Research Highlights - 2006
Below are highlights of research reported by grantees supported by the
Epidemiology and Genetics Research Program (EGRP). We can't begin to capture
all the research contributions of our grantees and apologize for this.
Your suggestions
on additions to make to the Web page are welcome. The names of the first
authors and of the EGRP-supported Principal Investigators whose grants
are credited in the published papers appear in boldface print.
Breast Cancer
Cervical Cancer
Colorectal Cancer
Gynecological Cancers
Gastrointestinal Cancers
Liver Cancer
Lung Cancer
Melanoma
Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma
Pancreatic Cancer
Prostate Cancer
HIV
Methods
General
BPC3 Consortium Finds Polymorphisms in the Androgen Receptor Are Not
Linked to Breast Cancer Risk
Androgens
may influence breast cancer risk through mechanisms including conversion
to estradiol or by binding to the estrogen receptor and/or the androgen
receptor (AR) in the breast. The AR is expressed in the normal breast
as well as in breast cancer tumors, and both the expression and protein
levels have been correlated with tumor invasiveness.
To analyze whether polymorphisms in the AR gene are associated with
breast cancer risk, Brian Henderson, M.D., of the University
of Southern California/Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center, David Hunter,
M.D., Sc.D., of the Harvard School of Public Health, Elio Riboli, M.D.,
M.Sc., of the Imperial College, London, Michael Thun, M.D., of the American
Cancer Society, and colleagues participating in the EGRP-sponsored Breast
and Prostate Cancer Cohort Consortium (BPC3) Study first determined
the underlying genetic variation in the AR coding regions in a panel
of 95 advanced breast cancer cases and genotyped markers in a panel of
349 healthy women.
They identified linkage disequilibrium relationships across the gene
and selected haplotype-tagged single nucleotide polymorphisms (htSNPs)
that captured the common genetic variants across the locus. The htSNPs
then were genotyped in nested breast cancer cases (5,603) and controls
(7,480) from the Cancer Prevention Study II, European Prospective Investigation
into Cancer and Nutrition, Multiethnic Cohort, Nurses’ Health Study,
and Women’s Health Study cohorts.
The authors found no association between any genetic variation in the
AR gene and breast cancer risk. They concluded that, in postmenopausal
Caucasian women, common polymorphisms in AR are not associated with breast
cancer risk.
Cox DG, Blanche H, Pearce CL, Calle EE, Colditz GA, Pike MC, Albanes
D, Allen NE, Amiano P, Berglund G, Boeing H, Buring J, Burtt N, Canzian
F, Chanock S, Clavel-Chapelon F, Feigelson HS, Freedman M, Haiman CA,
Hankinson SE, Henderson BE, Hoover R, Hunter DJ, Kaaks R, Kolonel L,
Kraft P, LeMarchand L, Lund E, Palli D, Peeters PH, Riboli E, Stram
DO, Thun M, Tjonneland A, Trichopoulos D, Yeager M; Breast and Prostate
Cancer Cohort Consortium. A
comprehensive analysis of the androgen receptor gene and risk of breast
cancer: results from the National Cancer Institute Breast and Prostate
Cancer Cohort Consortium (BPC3). Breast Cancer Res. 2006;8(5):R54.
BRCA1 and BRCA2 Mutation Frequencies and Their Association With Cancer
The
presence of BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations in the general
population and the link between these mutations and various types of
cancers have not been well documented. A study by Harvey A. Risch,
M.D., Ph.D., of the Yale University School of Medicine, and
colleagues investigated the presence of BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations
in 1,171 unselected patients with newly diagnosed incident ovarian cancer
in Ontario, Canada, with respect to cancers reported among their relatives.
The patients were screened for germline mutations throughout the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes.
Higher risks for various cancers, including ovarian, female breast,
and testicular cancer in the general Ontario population, were associated
with carrying BRCA1 mutations versus not carrying mutations
(ovarian cancer relative risk (RR) = 21, 95% confidence interval (CI)
= 12 to 36; female breast cancer RR = 11, 95% CI = 7.5 to 15; and testicular
cancer RR = 17, 95% CI = 1.3 to 230). Similarly, higher risks were associated
with carrying BRCA2 mutations versus not carrying mutations,
particularly for ovarian (RR = 7.0, 95% CI = 3.1 to 16), female and male
breast (RR = 4.6, 95% CI = 2.7 to 7.8; and RR = 102, 95% CI = 9.9 to
1,050; respectively), and pancreatic (RR = 6.6, 95% CI = 1.9 to 23) cancers.
Cancer risks differed according to a mutation’s position on the
gene. Estimated cumulative incidence to age 80 years among women carrying BRCA1 mutations
was 24% for ovarian cancer and 90% for breast cancer; in women carrying BRCA2 mutations,
the estimated cumulative incidence was 8.4% for ovarian cancer and 41%
for breast cancer. For the general Ontario population, estimated carrier
frequencies of BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations were, respectively,
0.32% (95% CI = 0.23% to 0.45%) and 0.69% (95% CI = 0.43% to 1.10%).
The researchers concluded that BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations
may be more frequent in general populations than previously thought and
may be associated with various types of cancers. This research was supported
by EGRP grants to Dr. Risch and Steven Narod, M.D., Ph.D., University
of Toronto.
Risch HA, McLaughlin JR, Cole DE, Rosen B, Bradley L, Fan I, Tang
J, Li S, Zhang S, Shaw PA, Narod SA. Population
BRCAl and BRCA2 mutation frequencies and cancer penetrances: a kin-cohort
study in Ontario, Canada. J Natl Cancer Inst. 2006 Dec
6;98(23):1694-706.
Human Papillomavirus Type 16 and 18 Variants Show Race-Related Distribution
and Persistence
Persistent
human papillomavirus (HPV) infection, particularly with HPV types 16
or 18, places women at increased risk for cervical cancer. HPV variants,
which are viral isolates for any HPV type that differ by less than 2%
in the L1 gene sequence, appear to segregate geographically. The persistence
of these variants in certain geographic populations of infected individuals
may be related to the racial composition of that population.
Long Fu Xi, M.D., Ph.D., of the University of Washington,
and colleagues studied 1,114 women in the United States participating
in the Atypical Squamous Cells of Undetermined Significance/Low-Grade
Squamous Intraepithelial Lesion Triage Study who were positive for HPV16
and/or HPV18 at enrollment and classified the HPV variants based on established
HPV lineages.
They found that 63.9% of women infected with HPV18 who self-reported
as African American were infected with the HPV18 African variant (95%
confidence interval (CI) = 53.5% to 73.4%); 54.2% of white women infected
with HPV18 were infected with the European variant (95% CI = 46.3% to
61.9%). The likelihood of staying HPV18 positive was statistically significant
and higher for African-American women if infected with the African variant
compared to the European variant, and statistically significant and higher
for white women if infected with the European variant compared to the
African variant. The same pattern was found for HPV16 infection.
