Literature DB >> 17103073

Host cytokine genotype is related to adverse prognosis and systemic inflammation in gastro-oesophageal cancer.

Chris Deans1, Matthew Rose-Zerilli, Stephen Wigmore, James Ross, Martin Howell, Alan Jackson, Robert Grimble, Kenneth Fearon.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Systemic inflammation has been linked with reduced survival in cancer, however, the role of the host cytokine genotype versus tumour phenotype in the generation of this response is not clearly established. This study examined the relationship between cytokine polymorphisms (IL-1beta 511, IL-6 174, IL-10 1082, TNFalpha 308 and LTalpha +252) and serum cytokine concentrations, serum CRP concentration and survival duration in patients with gastro-oesophageal malignancy.
METHODS: Two hundred and three newly diagnosed patients with gastric or oesophageal cancer had serum CRP and cytokine concentrations determined by ELISA. SNP genotyping was performed by Taqman allelic discrimination genotyping and compared with the genotype observed in 266 healthy volunteers. Clinico-pathological information was collected prospectively and survival duration was recorded.
RESULTS: Distribution of the cytokine genotypes was similar between patients and controls. The IL-6 174 CC and IL-10 1082 GG genotypes were associated with elevated serum CRP (P = .03, P = .01, respectively; Mann-Whitney U test) and sTNF-R (P = .015, P = .02) concentrations. These genotypes were also associated with reduced survival duration (P = .01, P = .047; log-rank test). TNFalpha AA genotype was also associated with reduced survival duration on univariate (P = .032) and multivariate analysis (P = .006, multivariate model), but not with inflammatory markers. No other cytokine polymorphisms were associated with systemic inflammatory markers or prognosis.
CONCLUSIONS: There is a pro-inflammatory cytokine haplotype (IL-6 CC, IL-10 GG, TNFalpha AA) that is associated with adverse prognosis that may act, at least in part, through an inflammatory mediated mechanism. Determining patients' cytokine haplotype may improve prognostication and allow stratification for intervention studies.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17103073     DOI: 10.1245/s10434-006-9122-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Surg Oncol        ISSN: 1068-9265            Impact factor:   5.344


  26 in total

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