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Genetic
mutation associated with increased risk of
Lung Cancer
Newswise — Carriers of a common genetic
disorder previously linked to lung disease
may have a 70-percent to 100-percent
increased risk of lung cancer, according to
a report in the May 26 issue of Archives of
Internal Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives
journals.
The disorder, alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency
(α1ATD), is one of the most common genetic
conditions affecting the U.S. population and
especially those of European descent,
according to background information in the
article.
Individuals with two copies of the
associated genetic mutation often develop
emphysema at an early age.
However, α1ATD carriers—those with only one
copy of the mutated gene—do not normally
have severe diseases related to α1ATD and
may not be aware of their status.
However, they may be more vulnerable to
cancer-causing tobacco smoke than
non-carriers.
Ping Yang, M.D., Ph.D., and colleagues at
the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn., tested
for α1ATD carrier status in 1,443 patients
with lung cancer.
In addition, 797 community members without
lung cancer and 902 siblings of lung cancer
patients were tested as controls.
Information was gathered about all
participants’ smoking history, demographic
characteristics and family history of
cancer.
A total of 13.4 percent of the lung cancer
patients and 7.8 percent of unrelated
controls were α1ATD carriers. When patients
with lung cancer were compared to
non-related controls, α1ATD carriers had a
70 percent higher risk of developing lung
cancer than non-carriers.
Comparing
patients with lung cancer to their
cancer-free siblings, α1ATD carriers had
twice the risk of developing lung cancer.
The researchers estimated that α1ATD carrier
status may account for 11 percent to 12
percent of the patients with lung cancer
enrolled in the study.
Among those who had never smoked, α1ATD
carrier status was associated with a
2.2-fold higher risk of lung cancer, with a
2-fold increased risk among light smokers
and a 2.3-fold increased risk among moderate
to heavy smokers.
“Patients with a family history of lung
cancer or other cancers in their
first-degree relatives had a similar α1ATD
carrier rate to those without such a family
history, all significantly higher than the
controls,” the authors write.
“This finding suggests that increased lung
cancer risk among α1ATD carriers is
independent of a family history of cancer.”
“In summary, our findings demonstrate a
paradigm in lung cancer etiology research
and risk assessment that incorporates
clinical and genetic markers for lung damage
into a gene-environment interaction,” they
conclude.
“This knowledge may prove to be useful in
further understanding the pathologic
mechanisms of lung cancer development and in
refining lung cancer risk assessment.”
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