This work suggests that HPV infection persists longer in a host whose
race indicates an ancestral geographic distribution that once was shared
with that of the infecting HPV variant. This study was funded
by an EGRP grant to Dr. Xi.
Xi LF, Kiviat NB, Hildesheim A, Galloway DA, Wheeler CM, Ho J, Koutsky
LA. Human
papillomavirus type 16 and 18 variants: race-related distribution and
persistence. J Natl Cancer Inst. 2006 Aug 2;98(15):1045-52.
Multiple-Type Human Papillomavirus Infection Increases Risk of Cervical
Cancer
Human
papillomavirus (HPV) infection is one of the most common sexually transmitted
diseases and plays the main causal role in cervical carcinogenesis. Certain
HPV genotypes, such as HPV16, are associated with a high risk of cervical
cancer, but little is known about the effects of infection with multiple
HPV genotypes on cervical cancer.
Helen Trottier, Ph.D., and Eduardo Franco, Dr.P.H., of McGill
University, and colleagues used PCR to type HPV present in
cervical specimens from 2,462 Brazilian women and assessed the relationship
between infection with multiple HPV types and any-grade squamous intraepithelial
lesions (SIL) and high-grade SIL (HSIL). Infection with multiple HPV
types was associated positively with HSIL risk. Relative to women consistently
negative for HPV infection, after a 1-year followup for HSIL, women
infected with a single type of HPV had an odds ratio (OR) of 41.5,
95% confidence interval (CI) = 5.3 to 323.2; women infected with two
to three types of HPV had an OR of 91.7, 95% CI = 11.6 to 728.1; and
women infected with four to six types had an OR of 424.0, 95% CI =
31.8 to 5,651.8. The excess risk associated with multiple HPV-type
infection persisted after excluding women infected with HPV16 or other
high-risk HPV types, or for persistent infections, particularly for
any-grade SIL.
This work suggests that infection with multiple HPV types may act synergistically
in cervical carcinogenesis, or that harboring multiple HPV types may
be a marker for a decreased immune response to HPV and thus to greater
risk. This research is supported in part by an EGRP grant to
Dr. Franco.
Trottier H, Mahmud S, Costa MC, Sobrinho JP, Duarte-Franco E, Rohan
TE, Ferenczy A, Villa LL, Franco EL. Human
papillomavirus infections with multiple types and risk of cervical
neoplasia. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 2006 Jul;15(7):1274-80.
Colorectal Cancer Risk Associated Jointly With Smoking and NSAID Use
Smoking
has been associated with an increased risk of colorectal cancer, and
nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) have been associated with
a reduced risk of colorectal cancer. In a population-based case-control
study, Victoria M. Chia, Ph.D., of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer
Research Center and the University of Washington, and colleagues
evaluated the joint association between smoking and regular NSAID use
with colorectal cancer risk and examined these associations stratified
by tumor microsatellite instability (MSI high/low: MSI-H, MSI-L).
They analyzed 1,792 incident colorectal cancer cases and 1,501 population
controls in the Seattle area from 1998 to 2002, and assessed MSI in tumors
of 1,202 cases. Individuals who had ever smoked had an increased risk
of developing colorectal cancer. Individuals who were currently using
NSAIDs had a 30% lower risk of developing colorectal cancer compared
to non-NSAID users.
The data also demonstrated that, relative to current NSAID users who
never smoked, individuals who had both smoked for more than 40 years
and had never used NSAIDs had the highest risk for colorectal cancer.
Compared with nonsmokers, a greater number of tumors in smokers were
classified as MSI-H than as MSI-L. NSAID use did not reduce the risk
of MSI-H or MSI-L tumors in long-term smokers. Yet smokers who never
used NSAIDs had a higher likelihood of having MSI-L tumors.
The researchers concluded that there seems to be a synergistic inverse
association that implies protection against colorectal cancer overall
as a result of NSAID use and nonsmoking, but the risk of MSI-H colorectal
cancer remains elevated among smokers even when they have a history of
NSAID use. This research was supported in part by an EGRP grant to John
Potter, M.D., Ph.D., of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center and
the University of Washington, and through cooperative agreements with
members of the Colon Cancer Family Registry and Principal Investigators.
Chia VM, Newcomb PA, Bigler J, Morimoto LM, Thibodeau SN, Potter JD. Risk
of microsatellite-unstable colorectal cancer is associated jointly
with smoking and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug use. Cancer
Res. 2006 Jul 1;66(13):6877-83.
Model Predicts Germline Mutations and Risk of Cancer in the Lynch Syndrome
The
Lynch Syndrome (hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer, HNPCC), the
most common familial colorectal cancer, can be caused by germline deleterious
mutations of DNA mismatch repair (MMR) genes. Sining
Chen, Ph.D., of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, and
colleagues developed the MMRpro model to estimate the probability of
an individual carrying a deleterious mutation in mismatch repair genes MLH1,
MSH2, and MSH6 and developing colorectal or endometrial
cancer.
The probability is assessed on the basis of a detailed family history
of colorectal and endometrial cancer for an individual and his or her
first- and second-degree relatives. To validate the MMRpro model, the
model’s predictions were compared with the results of highly sensitive
germline mutation detection techniques for 279 individuals from 226 clinic-based
families in the United States, Canada, and Australia (referred between
1993 and 2005).
In this independent evaluation, MMRpro provided a concordance index
of 0.83 (95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.78 to 0.88) and a ratio of
observed-to-predicted cases of 0.94 (95% CI = 0.84 to 1.05),
demonstrating that the model is more sensitive and more specific than
current clinical guidelines for identifying individuals who may benefit
from MMR germline testing. Importantly, this model can be used among
individuals for whom tumor samples are not available or whose germline
DNA tests find no mutation.
Some patients who were in this study belong to EGRP’s Colon
Cancer Family Registry, an international research infrastructure
for investigators interested in conducting population- and clinic-based
interdisciplinary studies on the genetic and molecular epidemiology
of colon cancer and its behavioral implications.
Chen S, Wang W, Lee S, Nafa K, Lee J, Romans K, Watson P, Gruber SB,
Euhus D, Kinzler KW, Jass J, Gallinger S, Lindor NM, Casey G, Ellis
N, Giardiello FM, Offit K, Parmigiani G; Colon Cancer Family Registry. Prediction
of germline mutations and cancer risk in the Lynch syndrome. JAMA.
