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No Association Between Variant N-acetyltransferase Genes, Cigarette Smoking and Prostate Cancer Susceptibility Among Men of African Descent

OBJECTIVE: We evaluated the individual and combination effects of NAT1, NAT2 and tobacco smoking in a case-control study of 219 incident prostate cancer (PCa) cases and 555 disease-free men. METHODS: Allelic discriminations for 15 NAT1 and NAT2 loci were detected in germ-line DNA samples using Taqma...

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Autores principales: Kidd, La Creis Renee, VanCleave, Tiva T., Doll, Mark A., Srivastava, Daya S., Thacker, Brandon, Komolafe, Oyeyemi, Pihur, Vasyl, Brock, Guy N., Hein, David W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Libertas Academica 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3122269/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21709725
http://dx.doi.org/10.4137/BIC.S6111
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author Kidd, La Creis Renee
VanCleave, Tiva T.
Doll, Mark A.
Srivastava, Daya S.
Thacker, Brandon
Komolafe, Oyeyemi
Pihur, Vasyl
Brock, Guy N.
Hein, David W.
author_facet Kidd, La Creis Renee
VanCleave, Tiva T.
Doll, Mark A.
Srivastava, Daya S.
Thacker, Brandon
Komolafe, Oyeyemi
Pihur, Vasyl
Brock, Guy N.
Hein, David W.
author_sort Kidd, La Creis Renee
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: We evaluated the individual and combination effects of NAT1, NAT2 and tobacco smoking in a case-control study of 219 incident prostate cancer (PCa) cases and 555 disease-free men. METHODS: Allelic discriminations for 15 NAT1 and NAT2 loci were detected in germ-line DNA samples using Taqman polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assays. Single gene, gene-gene and gene-smoking interactions were analyzed using logistic regression models and multi-factor dimensionality reduction (MDR) adjusted for age and subpopulation stratification. MDR involves a rigorous algorithm that has ample statistical power to assess and visualize gene-gene and gene-environment interactions using relatively small samples sizes (i.e., 200 cases and 200 controls). RESULTS: Despite the relatively high prevalence of NAT1*10/*10 (40.1%), NAT2 slow (30.6%), and NAT2 very slow acetylator genotypes (10.1%) among our study participants, these putative risk factors did not individually or jointly increase PCa risk among all subjects or a subset analysis restricted to tobacco smokers. CONCLUSION: Our data do not support the use of N-acetyltransferase genetic susceptibilities as PCa risk factors among men of African descent; however, subsequent studies in larger sample populations are needed to confirm this finding.
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spelling pubmed-31222692011-06-24 No Association Between Variant N-acetyltransferase Genes, Cigarette Smoking and Prostate Cancer Susceptibility Among Men of African Descent Kidd, La Creis Renee VanCleave, Tiva T. Doll, Mark A. Srivastava, Daya S. Thacker, Brandon Komolafe, Oyeyemi Pihur, Vasyl Brock, Guy N. Hein, David W. Biomark Cancer Original Research OBJECTIVE: We evaluated the individual and combination effects of NAT1, NAT2 and tobacco smoking in a case-control study of 219 incident prostate cancer (PCa) cases and 555 disease-free men. METHODS: Allelic discriminations for 15 NAT1 and NAT2 loci were detected in germ-line DNA samples using Taqman polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assays. Single gene, gene-gene and gene-smoking interactions were analyzed using logistic regression models and multi-factor dimensionality reduction (MDR) adjusted for age and subpopulation stratification. MDR involves a rigorous algorithm that has ample statistical power to assess and visualize gene-gene and gene-environment interactions using relatively small samples sizes (i.e., 200 cases and 200 controls). RESULTS: Despite the relatively high prevalence of NAT1*10/*10 (40.1%), NAT2 slow (30.6%), and NAT2 very slow acetylator genotypes (10.1%) among our study participants, these putative risk factors did not individually or jointly increase PCa risk among all subjects or a subset analysis restricted to tobacco smokers. CONCLUSION: Our data do not support the use of N-acetyltransferase genetic susceptibilities as PCa risk factors among men of African descent; however, subsequent studies in larger sample populations are needed to confirm this finding. Libertas Academica 2011-02-03 /pmc/articles/PMC3122269/ /pubmed/21709725 http://dx.doi.org/10.4137/BIC.S6111 Text en © 2011 the author(s), publisher and licensee Libertas Academica Ltd. This is an open access article. Unrestricted non-commercial use is permitted provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Kidd, La Creis Renee
VanCleave, Tiva T.
Doll, Mark A.
Srivastava, Daya S.
Thacker, Brandon
Komolafe, Oyeyemi
Pihur, Vasyl
Brock, Guy N.
Hein, David W.
No Association Between Variant N-acetyltransferase Genes, Cigarette Smoking and Prostate Cancer Susceptibility Among Men of African Descent
title No Association Between Variant N-acetyltransferase Genes, Cigarette Smoking and Prostate Cancer Susceptibility Among Men of African Descent
title_full No Association Between Variant N-acetyltransferase Genes, Cigarette Smoking and Prostate Cancer Susceptibility Among Men of African Descent
title_fullStr No Association Between Variant N-acetyltransferase Genes, Cigarette Smoking and Prostate Cancer Susceptibility Among Men of African Descent
title_full_unstemmed No Association Between Variant N-acetyltransferase Genes, Cigarette Smoking and Prostate Cancer Susceptibility Among Men of African Descent
title_short No Association Between Variant N-acetyltransferase Genes, Cigarette Smoking and Prostate Cancer Susceptibility Among Men of African Descent
title_sort no association between variant n-acetyltransferase genes, cigarette smoking and prostate cancer susceptibility among men of african descent
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3122269/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21709725
http://dx.doi.org/10.4137/BIC.S6111
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