• Etiologie

  • Interactions gènes-environnement

  • Vessie

Modification of Occupational Exposures on Bladder Cancer Risk by Common Genetic Polymorphisms

A partir de données de deux études incluant 2 258 cas et 2 410 patients, cette étude évalue l'association entre une exposition professionnelle à des fluides de coupe dans les activités d'usinage de métaux, 16 polymorphismes de gènes liés au cancer de la vessie, et le risque de développer la maladie

Few studies have demonstrated gene/environment interactions in cancer research. Using data on high-risk occupations for 2258 case patients and 2410 control patients from two bladder cancer studies, we observed that three of 16 known or candidate bladder cancer susceptibility variants displayed statistically significant and consistent evidence of additive interactions; specifically, the GSTM1 deletion polymorphism (P interaction ≤ .001), rs11892031 (UGT1A, P interaction = .01), and rs798766 (TMEM129-TACC3-FGFR3, P interaction = .03). There was limited evidence for multiplicative interactions. When we examined detailed data on a prevalent occupational exposure associated with increased bladder cancer risk, straight metalworking fluids, we also observed statistically significant additive interaction for rs798766 (TMEM129-TACC3-FGFR3, P interaction = .02), with the interaction more apparent in patients with tumors positive for FGFR3 expression. All statistical tests were two-sided. The interaction we observed for rs798766 (TMEM129-TACC3-FGFR3) with specific exposure to straight metalworking fluids illustrates the value of integrating germline genetic variation, environmental exposures, and tumor marker data to provide insight into the mechanisms of bladder carcinogenesis.

Journal of the National Cancer Institute

Voir le bulletin