2006 Sep 27;296(12):1479-87.
HPV Co-Infections Synergistically Increase Risk for Cervical Cancer
Simultaneous infection with multiple types of human papillomavirus (HPV)
appears to act synergistically to increase the risk of developing lesions
that typically precede development of cervical cancer, according to research
by Helen Trottier, Ph.D., of McGill University, and colleagues.
This study is the first to document the higher risk of cervical cancer with
multiple HPV infections.
The researchers studied 2,462 Brazilian women ages 18 to 40 who had repeated
measurements of viral infection and lesion outcomes to assess the role of
cumulative and concurrent infection with types of HPV in the development
of cervical cancer. The greater the number of HPV types involved in the
co-infection, the higher the risk of precancerous lesions. The excess risks
for lesions from multiple-type infections remained after excluding women
infected with HPV-16 and other high-risk HPV types, and women with persistent
infections. Co-infections with HPV-16 and -58 appeared to be particularly
prone to increase risk for precancerous lesions.
These findings have implications for the management of cervical lesions
and prediction of the outcome of HPV infections. They also provide baseline
data for analyzing the impact of the newly approved HPV vaccine. The researchers
pointed out that the vaccine does not protect against HPV-58 and suggested
that it be a target for the next generation of cervical cancer vaccines
to be developed. The research was supported in part by an EGRP grant to
Eduardo Franco, Dr.P.H., of McGill University.
Trottier
H, Mahmud S, Costa MC, Sobrinho JP, Duarte-Franco E, Rohan TE, Ferenczy
A, Villa LL, Franco EL. Human papillomavirus infections with multiple
types and risk of cervical neoplasia. Cancer
Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev.
2006 Jul;15(7):1274-80.
Avoiding Weight Gain Reduces Risk for Postmenopausal Breast Cancer
Women can reduce their risk of breast cancer, particularly after menopause,
by avoiding weight gain in adulthood or by losing the extra pounds, suggest
findings by A. Heather Eliassen, Sc.D., of Brigham and Women’s
Hospital and Harvard Medical School, and colleagues. Other studies
have indicated that weight gain since early adulthood is associated with
an increased risk of breast cancer in postmenopausal women, but weight change
in middle-aged to older women has been studied less extensively.
The researchers analyzed data from the Nurses’ Health Study (NHS)
I on 87,143 postmenopausal women who were followed for up to 26 years to
assess weight change since age 18. Weight change since menopause was assessed
among 49,514 women who were followed up to 24 years. They found that women
who gained 55 pounds or more since age 18 had a 45 percent increased risk
of breast cancer compared with women who maintained their weight, with a
stronger association among women who had never taken postmenopausal hormones.
Women who gained about 22 pounds or more since menopause had an 18 percent
increased risk of breast cancer. On the other hand, women who lost about
22 pounds or more since menopause, kept the weight off, and had never used
postmenopausal hormones had a 57 percent reduction in risk of the cancer
compared to women who simply maintained their weight.
“Women should be advised to avoid weight gain both before and after
menopause to decrease their postmenopausal breast cancer risk,” concluded
the researchers. The study was supported in part by an EGRP grant to Susan
Hankinson, Sc.D., of Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard
Medical School, who is principal investigator of the Nurses’ Health
Study I. EGRP has funded this cohort since 1973.
Eliassen
AH, Colditz GA, Rosner B, Willett WC, Hankinson SE. Adult weight change
and risk of postmenopausal breast cancer. JAMA. 2006 Jul 12;296(2):193-201.
Mammographic Density Reflects Exposure to Breast Cancer Risk Factors
Mammographic densities have been hypothesized to reflect cumulative exposure
to risk factors that stimulate the growth of breast cells and influence
breast cancer incidence. Gertraud Maskarinec, M.D., Ph.D., of the
Cancer Research Center of Hawaii, and colleagues, analyzed percent
mammographic densities over time and explored predictors of density change
in relation to age in the Hawaii component of the Multiethnic Cohort Study.
The study population included 607 breast cancer cases and 667 controls.
Eighty-two percent of the women had more than one mammogram, and almost
half of the women had three or more mammograms. The researchers used a computer-
assisted method to assess densities of mammograms performed over more than
20 years and before a diagnosis of breast cancer. The effects of ethnicity,
status (whether the woman was diagnosed with breast cancer or not), reproductive
characteristics, hormonal therapy, body mass index, and soy intake on initial
status and longitudinal change were assessed using multilevel modeling.
They found that cumulative percent mammographic densities and age-specific
breast cancer rates increased at similar rates. Japanese ancestry, being
overweight, estrogen/progestin therapy, and to a lesser extent, estrogen-only
therapy, predicted a slower decline in mammographic densities with age.
Case status and adult soy intake were related to higher densities, whereas
being overweight and having any children were associated with lower densities
at initial status. Age at menarche was not related to density.
The findings agree with the hypothesis that cumulative breast density reflects
exposure to risk factors that predict age-specific breast cancer incidence.
Risk factors that influence the decline in mammographic densities over time
may be important in breast cancer prevention, said the researchers. The
study was supported in part by EGRP grants to Dr. Maskarinec and
Laurence Kolonel, M.D., Ph.D., also of the Cancer Research Center of Hawaii. EGRP
has funded the Multiethnic Cohort Study since 1993, with Dr. Kolonel as
principal investigator.
Maskarinec
G, Pagano I, Lurie G, Kolonel LN. A longitudinal investigation of mammographic
density: the multiethnic cohort. Cancer Epidemiol
Biomarkers Prev. 2006
Apr;15(4):732-9.
Hormone Use Increases Breast Cancer Risk Among Black Women
Epidemiologic studies have shown a link between recent long-term hormone
use among women, particularly the use of estrogen with progestin, and an
increased risk of breast cancer. Research also has indicated an increased
risk of breast cancer among leaner women who use these hormones, but most
participants in these studies were white women.
Lynn Rosenberg, Sc.D., of Boston University, and colleagues
focused on women in the Black Women’s Health Study (BWHS) and found
that recent long-term hormone use increased the risk of breast cancer in
this population, also. The risk increased with duration of use and was strongest
among leaner women, agreeing with previously published results for white
women. The study included 32,559 black women who were 40 years of age or
older. It was supported by an EGRP grant to Dr. Rosenberg.
The BWHS is a cohort study that has been funded by EGRP since 1994, with
Dr. Rosenberg as principal investigator.
Rosenberg
L, Palmer JR, Wise LA, Adams-Campbell LL. A prospective study of female
hormone use and breast cancer among black women. Arch
Intern Med. 2006
Apr 10;166(7):760-5.
