Literature DB >> 1727678

Lung cancer histologic type and family history of cancer.

T A Sellers1, R C Elston, L D Atwood, H Rothschild.   

Abstract

The authors studied 300 patients with pathologically confirmed cancer of the trachea, bronchus, or lung in a 16-parish (county) area of southern Louisiana. Squamous-cell carcinoma was observed most frequently among these patients (39.3%), with nearly equal numbers of adenocarcinoma (25.0%) and small cell varieties (25.5%). Patients with large cell cancer, the least frequent type (10.3%), were 4.6 years younger on average than those with small cell (P less than 0.05) or squamous cell (P less than 0.05) neoplasias. Squamous cell neoplasia was more frequent among men (45.5%) than women (22.0%) (P less than 0.05). To assess whether family history differed according to the histologic cell type of the index family member, 248 patients were interviewed with regard to a family history of neoplasia. Those with small cell cancer had the highest family-size adjusted mean number of lung cancers per family (0.28). This was 2.2 times greater than the mean number of affected persons among relatives of patients with adenocarcinoma and 1.5 times greater than the mean for the families of patients with large or squamous cell types. However, none of these differences was statistically significant. Similar results were obtained when the total number of cancers at all sites was tabulated. Probands with small cell neoplasia were again most likely to have a positive family history, but the differences between histologic types were small. Although these data suggest an association, a larger study sample is required to determine conclusively whether or not a family history of lung cancer differs according to histologic type.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1727678     DOI: 10.1002/1097-0142(19920101)69:1<86::aid-cncr2820690116>3.0.co;2-s

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer        ISSN: 0008-543X            Impact factor:   6.860


  3 in total

1.  A genome-wide association study of lung cancer identifies a region of chromosome 5p15 associated with risk for adenocarcinoma.

Authors:  Maria Teresa Landi; Nilanjan Chatterjee; Kai Yu; Lynn R Goldin; Alisa M Goldstein; Melissa Rotunno; Lisa Mirabello; Kevin Jacobs; William Wheeler; Meredith Yeager; Andrew W Bergen; Qizhai Li; Dario Consonni; Angela C Pesatori; Sholom Wacholder; Michael Thun; Ryan Diver; Martin Oken; Jarmo Virtamo; Demetrius Albanes; Zhaoming Wang; Laurie Burdette; Kimberly F Doheny; Elizabeth W Pugh; Cathy Laurie; Paul Brennan; Rayjean Hung; Valerie Gaborieau; James D McKay; Mark Lathrop; John McLaughlin; Ying Wang; Ming-Sound Tsao; Margaret R Spitz; Yufei Wang; Hans Krokan; Lars Vatten; Frank Skorpen; Egil Arnesen; Simone Benhamou; Christine Bouchard; Andres Metspalu; Andres Metsapalu; Tonu Vooder; Mari Nelis; Kristian Välk; John K Field; Chu Chen; Gary Goodman; Patrick Sulem; Gudmar Thorleifsson; Thorunn Rafnar; Timothy Eisen; Wiebke Sauter; Albert Rosenberger; Heike Bickeböller; Angela Risch; Jenny Chang-Claude; H Erich Wichmann; Kari Stefansson; Richard Houlston; Christopher I Amos; Joseph F Fraumeni; Sharon A Savage; Pier Alberto Bertazzi; Margaret A Tucker; Stephen Chanock; Neil E Caporaso
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  2009-10-15       Impact factor: 11.025

2.  Family history of cancer and nonmalignant lung diseases as risk factors for lung cancer.

Authors:  Ying Gao; Alisa M Goldstein; Dario Consonni; Angela C Pesatori; Sholom Wacholder; Margaret A Tucker; Neil E Caporaso; Lynn Goldin; Maria Teresa Landi
Journal:  Int J Cancer       Date:  2009-07-01       Impact factor: 7.396

3.  Positional cloning of the major quantitative trait locus underlying lung tumor susceptibility in mice.

Authors:  Zhongqiu Zhang; Manabu Futamura; Haris G Vikis; Min Wang; Jie Li; Yian Wang; Kun-Liang Guan; Ming You
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2003-10-28       Impact factor: 11.205

  3 in total

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