| Literature DB >> 29720177 |
Juhi Ojha1, Iryna Dyagil2, Stuart C Finch3, Robert F Reiss4, Adam J de Smith1, Semira Gonseth5, Mi Zhou1, Helen M Hansen1, Amy L Sherborne1, Jean Nakamura1, Paige M Bracci1, Nataliya Gudzenko2, Maureen Hatch6, Nataliya Babkina2, Mark P Little6, Vadim V Chumak2, Kyle M Walsh1, Dimitry Bazyka2, Joseph L Wiemels1, Lydia B Zablotska7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) was the predominant leukemia in a recent study of Chornobyl cleanup workers from Ukraine exposed to radiation (UR-CLL). Radiation risks of CLL significantly increased with increasing bone marrow radiation doses. Current analysis aimed to clarify whether the increased risks were due to radiation or to genetic mutations in the Ukrainian population.Entities:
Keywords: Chernobyl; Chornobyl; Chronic lymphocytic leukemia; Ionizing radiation; Mutation; Telomere
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29720177 PMCID: PMC5930419 DOI: 10.1186/s12940-018-0387-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health ISSN: 1476-069X Impact factor: 5.984
Characteristics of Ukrainian CLL cases
| Variable | Exposed (UR-CLL)a | Unexposed (UN-CLL)b |
|---|---|---|
| Cases, N | 16 | 28 |
| Age at diagnosis, median (range), years | 61 (49–78) | 58 (41–76) |
| Sex | Male | Male |
| Diagnosis year, range | 1986–2006 | 2002–2014 |
| Blood count, median (range), 10 × 9 per mL | 13 (2–55) | 54 (16–122) |
| Rai stage, n (%) | NaNc | |
| 0 | 1 (6) | |
| 1 | 3 (19) | |
| 2 | 9 (56) | |
| 3 | 3 (19) | |
| Smoking history, n (%) | NaNc | |
| never or former | 9 (56) | |
| less than 20 cigarettes/day | 5 (31) | |
| 20 or more cigarettes/day | 2 (13) | |
| Alcohol consumption | NaNc | |
| never | 4 (25) | |
| no more than 2–3 times a month | 7 (44) | |
| once a week or more | 5 (31) | |
| Bone marrow radiation dose, median (range), milligray (mGy) | 40.56 (0.24–1536.24) | NAd |
| 4 (25) | 0 (0) | |
| Telomere length, median (range), kilobytes (kb) | 1.58 (0.12–9.06) | 0.30 (0.09–2.47) |
| Survival after diagnosis, median (range), years | 4 (1–18) | NaNc |
Based on 15 cases who have died by the end of follow-up
aCLL cases in Chornobyl cleanup workers from Ukraine exposed to ionizing gamma-ray radiation
bSex- and age-matched CLL cases from the general population of Ukraine unexposed to ionizing radiation
cNaN = Not Available
dNA = Not Applicable
Fig. 1Genomic landscape of CLL cases. (a) Prevalence of driver mutations, as defined in Landau et al. [23] in Western-CLL (dbGaP/Western; W-CLL cases from previous sequencing studies, light gray bars), Chornobyl cleanup workers with CLL (Exposed; UR-CLL, black bars) and unexposed Ukrainian CLL cases (UnExpsed; UN-CLL, gray bars). The asterisks identify significant comparisons (p < 0.05); (b) Tiling plot of predicted damaging mutations in exposed (UR-CLL) and unexposed (UN-CLL) Ukrainian patients. Horizontal rows depict mutations in a particular gene and functional category, and vertical columns represent individual patients (exposed and unexposed). Patients without mutations were excluded from the figure. Mutations are shaded according to their mutant allele fraction (MAF)
Fig. 2Telomere length comparison and associated mutations (a) Location and type of mutations associated with telomere maintenance pathway genes POT1 and (b) ATM. (c) Boxplot of estimated telomere length between exposed (UC-CLL) and unexposed (UN-CLL) Ukrainian samples. Fifty percent of the data is within the box, 75% within the whiskers, and outliers are noted by circles. A black line within the box depicts the median telomere length for the group