Eight Genetic Variants in DNA Repair Pathway Ruled Out as Important in
Breast Cancer
Epidemiologic
studies have suggested that polymorphisms in genes encoding components
of the DNA base-excision repair (BER) function are associated with cancer
risk. Impaired BER function can lead to accumulation of DNA damage and initiation
of cancer. Yawei Zhang, M.D., Ph.D., of Yale
University, and colleagues evaluated the association between variation
in six BER pathway genes (XRCC1, ADPRT, APEX1, OGG1, LIG3,
and MUTHYH) and breast cancer risk in large population- based case-control
studies in the United States and Poland. Eight single nucleotide polymorphisms
(SNPs) were assessed; the researchers preferentially selected coding
SNPs in the candidate genes.
No significant association was found between breast cancer risk and the
SNPs analyzed in samples from the U.S. study. Meta-analyses of the researchers’ data
and published data from studies of two SNPs in XRCC1 showed no
evidence of association between breast cancer risk and homozygous variants
versus wild type for Q399R; there was a suggestion of an association
for this polymorphism in Asian populations (Odds Ratio (OR) = 1.6).
The researchers concluded that the polymorphisms evaluated in this study
do not play a significant role in breast carcinogenesis. The research was
supported in part by EGRP grants to Amy Trentham-Dietz, Ph.D., of
the University of Wisconsin; Polly Newcomb, Ph.D., of Fred Hutchinson Cancer
Research Center; and Linda Titus-Ernstoff, Ph.D., of Dartmouth.
Zhang
Y, Newcomb PA, Egan KM, Titus-Ernstoff L, Chanock S, Welch R, Brinton
LA, Lissowska J, Bardin-Mikolajczak A, Peplonska B, Szeszenia-Dabrowska
N, Zatonski W, Garcia-Closas M. Genetic polymorphisms in base-excision
repair pathway genes and risk of breast cancer. Cancer
Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 2006 Feb;15(2):353-8.
Large Study Supports Prophylactic Oophorectomy for BRCA1 and BRCA2 Gene
Mutation Carriers
In a large-scale prospective study, Amy Finch, M.Sc., of Toronto-Sunnybrook
Regional Cancer Centre (not pictured), and colleagues
estimated the absolute risks for developing ovarian, fallopian tube, and
peritoneal cancers among women with BRCA1 and BRCA2 gene
mutations, and the reduction in risk associated with the removal of ovaries
and fallopian tubes.
The study included 1,828 BRCA1 and BRCA2 gene mutation
carriers (mean age = 47.3 years) participating in an international registry
of 32 centers in Canada, the United States, Europe, and Israel. The women
were followed for an average of 3.5 years. A total of 555 (30%) women had
prophylactic bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy (removal of the ovaries and
fallopian tubes) prior to study entry, and 490 (27%) had the surgery after
entry. Prophylactic bilateral salpingooophorectomy reduced the risk of ovarian
and fallopian tube cancer by 80 percent. A residual risk of 4.3 percent
for peritoneal cancer remained at 20 years after oophorectomy, but the researchers
believe the risk was not sufficiently high to recommend against the surgery.
“It is important that both fallopian tubes and ovaries be removed
because either site may be the origin of cancer, and both organs should
be examined in fine detail to rule out the presence of microscopic disease,” said
the researchers. The study was supported in part by an EGRP grant to Steven
Narod, M.D., Ph.D., of Toronto-Sunnybrook Regional Cancer Centre (pictured).
Finch
A, Beiner M, Lubinski J, Lynch HT, Moller P, Rosen B, Murphy J, Ghadirian
P, Friedman E, Foulkes WD, Kim-Sing C, Wagner T, Tung N, Couch F, Stoppa-Lyonnet
D, Ainsworth P, Daly M, Pasini B, Gershoni-Baruch R, Eng C, Olopade OI,
McLennan J, Karlan B, Weitzel J, Sun P, Narod SA; Hereditary Ovarian Cancer
Clinical Study Group. Salpingo-oophorectomy and the risk of ovarian, fallopian
tube, and peritoneal cancers in women with a BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation.
JAMA. 2006 Jul 12;296(2):185-92.
High Glycemic Index and Load May Increase Risk for Colorectal Cancer Among
Obese Women
The colorectal cancer risk factors of obesity, greater energy consumption,
and low physical activity modulate circulating levels of insulin, which
may have growth-promoting effects on the colorectum and thus influence carcinogenesis.
Dietary glycemic index (GI) and glycemic load (GL) directly affect circulating
insulin levels, and the consumption of foods with high GIs leads to more
rapid increase in blood insulin levels than foods with low GIs.
Mary McCarl, M.P.H., of the University of Minnesota, and
colleagues conducted a prospective study to examine associations of GI and
GL with colorectal cancer among 35,197 participants in the Iowa Women’s
Health Study. They found that neither GI nor GL were major colorectal cancer
risk factors among older women (ages 55–69). However, among obese
women (baseline body mass index (BMI) > 30 kg/m2), colorectal cancer
incidence was increased for women in the highest versus lowest quintiles
of GI (Relative Risk (RR) = 1.66) and GL RR = 1.79). The increase was observed
for both colon and rectal cancer and for women with and without diabetes.
For women with a BMI below 30 kg/m2, no statistically significant associations
between GI or GL and colorectal cancer risk were found.
The results indicate that although neither GI nor GL are major colorectal
cancer risk factors among older women in general, high GI or GL may increase
risk for the cancer among obese women. The Iowa Women’s Health Study
has been funded by EGRP since 1985, with Aaron Folsom, M.D., M.P.H.,
of the University of Minnesota, as the principal investigator.
McCarl
M, Harnack L, Limburg PJ, Anderson KE, Folsom AR. Incidence of colorectal
cancer in relation to glycemic index and load in a cohort of women. Cancer
Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 2006 May;15(5):892-6.
Occupational Exposures Associated With Risk for Esophageal and Stomach
Cancer
Karen Wernli, Ph.D., of Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, and
colleagues analyzed associations between occupational exposures in the Shanghai,
China, textile industry and risk of esophageal and stomach cancer. Few occupational
exposures have been associated with these highly lethal cancers, which account
for a substantial proportion of the cancer burden in developing countries.
In a case-cohort study nested in a cohort of female textile workers in
Shanghai, the researchers analyzed and compared data on 102 workers with
esophageal cancer and 646 workers with stomach cancer diagnosed between
1989 and 1998 with data from a subcohort of 3,188 workers. Risk for esophageal
cancer was increased 15.8-fold with 10 or more years of exposure to silica
dust and 3.7-fold with long-term exposure to metals (welding dust, lead
fumes, and steel). Risk increased with increasing duration of exposure.
In addition, the researchers unexpectedly found that cumulative exposure
to endotoxin, a cotton dust contaminant, was inversely related to risk of
esophageal and stomach cancer. Endotoxin is known to elicit a systemic inflammatory
response after inhalation and somehow may have a protective effect against
cancer.
