| Literature DB >> 30171605 |
Osmel Companioni1, Catalina Bonet1, Nadia García1,2, María José Ramírez-Lázaro3, Sergio Lario3, Jorge Mendoza4, Mª Magdalena Adrados5, Elvira Poves6, Laura Espinosa6, José Juan Pozo-Kreilinger7, Luís Ortega8, Luis Bujanda9, Angel Cosme10, Angel Ferrández11, Guillermo Muñoz12, Miriam Cuatrecasas13, Ignasi Elizalde14, Victoria Andreu15, Mª José Paules16, Beatriz Madrigal17, Jesús Barrio18, María Berdasco19, Xavier Calvet3, José Miguel Sanz-Anquela20, Javier P Gisbert4, Carlos A González1, Núria Sala1,2.
Abstract
Gastric carcinogenesis proceeds through a series of gastric cancer precursor lesions (GCPLs) leading to gastric cancer (GC) development. Although Helicobacter pylori infection initiates this process, genetic factors also play a role. We previously reported that genetic variability in MUC2 is associated with the evolution of GCPLs. In order to replicate previous results in an independent sample series and to explore whether genetic variability in other candidate genes plays a role in the evolution of GCPL, genomic DNA from 559 patients with GCPLs, recruited from 9 Spanish hospitals and followed for a mean of 12 years, was genotyped for 141 SNPs in 29 genes. After follow-up, 45.5% of the lesions remained stable, 37% regressed and 17.5% progressed to a more severe lesion. Genetic association with the evolution of the lesions (progression or regression) was analyzed by multinomial and binomial logistic regression. After correction for multiple comparisons, the results obtained confirmed the inverse association between MUC2 variants and the regression of the lesions. A significant association was also observed between NFKB1 and CD14 variants and the evolution of the lesions; interestingly, this association was with both progression and regression in the same direction, which could reflect the dual role of inflammation in cancer. Stratified analyses according to H. pylori virulence factors indicated some significant and differential effects but none of them passed the FDR test. These results confirm that genetic variability in MUC2, NFKB1 and CD14 may have a role in the evolution of the GCPLs along time and in gastric carcinogenesis.Entities:
Keywords: CD14; MUC2; NFKB1; gastric cancer precursor lesions; genetic association
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30171605 DOI: 10.1002/ijc.31839
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cancer ISSN: 0020-7136 Impact factor: 7.396