| Literature DB >> 31114287 |
Mohammed Alaouna1, Rodney Hull2, Clement Penny1, Zodwa Dlamini2.
Abstract
Esophageal cancer (EC) is an extremely aggressive cancer with one of the highest mortality rates. The cancer is generally only diagnosed at the later stages and has a poor 5-year survival rate due to the limited treatment options. China and South Africa are two countries with a very high prevalence rate of EC. EC rates in South Africa have been on the increase, and esophageal squamous cell carcinoma is the predominant subtype and a primary cause of cancer-related deaths in the black and male mixed ancestry populations in South Africa. The incidence of EC is highest in the Eastern Cape Province, especially in the rural areas such as the Transkei, where the consumption of foods contaminated with Fusarium verticillioides is thought to play a major contributing role to the incidence of EC. China is responsible for almost half of all new cases of EC globally. In China, the prevalence of EC varies greatly. However, the two main areas of high prevalence are the southern Taihang Mountain area (Linxian, Henan Province) and the north Jiangsu area. In both countries, environmental toxins play a major role in increasing the chance that an individual will develop EC. These associative factors include tobacco use, alcohol consumption, nutritional deficiencies and exposure to environmental toxins. However, genetic polymorphisms also play a role in predisposing individuals to EC. These include single-nucleotide polymorphisms that can be found in both protein-coding genes and in non-coding sequences such as miRNAs. The aim of this review is to summarize the contribution of genetic polymorphisms to EC in South Africa and to compare and contrast this to the genetic polymorphisms observed in EC in the most comprehensively studied population group, the Chinese.Entities:
Keywords: China; ESCC; South Africa; adenocarcinoma; alcohol; diet; esophageal squamous cell carcinoma; smoking
Year: 2019 PMID: 31114287 PMCID: PMC6485038 DOI: 10.2147/CEG.S182000
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Exp Gastroenterol ISSN: 1178-7023
Figure 1Incidence and mortality rates of EC.
Notes: (A) Worldwide in both sexes and (B) in men and women in Africa. The highest incidence rate is in South Africa and East Africa, with the highest incidence in both sexes being found in Kenya, Uganda and Malawi. A high incidence rate of EC is found in both sexes in Guinea Bissau. (C) The incidence and mortality rates per 100,000 in South Africa and the Eastern Africa and Southern Africa regions is much higher in males than in females.4
Abbreviation: EC, esophageal cancer.
Alcohol consumption and tobacco use in China and South Africa
| Males | Females | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of new cases | Crude incidence/100,000 | ASIRW | Number of new cases | Crude | ASIRW | |||||||
| China | 13,161 | 26.46 | 18.03 | 5,763 | 10.85 | 5.81 | ||||||
| South Africa | 848 | 3.2 | 4.7 | 650 | 2.35 | 2.67 | ||||||
| Average 2003–2005 | Average 2008–2010 | Males | Females | |||||||||
| 4.9 | 6.7 | 10.9 | 2.2 | |||||||||
| Male | Female | Total 2015 | ||||||||||
| 2000 | 2015 | 2000 | 2015 | |||||||||
| 55.8 | 47.6 | 3.5 | 1.8 | 25.3 | ||||||||
| Average 2003–2005 | Average 2008–2010 | Males | Females | |||||||||
| 10.1 | 11.0 | 11.4 | 4.2 | |||||||||
| Male | Female | Total 2015 | ||||||||||
| 2000 | 2015 | 2000 | 2015 | |||||||||
| 35.3 | 31.4 | 12.5 | 6.5 | 18.4 | ||||||||
Notes: The amount of pure alcohol consumed per capita and the prevalence of tobacco use in China and South Africa are presented in the above table. For alcohol consumption, data are shown for the periods 2003–2005 and 2008–2010 and for males and females in 2010. The trend observed in both countries is an increase in alcohol consumption over time.187 In terms of tobacco use, data are given as percentages of the population that uses tobacco.
Abbreviations: ASIRW, age-standardized incidence rate by world standard population.
Figure 2Geographic locations of the four high-risk areas in China.