The researchers pointed out that silica, metals, and endotoxin exposures
are not unique to the textile industry and might influence the risk of esophageal
and stomach cancer in other industries. The study was supported in part
by an EGRP grant to Harvey Checkoway, Ph.D., of the University of
Washington.
Wernli
KJ, Fitzgibbons ED, Ray RM, Gao DL, Li W, Seixas NS, Camp JE, Astrakianakis
G, Feng Z, Thomas DB, Checkoway H. Occupational risk factors for esophageal
and stomach cancers among female textile workers in Shanghai, China. Am
J Epidemiol. 2006 Apr 15;163(8):717-25. Epub 2006 Feb 8.
Pancreatic Cancer Genetic Epidemiology Consortium Focuses on Familial Susceptibility
Organized in 2002 with grant support from EGRP, the Pancreatic Cancer Genetic
Epidemiology (PACGENE) Consortium is a foundation for investigating the
genetic etiology of familial pancreatic cancer susceptibility. PACGENE has
seven data collection centers, a statistical genetics core, and a pathology/archival
genotyping core.
In a published paper, Principal Investigator Gloria Petersen, Ph.D.,
of the Mayo Clinic, and colleagues describe the Consortium and
their observations on age at diagnosis of pancreatic cancer among 466
participating probands and 670 affected relatives. (Probands have at least
two first-degree relatives with pancreatic cancer.) Probands and affected
relatives were diagnosed with the cancer at a significantly younger mean
age (64) than pancreatic cancer patients in the general population (70),
a finding consistent with other studies. The age for the general population
was determined using data from NCI’s population-based Surveillance,
Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) Program. The researchers also found
that age at diagnosis among the affected relatives did not decrease with
increasing number of affected family members.
PACGENE now is conducting linkage analyses to pursue the genetic basis
of familial pancreatic cancer. Because pancreatic cancer is relatively rare
and rapidly fatal, it is difficult for any single research center to recruit
sufficient numbers of study participants and collect sufficient biospecimens
from informative families to perform linkage analyses and other research.
The research was supported in part by EGRP grants to Dr. Petersen.
Petersen
GM, de Andrade M, Goggins M, Hruban RH, Bondy M, Korczak JF, Gallinger
S, Lynch HT, Syngal S, Rabe KG, Seminara D, Klein AP. Pancreatic cancer
genetic epidemiology consortium. Cancer Epidemiol
Biomarkers Prev. 2006
Apr; 15(4):704-10.
Prediagnostic Level of Serum Retinol Associated With Decreased Risk
of Hepatocellular Carcinoma
Retinol
and its derivatives (retinoids) are antioxidants that promote cell differentiation
and may protect against the development of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC)
by controlling hepatocellular differentiation and reducing inflammatory
responses. Few prospective epidemiologic studies of serum retinol and
other antioxidants in relation to HCC risk have been conducted, however.
This study by Jian-Min Yuan, M.D., Ph.D., of the University
of Minnesota, and colleagues examined the relationship between
concentrations of antioxidant micronutrients in prediagnostic serum
samples and the risk of developing HCC in 213 patients with HCC and
1,087 controls from a cohort of 18,244 men in Shanghai, China, who
were monitored from 1986 through 2001. The micronutrients measured
included retinol, specific carotenoids, tocopherols, and selenium.
Odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were estimated
by quartile (Q) of serum micronutrient concentrations using logistic
regression, with adjustments for smoking status, alcohol intake, history
of physician-diagnosed hepatitis or liver cirrhosis, and seropositivity
for hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg).
The researchers found that higher prediagnostic serum levels of retinol
were associated with a statistically significant reduced risk of developing
HCC in these middle-aged or older Chinese men (Q2 versus Q1, OR= 0.37,
CI = 0.22 to 0.61; Q3 versus Q1, OR = 0.30, CI = 0.17 to 0.50; Q4 versus
Q1, OR = 0.13, CI = 0.06 to 0.26; Ptrend < .001).
The association between serum retinol levels and HCC risk was present
in both chronic carriers and noncarriers of the hepatitis B virus. Statistically
significant interaction regarding HCC risk between low retinol levels
and HBsAg positivity also was found; HBsAg-positive men in the lowest
tertile of retinol had a greater than 70-fold higher risk (OR = 72.7,
CI = 31.6 to 167.4) of HCC than HBsAg-negative men in the highest tertile
of retinol (Pinteraction = .018). Given that HCC is highly fatal,
these findings may have implications for clinical practice and prevention
efforts. This research was supported by EGRP grants to Dr. Yuan.
Yuan JM, Gao YT, Ong CN, Ross RK, Yu MC. Prediagnostic
level of serum retinol in relation to reduced risk of hepatocellular
carcinoma. J Natl Cancer Inst. 2006 Apr 5;98(7):482-90.
New Biomarker Proposed for Lung Cancer Risk
The cytokinesis-blocked micronucleus (CBMN) assay in human lymphocytes
is one of the most commonly used methods for measuring DNA damage. Randa
El-Zein, M.D., Ph.D., of The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, and
colleagues modified the CBMN assay to evaluate susceptibility to the nicotine-derived
nitrosamine 4-(methlynitrosamino)- 1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone (NNK), which
is a carcinogen and a strong inducer of lung cancer.
They measured the frequency of NNK-induced chromosomal damage endpoints
(micronuclei, nucleoplasmic bridges, and nuclear buds) per 1,000 binucleated
lymphocytes. Spontaneous and NNK-induced chromosomal damage was significantly
higher in lung cancer patients compared to controls. Forty-seven percent
of patients compared with 12 percent of controls had greater than four spontaneous
micronuclei; 66 percent of patients compared with none of the controls had
greater than four spontaneous nucleoplasmic bridges; and 25 percent of patients
compared with 5 percent of controls had greater than one spontaneous nuclear
bud. The study included 139 cases and 130 controls.
These results provide strong evidence that the modified CBMN assay is extremely
sensitive to NNK-induced genetic damage, and that the test’s simplicity,
speed, and sensitivity make it valuable for screening and possibly for prioritizing
potential cases for early detection. This research was supported in part
by EGRP grants to Dr. El-Zein and Margaret Spitz, M.D., M.P.H.,
of M.D. Anderson Cancer Center.
El-Zein
RA, Schabath MB, Etzel CJ, Lopez MS, Franklin JD, Spitz MR. Cytokinesis
blocked micronucleus assay as a novel biomarker for lung cancer risk.
Cancer Res. 2006 Jun 15;66(12):6449-56.
