiva, cervix, penis and vulva continued to increase in recent ART periods. Our study confirms the spectrum of HIV‐associated cancers found in other African settings. The odds ratios of conjunctival and HPV‐related cancers continue to rise in the ART era as the HIV positive population ages.

Usefulness of high‐risk HPV early oncoprotein (E6 and E7) serological markers in the detection of cervical cancer: A systematic review and meta‐analysis

Abstract We reviewed the literature on the importance of selected anti‐high‐risk human papillomavirus (HR‐HPV) antibodies (namely, 16/18 and early oncoproteins E6 and E7) as potential serological markers for early detection of individuals at high risk of cervical cancer. We searched for studies in PubMed and Embase databases published from 2010 to 2020 on antibodies against HR‐HPV E6 and E7 early proteins and cervical cancer. Pooled sensitivity and specificity for HPV16 and HPV18 antibodies were calculated using a bivariate hierarchical random‐effects model. A total of 69 articles were identified; we included three studies with 1550 participants. For the three HPV16/18 E6 and E7 antibody tests, enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay‐based assays had a sensitivity of 18% for detecting CIN2+ (95% confidence interval [CI]: 15–21) and a specificity of 96% (95% CI: 92–98), for slot‐blot, sensitivity was 28.9% (95% CI: 23.3–35.1) and specificity was 72% (95% CI: 66.6–77.0) for detecting CIN2+, and for multiplex HPV serology assay based on a glutathione S ‐transferase, sensitivity was 16% (95% CI: 8.45–28.6) and specificity was 98% (95% CI: 97–99) for detecting invasive cervical cancer. HR‐HPV16/18 E6 and E7 serological markers showed high specificity, but sensitivity was suboptimal for the detection of cervical cancer in either population screening settings or as point‐of‐care screening tests.

179Works
2Papers
10Collaborators

Positions

2024–

Chief Operational Officer

University of New South Wales · International Centre for Future Health Systems

2023–

Editor in Chief

Elsevier Foundation · Cancer Epidemiology

2016–

Associate Chief Specialist Scientist

South African Medical Research Council · Burden of Disease Research Unit

2003–

Adjunct Associate Professor

University of New South Wales · School of Population Health

2018–

Director

University of New South Wales · Centre for Primary Health Care and Equity

2003–

Adjunct Associate Professor

The University of Sydney · School of Public Health

2015–

Associate Editor

Elsevier Ltd Kidlington Corporate Office · Cancer Epidemiology Journal

2018–

Assistant Editor

Oxford University Press · International Journal of Epidemiology

2016–

Health Intelligence Manager

National Prescribing Service · Decision Support and Health Informatics, Program & Product Development

2002–

Director Cancer Research Division

Cancer Council NSW

1990–

Head

National Health Laboratory Service · National Cancer Registry

Education

1990

D.Phil (Epidemiology)

University of Oxford · ICRF Cancer Epidemiology Unit

1987

MSc (Epidemiology)

London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine

1987

MSc(Med)

University of the Witwatersrand · Community Health

1980

BSc

University of the Witwatersrand · Science

Country

AU

Keywords
SmokingAlcoholBMIPrimary preventionCancerMortality trendsInfrastructure studies
Links & IDs
0000-0001-9679-1481

Scopus: 7003393668