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This study investigates the association between inflammation-related SNPs and tobacco-related cancers, including lung, oropharynx, nasopharynx, larynx, esophagus, stomach, liver, bladder, and kidney cancer. The study collects epidemiological data and DNA samples from multiple locations to assess genetic susceptibility to these cancers. The results aim to provide insights into the modulation of immune response and the potential role of genetic factors in cancer development.
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Tobacco-related cancers and inflammation-related SNPsMolecular markers of genetic susceptibility EPI 243 May 7, 2009 Sam S. Oh, MPH
Tobacco smoking • Major risk factor for cancers of lung, upper aero-digestive tract (UADT), stomach, pancreas, liver, kidney, urinary tract, uterine cervix, and bone marrow • Epithelial cells in many of these organs repeatedly exposed to tobacco smoke components and metabolites • Carcinogenic and potent inducers of inflammation • Free radicals contained in and generated by tobacco smoke can lead to cancer through oxidative DNA damage mediated by inflammation-associated production of reactive oxygen species
Inflammation & Cancer • Chronic inflammation associated with various cancers • Hepatitis/liver • H. pylori/stomach • Asbestosis/lung • IBD/colorectal • Inflammation mediating cells from cancers promote tumor growth in vitro • Altered immune cytokines found in cancer cells
Modulation of Immune Response Achieved through balance of T-helper (Th) cells via cytokine expression Type 1: pro-inflammatory, cellular immune response Type 2: anti-inflammatory, humoral immune response Activation of one Th-cell pathway inactivates the other
Inflammatory Anti-inflammatory
Research Summary • Investigate association of inflammation-related SNPs with tobacco-related cancers • Lung, oropharynx, nasopharynx, larynx, esophagus, stomach, liver, bladder; and kidney cancer • Pooled analysis across all three case-control studies • Los Angeles (LA) • Taixing, China • Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC) • All epidemiological data collected in person by trained interviewers using study-specific standardized questionnaires • Including factors associated with or known to affect study-specific cancer risk, including age, race, medical history, education, and history of tobacco and alcohol exposure
LA Study • Cases obtained from LA County cancer registry • Healthy controls matched on age, gender, and neighborhood • Eligibility criteria • New, histologically diagnosed cases or no history of lung cancer and head & neck cancer (controls) • Aged 18-65 years • Resident of LA County during 1999-2005 • English- or Spanish-speaking or available translator • Buccal cells collected post-interview • Recruitment rate: lung 39%, UADT 46%, control 79%
Taixing Study • Incident and pathologically or clinically diagnosed stomach, esophageal, and liver cases obtained from Taixing Tumor Registry • Healthy common controls from general population matched on age, gender, and village • Eligibility criteria (cases and controls) • Stable medical condition • At least 20 years old • Living in Taixing for at least 10 years • Blood samples collected post-interview • Recruitment rate: esophagus 67%, stomach 65%, liver 57%, control 89%
MSKCC Study • Pathologically confirmed bladder cancer cases recently diagnosed or undergone bladder surgery at MSKCC • Controls: MSKCC blood bank donors or stable non-cancer MSKCC patients • Blood samples collected post-interview • Recruitment rate: 95% case, 92% control
Pooled Study • Variable standardization • Study location • Gender • Ethnicity • Age • Smoking • Adjusting for ethnicity and study location • Control for which variable? • Combined study location and ethnicity into one variable
SNP Selection &Genotyping Criteria Minor allele frequency ≥5% in general population Functional change associated with polymorphism Located along gene transcription regulation areas HWE P value > Bonferroni-adjusted P value Genotyping call rate ≥80% (SNPlex), ≥95% (TaqMan) Case/control DNA randomized onto PCR plates Genotyped on SNPlex and TaqMan platforms Most reliable signal reported for SNPs in LD Reproducibility SNPlex: 0.978 TaqMan: 0.997 SNPlex-TaqMan concordance: 0.943
Adjusted for study location (pooled analysis), age, gender, education (cancer site-stratified analyses), tobacco smoking, ethnicity, and alcohol use (oropharynx and esophagus).
G*E Interaction Adjusted for study location/ethnicity (pooled analysis only), ethnicity (lung and esophagus analyses only), age, gender, education (lung and esophagus analyses only), pack-years (lung and esophagus analyses only), and alcohol use (esophagus only)
Limitations • Confounding • Standardized in-person questionnaires • Population stratification for pooled results • TNFA rs1796664 MAF does not vary appreciably • Information bias • Misclassification errors • Strict inclusion/exclusion criteria • Quality control measures for genotyping • Differential recall between cases and controls • Selection bias • Participation rates • Genotype unknown to participants • Tumor stage and grade unassociated with SNP
Strengths • Large sample size to estimate main and smoking-stratified effects • Ability to pool genotypes across studies • Population-based design for 7 of the 9 tobacco-related cancers • Control for multiple comparisons using two Bayesian approaches
Summary • “Noteworthy” associations were among synonymous SNPs in promoter regions • Some SNP-cancer associations became apparent within strata of smoking status • TNFA rs1799964 among never smokers associated with smoking-related cancer as a whole • Some SNP-cancer associations are site-specific • IL10 rs1800871 association with lung cancer is observed only among never smokers
Conclusions • TNFA rs1799964 is associated with smoking-related cancers among never smokers • IL10 rs1800871 is a susceptibility marker for oropharyngeal cancer, especially among ever smokers • IL10 rs1800871 is a susceptibility marker for lung cancer among never smokers
Co-authors UCLA Arie Belldegrun, Shen-Chih Chang, Sander Greenland, Leeka Kheifets, YC Amy Lee, Simin Liu, Jenny T Mao, Allan Pantuck, S Lani Park, Jian Yu Rao, Donald P Tashkin, Yuko You, Zuo-Feng Zhang USC Anh Le University of Michigan Hal Morgenstern SUNY Buffalo Li-Na Mu MSKCC Ming-Lan Lu, Victor E Reuter Columbia University Carlos Cordon-Cardo China Fudan University SPH Na He, Qingwu Jiang, Shun-Zhang Yu Fujian Medical University SPH Lin Cai Gates Foundation Beijing Office Jin-Kou Zhao Jiangsu CDC Hua Wang Taixing CDC Bao-Guo Ding