Striking Ethnic Discrepancies Seen in Smoking-Related Lung Cancer Risk
Lung
cancer is more likely to develop in cigarette smokers who are African American
or Native Hawaiian than in smokers who are white, Japanese American, or
Latino, according to research by Christopher Haiman, Sc.D., of the
University of Southern California, and colleagues. The findings
are especially noteworthy because of the study’s large size and its
far broader ethnic and racial representation than other studies. The research
team analyzed lung cancer incidence among 183,813 African-American, Japanese-American,
Latino, Native-Hawaiian, and white men and women from the Multiethnic Cohort
Study (MEC) of more than 215,000 individuals in California and Hawaii. In
the analysis, 1,979 lung cancer cases were identified between baseline (1993-96)
and 2001.
Among those who smoked less than 30 cigarettes per day, risks for African
Americans and Native Hawaiians were significantly greater than for the other
groups. The difference between groups was particularly evident among those
who smoked 10 or fewer cigarettes per day. Among those who smoked 10 cigarettes
or fewer a day, whites had a 55 percent lower risk of lung cancer than African
Americans; and among those who smoked 11 to 20 cigarettes a day, a 43 percent
lower risk. For Latinos and Japanese Americans, the percentages were lower
still. However, once smoking rates reached 30 cigarettes a day—the
equivalent of a pack and a half—or more, the risk difference was minimal.
The differences in risk were observed for both sexes and all histologic
types of lung cancer. Environmental measures looked at—occupation,
diet, and education (as a proxy for socioeconomic status)—could not
explain what the researchers called “the striking racial and ethnic
differences in the risk of lung cancer associated with cigarette smoking.”
The findings do not change the public health message on the hazards of
smoking. Individuals are far more likely to get lung cancer if they smoke,
and they can reduce their risks by quitting. The research was supported
by an EGRP grant to Laurence Kolonel, M.D., Ph.D., University of
Hawaii, Manoa, for the MEC, which has been funded since 1993.
Haiman CA, Stram DO, Wilkens LR, Pike MC, Kolonel LN, Henderson BE,
Le Marchand L. Ethnic
and racial differences in the smoking-related risk of lung cancer. N
Engl J Med 2006 Jan 26;354(4):333-42.
High-Risk Melanoma Susceptibility Genes and Pancreatic Cancer, Neural
System Tumors, and Uveal Melanoma Across GenoMEL
The Melanoma
Genetics Consortium (GenoMEL) is an international consortium of
familial melanoma research groups from North America, Europe, Asia,
and Australia. This study, by Alisa Goldstein, Ph.D., of the
National Cancer Institute, David Elder, M.B., Ch.B., of the University
of Pennsylvania, Julia Newton Bishop, M.D., of the University of Leeds,
UK, and colleagues used the largest familial melanoma sample
currently available, taken from across 17 GenoMEL centers, to assess
the high-risk melanoma susceptibility genes CDKN2A/alternative
reading frames (ARF, which encodes p16 and p14ARF)
and CDK4, and their relationship with pancreatic cancer, neural
system tumors, and uveal melanoma.
The study included 2,137 cutaneous malignant melanoma patients from
466 melanoma-prone families with at least three melanoma patients per
family. Forty-one percent (n = 190) of families had mutations
in one of three known high-risk melanoma susceptibility genes, most of
which involved p16 (n = 178). There were similar frequencies
(2–3%) in mutations in CDK4 (n = 5) and p14ARF (n =
7).
The researchers found a strong association between prostate cancer and CDKN2A mutations
(P < 0.0001), which differed by mutation. The group found
little evidence of an association between CDKN2A mutations and
neural system tumors or uveal melanoma and only a marginally significant
association between neural system tumors and ARF (P =
0.05).
They also found that the proportion of families with the most frequent
founder mutations differed by locale, with similarities between Sweden
and the Netherlands; between France, Spain, and Italy; and between the
United Kingdom and Australia (P = 0.0009).
This GenoMEL study provides the most extensive characterization to date
of mutations in high-risk melanoma susceptibility genes in families with
three or more melanoma patients. This research was supported in part
by EGRP grants to Dr. Elder, Lisa Cannon Albright, Ph.D., of
the University of Utah, and Nicholas Hayward, Ph.D., of the Queensland
Institute of Medical Research.
Goldstein AM, Chan M, Harland M, Gillanders EM, Hayward NK, Avril
MF, Azizi E, Bianchi-Scarra G, Bishop DT, Bressac-de Paillerets B,
Bruno W, Calista D, Cannon Albright LA, Demenais F, Elder DE, Ghiorzo
P, Gruis NA, Hansson J, Hogg D, Holland EA, Kanetsky PA, Kefford RF,
Landi MT, Lang J, Leachman SA, Mackie RM, Magnusson V, Mann GJ, Niendorf
K, Newton Bishop J, Palmer JM, Puig S, Puig- Butille JA, de Snoo FA,
Stark M, Tsao H, Tucker MA, Whitaker L, Yakobson E; Melanoma Genetics
Consortium (GenoMEL). High-risk
melanoma susceptibility genes and pancreatic cancer, neural system
tumors, and uveal melanoma across GenoMEL. Cancer Res.
2006 Oct 15;66(20):9818-28.
InterLymph Identifies Genetic Variants Associated With Non-Hodgkin’s
Lymphoma
Increased risk of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (NHL) has been observed
in individuals with a family history of the disease or other hemopoietic
cancers, suggesting that genetic susceptibility plays a role. In a study
by the InterLymph Consortium, Nathaniel Rothman, M.D., M.P.H., of
NCI’s Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics (DCEG),
and colleagues hypothesized that single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs)
in genes important in lymphoid development and pro-inflammatory or anti-inflammatory
pathways may be associated with increased risk of NHL.
This study included 3,586 cases of NHL and 4,018 controls from eight case-control
studies participating in InterLymph. The researchers analyzed 12 SNPs in
nine genes selected on the basis of previous functional or association data: IL1A,
IL1RN, IL1B, IL2, IL6, IL10, TNF, LTA, and CARD15. They found
that TNF-308→A and IL10-3575T→A were
associated with an increased NHL risk, particularly diffuse large B-cell
lymphoma. Other NHL studies that have investigated this TNF polymorphism
and IL10 polymorphisms were small and not population-based.
The research, which underscores the value of large consortia in identifying
genetic associations, was supported in part by EGRP grants to William
Isaacs, Ph.D., of The Johns Hopkins University, and Kathleen Cooney, M.D.,
of the University of Michigan.
InterLymph, short for the International Consortium of Investigators Working
on Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma Epidemiologic Studies, is an open scientific
forum for NHL epidemiologic research that is comprised of international
researchers with completed or ongoing case-control studies. Its Web site
is epi.grants.cancer.gov/InterLymph.
