Kushaldeep Kaur Sodhi1, Charu Bahl1, Navneet Singh2, Digamber Behera2, Siddharth Sharma1. 1. Department of Biotechnology, Thapar University, Patiala, Punjab 147002, India. 2. Department of Pulmonary Medicine, Post Graduate Institute of Education & Medical Research (PGIMER), Sector 14, Chandigarh, India.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To find the association of two pre-miRNA polymorphisms with risk of lung cancer in North Indians. MATERIALS & METHODS: Genotyping of 250 cases and 255 controls for miR-146a and miR-196a2 using PCR-RFLP. RESULTS: Heterozygous subjects showed a risk toward lung cancer (LC), especially for adenocarcinoma (OR: 1.82; 95% CI: 1.04-3.20; p = 0.03) in miR-146a gene. TT genotype for miR-196a2 gene also showed 3.2-fold risk toward LC and the risk was fivefold higher for squamous cell carcinoma. Survival rate was significantly lower in subjects with TT genotype as compared with the CC genotype in miR-196a2. CONCLUSION: Both the single nucleotide polymorphism variants showed a positive association toward risk of lung cancer.
OBJECTIVE: To find the association of two pre-miRNA polymorphisms with risk of lung cancer in North Indians. MATERIALS & METHODS: Genotyping of 250 cases and 255 controls for miR-146a and miR-196a2 using PCR-RFLP. RESULTS: Heterozygous subjects showed a risk toward lung cancer (LC), especially for adenocarcinoma (OR: 1.82; 95% CI: 1.04-3.20; p = 0.03) in miR-146a gene. TT genotype for miR-196a2 gene also showed 3.2-fold risk toward LC and the risk was fivefold higher for squamous cell carcinoma. Survival rate was significantly lower in subjects with TT genotype as compared with the CC genotype in miR-196a2. CONCLUSION: Both the single nucleotide polymorphism variants showed a positive association toward risk of lung cancer.
Entities:
Keywords:
genotype; lung cancer; miR-146a; miR-196a2; single nucleotide polymorphism