Literature DB >> 22664550

Basal cell carcinoma: stressful life events and the tumor environment.

Christopher P Fagundes1, Ronald Glaser, Sheri L Johnson, Rebecca R Andridge, Eric V Yang, Michael P Di Gregorio, Min Chen, David R Lambert, Scott D Jewell, Mark A Bechtel, Dean W Hearne, Joel B Herron, Janice K Kiecolt-Glaser.   

Abstract

CONTEXT: Child emotional maltreatment can result in lasting immune dysregulation that may be heightened in the context of more recent life stress. Basal cell carcinoma (BCC) is the most common skin cancer, and the immune system plays a prominent role in tumor appearance and progression.
OBJECTIVE: To address associations among recent severe life events, childhood parental emotional maltreatment, depression, and messenger RNA (mRNA) coding for immune markers associated with BCC tumor progression and regression.
DESIGN: We collected information about early parent-child experiences, severe life events in the past year as assessed by the Life Events and Difficulties Schedule, depression, and mRNA for immune markers associated with BCC tumor progression and regression from patients with BCC tumors.
SETTING: University medical center. PARTICIPANTS: Ninety-one patients with BCC (ages, 23-92 years) who had a previous BCC tumor. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The expression of 4 BCC tumor mRNA markers (CD25, CD3ε, intercellular adhesion molecule 1, and CD68) that have been linked to BCC tumor progression and regression were assessed in BCC tumor biopsy specimens.
RESULTS: Both maternal and paternal emotional maltreatment interacted with the occurrence of severe life events to predict the local immune response to the tumor (adjusted P = .009 and P = .03, respectively). Among BCC patients who had experienced a severe life event within the past year, those who were emotionally maltreated by their mothers (P = .007) or fathers (P = .02) as children had a poorer immune response to the BCC tumor. Emotional maltreatment was unrelated to BCC immune responses among those who did not experience a severe life event. Depressive symptoms were not associated with the local tumor immune response.
CONCLUSIONS: Troubled early parent-child relationships, in combination with a severe life event in the past year, predicted immune responses to a BCC tumor. The immunoreactivity observed in BCCs and the surrounding stroma reflects an anti-tumor-specific immune response that can be altered by stress.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22664550      PMCID: PMC3890083          DOI: 10.1001/archgenpsychiatry.2011.1535

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Gen Psychiatry        ISSN: 0003-990X


  59 in total

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  26 in total

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10.  Gender specific association of child abuse and adult cardiovascular disease in a sample of patients with basal cell carcinoma.

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