Rothman
N, Skibola CF, Wang SS, Morgan G, Lan Q, Smith MT, Spinelli JJ, Willett
E, De Sanjose S, Cocco P, Berndt SI, Brennan P, Brooks-Wilson A, Wacholder
S, Becker N, Hartge P, Zheng T, Roman E, Holly EA, Boffetta P, Armstrong
B, Cozen W, Linet M, Bosch FX, Ennas MG, Holford TR, Gallagher RP, Rollinson
S, Bracci PM, Cerhan JR, Whitby D, Moore PS, Leaderer B, Lai A, Spink
C, Davis S, Bosch R, Scarpa A, Zhang Y, Severson RK, Yeager M, Chanock
S, Nieters A. Genetic variation in TNF and IL10 and risk of non-Hodgkin
lymphoma: a report from the InterLymph Consortium. Lancet
Oncol. 2006
Jan;7(1):27-38.
Vitamin D Intake Associated With a Lower Risk for Pancreatic Cancer
in Two Cohort Studies
Vitamin
D and its analogs show strong antitumor effects in a variety of tissues,
including the pancreas. A study by Halcyon Skinner, Ph.D., of Northwestern
University, and colleagues looked at associations between dietary intake
of vitamin D, calcium, and retinol and subsequent risk for pancreatic
cancer in two large, EGRP-supported prospective cohort studies: the Health
Professionals Follow-up Study, which includes 46,771 men ages 40 to 75
years as of 1986, and the Nurses’ Health Study, which includes
75,427 women ages 38 to 65 years as of 1984.
Researchers collected information on vitamin D dietary intake, documented
incident pancreatic cancer through the year 2000, and identified 365
pancreatic cancer cases. Compared with participants in the lowest category
of total vitamin D intake (< 150 IU/d), those participants who consumed ≥ 300
IU/d decreased their risk for pancreatic cancer (relative risk = 0.59).
Calcium and retinol intakes were found not to be associated with pancreatic
cancer risk.
The researchers concluded that higher intakes of vitamin D were associated
with lower risks for pancreatic cancer in these two U.S. cohorts, suggesting
a potential role for vitamin D in the pathogenesis and prevention of
pancreatic cancer. This research was supported in part by EGRP grants
to Walter Willett, M.D., Dr.P.H., and Graham Colditz, M.D., Dr.P.H.,
both of Harvard University and Brigham and Women’s Hospital; and
Charles Fuchs, M.D., M.P.H. (pictured), of Harvard University, Brigham
andWomen’s Hospital, and Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.
Skinner HG, Michaud DS, Giovannucci E, Willett WC, Colditz GA, Fuchs
CS. Vitamin
D intake and the risk for pancreatic cancer in two cohort studies. Cancer
Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 2006 Sep;15(9):1688-95.
Recent-Onset Diabetes Mellitus May Be an Early Marker for Pancreatic
Cancer
Diabetes
has been hypothesized to be both a risk factor for and a consequence
of pancreatic cancer. Patients with diabetes have been shown to have
an approximately 2-fold risk of developing pancreatic cancer, and newonset
diabetes may be caused by pancreatic cancer.
Furong Wang, M.D., of the University of California, San Francisco, and
colleagues performed a population-based case-control study of pancreatic
cancer in the San Francisco Bay area, involving 532 cases with newly
diagnosed pancreatic cancer and 1,701 controls. They found that participants
with pancreatic cancer were more likely to report a history of diabetes
than controls (odds ratio = 1.5, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.1 to
2.1). Diabetics in the case group reported a shorter duration of diabetes
and a larger proportion of insulin users. Risk for pancreatic cancer
decreased as the duration of diabetes increased. There was no association
with pancreatic cancer and insulin use for 5 or more years, but insulin
use for less than 5 years was associated with a 6.8-fold increased risk
for pancreatic cancer (95% CI = 3.7 to 12).
The authors concluded that recent-onset diabetes may be a complication
of or an early marker for pancreatic cancer. This research was
supported by EGRP grants to Elizabeth Holly, Ph.D., M.P.H., (pictured)
of the University of California, San Francisco, and Stanford University.
Wang F, Gupta S, Holly EA. Diabetes
mellitus and pancreatic cancer in a population-based case-control
study in the San Francisco Bay Area, California. Cancer Epidemiol
Biomarkers Prev. 2006 Aug;15(8):1458-63.
LTA May Modify the Association Between NSAID Use and Decreased
Risk of Advanced Prostate Cancer
Studies
show that nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) have protective
effects against prostate cancer, but this may exist only among certain
subgroups of men, such as those with particular variants in inflammatory
response genes.
Xin Liu, M.D., Ph.D., of the University of California, San Francisco,
and colleagues conducted a case-control study (n = 1,012) of
the association between NSAID use and more advanced prostate cancer and
evaluated whether the association was modified by a functional polymorphism
in the lymphotoxin alpha (LTA) gene (LTA C+80A, where
the CC genotype results in higher LTA production). The LTA protein
modulates the immune and inflammatory response to pathogens. The researchers
found an inverse association between NSAID use and disease (odds ratio
(OR) = 0.67, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.52 to 0.87), which was
modified by the LTA C+80A variant (p for interaction
= 0.03). In men with the CC genotype, the inverse association between
NSAID use and prostate cancer was substantially stronger (OR = 0.43,
95% CI = 0.28 to 0.67).
NSAID use was not found to be associated with disease for men without
the CC genotype (p = 0.30). Similar associations were observed
when dose/duration of NSAID use were studied. These results suggest that
prostate cancer chemoprevention by NSAIDs may be most appropriate for
men with the LTA +80CC genotype.
This research was supported by EGRP grants to Graham Casey,
Ph.D., of The Cleveland Clinic Foundation, and John Witte, Ph.D., of
the University of California, San Francisco (both pictured).
Liu X, Plummer SJ, Nock NL, Casey G, Witte JS. Nonsteroidal
antiinflammatory drugs and decreased risk of advanced prostate cancer:
modification by lymphotoxin alpha. Am J Epidemiol. 2006
Nov 15;164(10):984-9. Epub 2006 Aug 24.
Prostate Cancer Aggressiveness Appears To Be Influenced by Several Genes
Several independent genome scans have reported evidence of linkage using
the Gleason score as a measure of prostate cancer aggressiveness, but with
inconsistent results. Susan Slager, Ph.D., of the Mayo Clinic, and
colleagues conducted an independent genome-wide scan using the Gleason score
as a quantitative trait on brothers participating in the University of Michigan
Prostate Cancer Genetics Project.
The researchers genotyped 405 highly polymorphic microsatellite markers
in 175 brother pairs from 103 families. The strongest evidence of linkage
was to chromosome 6q23 at 137 cM. Other evidence of linkage was found on
chromosomes 1p13–q21 and 5p13–q11. Altogether, three interesting
regions (P<0.005) and two modest regions of linkage (P<0.05) were
identified. For all but one of these regions, there is previous evidence
of linkage to tumor aggressiveness.
