4.6 Article

CYP2A6 reduced activity gene variants confer reduction in lung cancer risk in African American smokers-findings from two independent populations

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CARCINOGENESIS
卷 36, 期 1, 页码 99-103

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OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/carcin/bgu235

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  1. University Endowed Chair in Addictions for the Department of Psychiatry
  2. National Institutes of Health [R01 CA092447, U01DA020830, P50CA070907, R01CA127219, K07CA172294]
  3. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [MOP86471, TMH109787]
  4. Center for Translational and Public Health Genomics of the Duncan Family Institute for Cancer Prevention and Risk Assessment at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
  5. Centre for Addiction and Mental Health and the CAMH foundation
  6. Canada Foundation for Innovation [20289, 16014]
  7. Ontario Ministry of Research and Innovation

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We investigated genetic variation in CYP2A6 in relation to lung cancer risk among African American smokers, a high-risk population. Previously, we found that CYP2A6, a nicotine/nitrosamine metabolism gene, was associated with lung cancer risk in European Americans, but smoking habits, lung cancer risk and CYP2A6 gene variants differ significantly between European and African ancestry populations. Herein, African American ever-smokers, drawn from two independent lung cancer case-control studies, were genotyped for reduced activity CYP2A6 alleles and grouped by predicted metabolic activity. Lung cancer risk in the Southern Community Cohort Study (n = 494) was lower among CYP2A6 reduced versus normal metabolizers, as estimated by multivariate conditional logistic regression [odds ratio (OR) = 0.44; 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.26-0.73] and by unconditional logistic regression (OR = 0.62; 95% CI = 0.41-0.94). The association was replicated in an independent study from MD Anderson Cancer Center (n = 407) (OR = 0.64; 95% CI = 0.42-0.98), and pooling the studies yielded an OR of 0.64 (95% CI = 0.48-0.86). Exploratory analyses revealed a significant interaction between CYP2A6 genotype and sex on the risk for lung cancer (Southern Community Cohort Study: P = 0.04; MD Anderson: P = 0.03; Pooled studies: P = 0.002) with a CYP2A6 effect in men only. These findings support a contribution of genetic variation in CYP2A6 to lung cancer risk among African American smokers, particularly men, whereby CYP2A6 genotypes associated with reduced metabolic activity confer a lower risk of developing lung cancer.

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