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Genetic
Region linked to a five times higher Lung
Cancer Risk
Newswise — A narrow region on
chromosome 15 contains genetic variations
strongly associated with familial lung
cancer, says a study conducted by scientists
at Washington University School of Medicine
in St. Louis and other institutions in the
United States and the United Kingdom.
The researchers found a more
than five times higher risk of lung cancer
for people who have both a family history of
the disease and these genetic variations.
The risk was not affected by
whether the study participants smoked or
didn't smoke.
Published in the Sept. 13
issue of the Journal of the National Cancer
Institute, this study is the fourth since
April 2008 to implicate this genetic region
in the development of lung cancer, and it
strengthens the possibility that testing for
variations in this region could become a
valuable way to warn individuals of their
higher risk.
"Many smokers don't get lung
cancer, which suggests there is a genetic
difference in smokers who do get the
disease," says senior author Ming You, M.D.,
Ph.D., a researcher in cancer
chemoprevention at the Siteman Cancer Center
at Washington University School of Medicine
and Barnes-Jewish Hospital.
"We also know that some
families have a high incidence of lung
cancer. If we can identify the genetic
factors linked to lung cancer in such people
before they get the disease, we can take
steps to help prevent it. This genetic
region might be part of the answer."
Lung cancer, the leading
cancer killer in the United States, will
likely cause 162,000 deaths in 2008 in men
and women combined, according to
projections. The National Cancer Institute
indicates that cigarette smoking is linked
to 87 percent of these deaths.
Among research groups
studying lung cancer susceptibility, many
other genetic markers of increased risk have
been identified, but the area identified in
this study on chromosome 15 is the only
genetic region that is consistent across
many studies, You says.
The three other recent
studies that identified these specific
genetic variations focused on sporadic lung
cancer, but the current study established a
strong risk factor in this chromosomal
region for the kind of lung cancer that is
inherited.
Sporadic lung cancer occurs
in individuals without a family history of
lung cancer, while familial lung cancer, as
defined for this study, is lung cancer that
occurs in three or more direct blood
relatives.
The three recent studies on
sporadic lung cancer cited an approximately
30 percent greater risk for individuals with
specific genetic variations in this region
of chromosome 15, a much lower risk than
found in the current study, You notes.
One of these studies indicated that smoking
increases the risk when people have the
genetic variations on chromosome 15, but two
of the studies indicated that smoking adds
no increased risk in such people.
The increase in risk
identified in the current study also was not
dependent on whether a person smoked.
"If these genetic variations
are associated with a five-fold increased
risk, regardless of whether you smoke,
that's very important information," says
You, professor of surgery at the School of
Medicine. "It would suggest that specific
genes in this region and smoking are
independent risk factors for lung cancer,
and together they might cause an even
greater increase in lung cancer risk."
The researchers looked at 194
people with familial lung cancer and
compared their genetic profiles to 219
people over age 60 with no history of lung
cancer. To make their study population as
uniform as possible, only Caucasian subjects
were included. DNA samples from blood or
cheek swabs from each participant were
screened for more than 300,000 known human
genetic variations, or SNPs (pronounced
"snips," these are points on chromosomes
where people's DNA commonly differs by just
one unit, or nucleotide).
The research group found
several genetic variants, or SNPs, with a
strong association to familial lung cancer
on chromosomes 1, 3, 6, 9, 12 and 20, but a
cluster of SNPs on the long arm of
chromosome 15 had the strongest link to the
disease.
These genetic variants were
found much more often in the study subjects
with lung cancer.
The statistical analysis of
the data suggests that people with a family
history of lung cancer and the variants on
both copies of chromosome 15 have a 5.7- to
7.2-fold higher risk for developing lung
cancer compared to the control group.
The chromosomal region that
contains the high-risk-associated variations
is the site of several known genes,
including three that code for proteins
implicated in nicotine addiction.
That connection ties the
genes to lung cancer associated with
smoking, but some evidence also exists that
the genes are directly involved in lung
cancer development.
"These genes play roles in
cellular proliferation and cell death," You
says.
"And they are active in
lung cancer tumors. More research will be
needed to fully delineate the part they play
in lung cancer and whether they will be good
targets for cancer therapies in the future."
Liu P, Vikis HG, Wang D, Lu
Y, Wang Y, Schwartz AG, Pinney SM, Yang P,
de Andrade M, Petersen GM, Wiest JS, Fain
PR, Gazdar A, Gaba C, Rothschild H, Mandal
D, Coons T, Lee J, Kupert E, Seminara D,
Minna J, Bailey-Wilson JE, Wu X, Spitz MR,
Eisen T, Houlston RS, Amos CI, Anderson MW,
You M. Familial aggregation of common
sequence variants on 15q24-25.1 in lung
cancer. Journal of the National Cancer
Institute, Sept. 13, 2008.
Funding from the National
Institutes of Health, the National Cancer
Institute, the National Human Genome
Research Institute, the Mayo Clinic and the
Department of Defense supported this
research.
Washington University School
of Medicine's 2,100 employed and volunteer
faculty physicians also are the medical
staff of Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis
Children's hospitals.
The School of Medicine is one
of the leading medical research, teaching
and patient care institutions in the nation,
currently ranked third in the nation by U.S.
News & World Report.
Through its affiliations with
Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children's
hospitals, the School of Medicine is linked
to BJC HealthCare.
Siteman Cancer Center is the
only federally designated Comprehensive
Cancer Center within a 240-mile radius of
St. Louis.
Siteman Cancer Center is
composed of the combined cancer research and
treatment programs of Barnes-Jewish Hospital
and Washington University School of
Medicine.
Siteman has satellite
locations in West County and St. Peters, in
addition to its full-service facility at
Washington University Medical Center on
South Kingshighway.
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