The findings provide further evidence that tumor aggressiveness has a genetic
component, said the researchers, and that the genetic component may be influenced
by several independent genes. The study was supported in part by EGRP grants
to William Isaacs, Ph.D., of The Johns Hopkins University, and Kathleen
Cooney, M.D., of the University of Michigan.
Slager
SL, Zarfas KE, Brown WM, Lange EM, McDonnell SK, Wojno KJ, Cooney KA.
Genome-wide linkage scan for prostate cancer aggressiveness loci using
families from the University of Michigan Prostate Cancer Genetics Project.
Prostate. 2006 Feb 1;66(2):173-9.
Chromosome 8 Region Associated With Prostate Cancer Risk in African Americans
Matthew Freedman, M.D., of Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Broad
Institute of Harvard, and Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
and colleagues have identified an area of chromosome 8q24 as a major risk
factor for prostate cancer, especially in African- American men. The researchers
used their newly developed “admixture mapping” method to screen
through the genome of African Americans (who have both African and European
ancestry) searching for the differences in inherited DNA from ancestral
backgrounds.
They studied 1,597 African Americans with prostate cancer and 873 controls
and found that the genetic risk factor nearly doubled the likelihood of
prostate cancer in younger African- American men. This finding may explain
why younger African Americans have a greater risk of prostate cancer than
other populations and why the increased risk attenuates with older age,
said the researchers.
The study also shows that admixture mapping can be a powerful and practical
way to map genetic variants for complex diseases, they reported. Additional
research will be needed to identify the specific gene involved at 8q24.
The study was supported in part by grants to Brian Henderson, M.D.,
of the University of Southern California; Kathleen Cooney, M.D., of the
University of Michigan; and Alice Whittemore, Ph.D., of Stanford University.
Freedman
M, Haiman CA, Patterson N, McDonald GJ, Tandon A, Waliszewska A, Penney
K, Steen RG, Ardlie K, John EM, Oakley-Girvan I, Whittemore AS, Cooney
KA, Ingles SA, Altshuler D, Henderson BE, Reich D. Admixture mapping identifies
8q24 as a prostate cancer risk locus in African American men. Proc
Natl Acad Sci USA. 2006 Sep 19;103(38):14068-73. Epub 2006 Aug 31.
Vaginal Washing Associated With Increased Risk of HIV
Women who perform vaginal washing are at increased risk for acquiring HIV-1
compared to women who do not perform vaginal washing, according to a study
by R. Scott McClelland, M.D., M.P.H., of the University of Washington,
and colleagues. The researchers analyzed data from a 10-year study of risk
factors for contracting HIV-1 among 1,270 sex workers in Kenya.
The increased risk applied to women who used either water or soap for vaginal
washing. Women who used water to cleanse had a 2.6-fold increased risk for
contracting HIV-1 compared to women who did not perform vaginal washing,
and women who used soap had a 3.8-fold increased risk of infection. Furthermore,
women who used soap or other substances were at greater risk (1.47-fold
increased risk) of infection compared to women who used only water.
The researchers concluded that vaginal washing may be important in promoting
the spread of HIV-1 and that intervention strategies aimed at modifying
intra-vaginal practices should be evaluated as a possible female-controlled
HIV-1 prevention strategy. The research was supported in part by an EGRP
grant to King Holmes, M.D., Ph.D., of the University of Washington.
McClelland
RS, Lavreys L, Hassan WM, Mandaliya K, Ndinya-Achola JO, Baeten JM. Vaginal
washing and increased risk of HIV-1 acquisition among African women: a
10- year prospective study. AIDS. 2006 Jan 9;20(2):269-73.
Lessons Learned: MSI Testing Inconsistencies Reported by Six-Laboratory
Consortium
Microsatellite instability (MSI) testing is almost a standard part of the
clinical evaluation of individuals who develop colorectal cancer at young
ages or who have family histories suggestive of hereditary nonpolyposis
colon cancer syndrome (HNPCC). Despite the high volume of MSI testing conducted
clinically, no reports have been published on the agreement of MSI results
among laboratories.
Noralane Lindor, M.D., of the Mayo Clinic, and colleagues
compared MSI testing performed by six laboratories, all of which are part
of the Colon Cancer Family Registry (CFR), and found discordant results
with no evident systematic trends. Two laboratories with the longest experience
in MSI testing showed a 99 percent concordance of the 100 loci tested, demonstrating
that MSI scoring potentially is reproducible. After analysis of possible
reasons for the discordance, each laboratory repeated its testing. Agreement
of readings improved dramatically, which was attributed in large part to
cleaner PCR products. Disregarding mononucleotide single base pair gains,
concordance also was improved by greater use of equivocal readings, duplicate
readings, and general refinement of MSI reading skills. DNA quality was
not an issue.
The researchers proposed five key rules that laboratories should observe
when conducting MSI testing. Dr. Lindor is principal investigator of one
of the Registry sites. The Colon CFR is an EGRP-funded resource for investigators
interested in conducting population- and clinic-based interdisciplinary
studies on the genetic and molecular epidemiology of colon cancer. Its Web
site is epi.grants.cancer.gov/CFR.
Lindor NM, Smalley R, Barker M, Bigler J, Krumroy LM, Lum-Jones A, Plummer
SJ, Selander T, Thomas S, Youash M, Seminara D, Casey G, Bapat B, Thibodeau
SN. Ascending the learning curve—MSI testing experience of a six-laboratory
consortium. Cancer Biomarkers. 2006 Jul;2(1-2):5-9.
What Have We Learned Since Doll and Peto’s Analysis on Risk and
Preventability of Cancer?
“Epidemiology—identifying
the causes and preventability of cancer?” reviews studies of cancer
incidence using different epidemiologic techniques that have been conducted
in the 25 years since Professor Sir Richard Doll and Professor Sir Richard
Peto published their landmark comprehensive analysis of evidence on the
risk and preventability of cancer. “These studies revealed expanded
opportunities for cancer prevention through approaches that include vaccination,
increased physical activity, weight control, and avoidance of post-menopausal
hormone therapy,” write Graham
Colditz, M.D., Dr.P.H., of Brigham and Women’s
Hospital and Harvard School of Public Health, and Thomas
Sellers, Ph.D., H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center & Research Institute,
and NCI’s Edward Trapido, Sc.D., in the January
2006 issue of Nature Reviews Cancer. The authors make some suggestions
for future directions in epidemiologic research, including in method
development and method incorporation, and for studies of interactions
between behavior, psychological and social mechanisms, and risk indicators
to fill gaps in etiology and survivorship studies.
Colditz GA, Sellers TA, Trapido E. Epidemiology—identifying
the causes and preventability of cancer? Nat
Rev Cancer 2006 Jan;6(1):75-83.
|