4.6 Article

Population-based, Case-Control-Family Design to Investigate Genetic and Environmental Influences on Melanoma Risk Australian Melanoma Family Study

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
Volume 170, Issue 12, Pages 1541-1554

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/aje/kwp307

Keywords

case-control studies; environmental exposure; family; genetic predisposition to disease; melanoma; risk factors

Funding

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia (NHMRC) [107359, 211172, 402761]
  2. Cancer Councils of New South Wales, Victoria [77/00, 06/10]
  3. Queensland [371]
  4. US National Institutes of Health [CA-83115-01A2]
  5. NHMRC [520018]
  6. Victorian Cancer Agency Early Career Seed Grant [ECSG07_010]
  7. University of Sydney Medical Foundation

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Discovering and understanding genetic risk factors for melanoma and their interactions with phenotype, sun exposure, and other risk factors could lead to new strategies for melanoma control. This paper describes the Australian Melanoma Family Study, which uses a multicenter, population-based, case-control-family design. From 2001 to 2005, the authors recruited 1,164 probands including 629 cases with histopathologically confirmed, first-primary cutaneous melanoma diagnosed before age 40 years, 240 population-based controls frequency matched for age, and 295 spouse/friend controls. Information on lifetime sun exposure, phenotype, and residence history was collected for probands and nearly 4,000 living relatives. More than 3,000 subjects donated a blood sample. Proxy-reported information was collected for childhood sun exposure and deceased relatives. Important features of this study include the population-based, family-based design; a focus on early onset disease; probands from 3 major cities differing substantially in solar ultraviolet exposure and melanoma incidence; a population at high risk because of high ultraviolet exposure and susceptible pigmentation phenotypes; population-based, spouse/friend, and sibling controls; systematic recruitment of relatives of case and control probands; self and parent reports of childhood sun exposure; and objective clinical skin examinations. The authors discuss methodological and analytical issues related to the study design and conduct, as well as the potentially novel insights the study can deliver.

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