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Family history of
Colorectal Cancer linked with reduced risk
of Cancer recurrence
Newswise —
Among patients with advanced colon cancer
receiving treatment that includes
chemotherapy, a family history of colorectal
cancer is associated with a significant
reduction in cancer recurrence and death,
with the risk reduced further by having an
increasing number of affected first-degree
relatives, according to a study in the June
4 issue of JAMA.
“Approximately 16 percent to 20 percent of
patients with colorectal cancer have a
first-degree relative with colorectal
cancer.
"Beyond
rare but highly penetrant hereditary
colorectal cancer syndromes, numerous
studies have demonstrated that a history of
colorectal cancer in a first-degree relative
increases the risk of developing the disease
by approximately 2-fold.
"However, the influence of family history on
cancer recurrence and survival among
patients with established colon cancer
remains uncertain,” the authors write.
Jennifer A. Chan, M.D., M.P.H., of the
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, and
colleagues examined the association of
family history of colorectal cancer with
recurrence and survival of 1,087 patients
with stage III colon cancer who were
receiving supplemental chemotherapy.
Patients provided information on family
history of colorectal cancer at the
beginning of the study, and were followed up
until March 2007 for cancer recurrence and
death (median [midpoint] follow-up, 5.6
years).
Among the 1,087 participants, 195 (17.9
percent) reported a family history of
colorectal cancer in 1 or more first-degree
relatives. The researchers found that a
family history of colorectal cancer was
associated with a significant reduction in
the risk of cancer recurrence or death.
Compared
with patients without a family history,
those with a family history had a 28 percent
lower risk for cancer recurrence or death,
which occurred in 57 of 195 patients (29
percent) with a family history of colorectal
cancer compared with 343 of 892 patients (38
percent) without a family history.
Examining just the risk for cancer
recurrence, patients with a family history
of colorectal cancer had a 26 percent
reduced risk compared with patients without
a family history.
Cancer
recurrence occurred in 27 percent of
patients with a family history of colorectal
cancer and 35 percent of patients without a
family history.
The
reduced risk of death for patients with a
family history of colorectal cancer was 25
percent.
The apparent benefit associated with family
history was stronger with an increasing
number of affected family members.
Compared
with participants without a family history
of colorectal cancer, participants with two
or more affected relatives had a 51 percent
lower risk for cancer recurrence or death.
“Beyond rare, well-characterized hereditary
colorectal cancer syndromes, our data
support the hypothesis that a relatively
common though less penetrant genetic
predisposition may not only influence
colorectal cancer risk but also patient
survival.
"This
finding may reflect a distinct underlying
molecular and pathogenic mechanism in
cancers that develop in the setting of a
common (i.e., sporadic) family history,” the
researchers write.
“Further
studies are needed to more fully elucidate
potential mechanisms by which a common
family history may influence the outcome for
patients with colorectal cancer.”
Editorial: Familial Colorectal Cancer - A
Genetics Treasure Trove for Medical
Discovery
In an accompanying editorial, Boris Pasche,
M.D., Ph.D., of the Northwestern University
Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, and
Contributing Editor, JAMA, comments on the
results of the study by Chan and colleagues.
“If these intriguing findings are validated
in other studies, family history may well
become a new prognostic factor in colorectal
cancer.
"Should
this be the case, genome-wide association
studies and tumor gene expression profiling
studies will be warranted to identify
germline and tumor-specific genetic features
associated with a family history of
colorectal cancer and favorable outcome
following adjuvant chemotherapy.”
“Over the past 2 decades, some of the first
major molecular genetics inroads were
achieved through careful study of patients
with a strong family history of colorectal
cancer,” Dr. Pasche writes.
“The study
by Chan et al suggests that family history
of colorectal cancer will lead to the
identification of novel genetic features
predictive of response to chemotherapy.
Familial colorectal cancer may therefore
confirm its role as a genetics treasure
trove for medical discovery.”
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