Notes: The counties Cixian, Shexian and Linxian are located on the borders of the Henan and Hebei provinces. These three counties are located in an area with a radius of 60 km. The Taihang Mountains straddle the border of the Shanxi and Hebei provinces and have some of the highest mortality rates of esophageal cancer in the world. Another high-risk area for esophageal cancer is Yanting in Sichuan Province. Data from Lin et al.37
Comparison of the risk factors for adenocarcinoma and ESCC
| Factor | Adenocarcinoma | ESCC |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Gastroesophageal reflux disease | Approximately 6-fold increased risk, mainly in young adults | 50 times greater risk |
| Obesity | Strong increase in associated risk, linked to abdominal apidosity | Increased BMI commonly associated with a decreased risk of developing ESCC. May be due to reverse causation or other confounding factors |
| Tobacco smoking | Strong associated risk. Quitting smoking for 10 years or longer reduces the risk greatly | Greatly increased risk. From 3- to 9-fold increase in relative risk |
| Alcohol | No increase in risk | Consumption of alcohol increases the risk of developing ESCC between 2- and 6-fold |
| Diet | Increased dietary fat increases the risk of adenocarcinoma. Nutrients such as vitamin C, magnesium, folate, vitamin B6 and iron decrease the risk of adenocarcinoma | Most studies on specific foodstuffs show no relationship with ESCC risk. Fruits and vegetables decrease the risk of developing ESCC. Hot beverages and foods increase the risk of developing ESCC. |
| Exercise | Reduced risk | No clear association |
| No significant association between | ||
| Reproductive, sex-related factors | Menopause, oral contraceptives and hormone therapy all reduce the risk | Hormone therapy and menopause may have protective effects |
| Medicines | Both NSAIDs and statins decrease the risk of adenocarcinoma | Aspirin has been shown to reduce the risk and mortality of ESCC |
Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index; ESCC, esophageal squamous cell carcinoma.
Genetic polymorphisms affecting the genes related to changing the risk of developing esophageal cancer in South Africa and China
| Country and polymorphism | OR | Environmental factors | Postulated mechanisms/effect |
|---|---|---|---|
| rs10882379 | At 95% CI | No association with smoking and alcohol use | SNP is in the promoter region/decreased ESCC risk |
| rs829232 | At 95% CI | No association with smoking and alcohol use. | SNP is in the promoter/increased ESCC risk |
| rs2274223 at 10q23 | At 95% CI | No association with environmental factors | SNP in exon 26 of |
| rs11187870 | At 95% CI | No association with environmental factors | SNP is in the 3′UTR. Associated with increased risk of ESCC |
| Arg548Leu (rs17417407) | 0.75 at 95% CI | No evidence for an association with smoking or alcohol | Associated with a reduced risk of ESCC in the black population |
| NAT1 and NAT2 are the main Phase II xenobiotic metabolizing enzymes involved in either detoxification or activation of carcinogenic arylamines | |||
| NAT2 rs1565684 | At 95% CI | Alcohol consumption had no effect on ESCC risk | Genotype was associated with an increased risk for ESCC |
| NAT2 341 CC (rs1801280) | At 95% CI | In the black population group, smokers with this mutation had a higher risk of ESCC | Mutation resulted in decreased acetylation activity and reduced the risk for EC in mixed ancestry group |
| NAT1 and NAT2 slow/intermediate acetylation phenotype | 0.44 at 95% CI | NAT2 slow/intermediate acetylation/reduced risk of ESCC in mixed ancestry group | |
| CASP8 is an initiator of CASP3, a key regulator of apoptosis, and is important in cancer development and progression | |||
| rs1035142 G>T | At 95% CI | Associated with an increased risk of ESCC by negatively affecting the cells’ ability to undergo apoptosis | |
| (−652 6Ndel:302His) | 2.37 at 95% CI | Associated with ESCC in current smokers, but not in former smokers | Haplotype associated with ESCC in mixed ancestry population |
| Asp302His (rs1045485) | 1.42 at 95% CI | Suggestive association with increased ESCC risk in mixed ancestry population | |
| p53 can induce cell cycle arrest for DNA repair and/or apoptosis in response to cellular stress such as DNA damage or hypoxia | |||
| Arg72Pro (rs1042522) | At 95% CI | No significant association with tobacco use | Increased risk of EC in Han Province. Associated with Burkitt’s lymphoma |
| rs2909430 | 1.94 at 95% CI | Commonly observed in ESCC patients in high-risk area of China | |
| rs78378222 A => C | 3.22 at 95% CI | ||
| Polymorphisms in exon 4 | At 95% CI | Reactive mutagenic compounds form DNA adducts, which can cause nucleotide changes. TP53 plays an important role responding to DNA damage. Loss of function mutations will increase the threat posed by carcinogens | Strongly associated with EC |
| Small deletions, insertions and point mutations resulting in frame shifts or amino acid changes in exons 5–8 | Commonly observed in ESCC patients | ||
| 16 bp duplication in intron 3 resulting in loss of heterozygosity | 14 at 95% CI | Commonly observed in ESCC patients | |
Abbreviations: EC, esophageal cancer; ESCC, esophageal squamous cell carcinoma; rs, reference SNP cluster ID; SNP, single-nucleotide polymorphism.
Genetic polymorphisms in alcohol metabolizing enzymes associated with EC in South Africa and China
| Country and polymorphism | OR | Environmental factors | Postulated mechanisms/effect |
|---|---|---|---|
| ALDH2 is responsible for the conversion of acetaldehyde to nontoxic acetate | |||
| rs671 at 12q24 | At 95% CI | No evidence for an association with smoking or alcohol | Mutation increases the risk of ESCC in Kazak and Han populations and leads to a poor ESCC prognosis in Kazak population. The variant A allele of rs671 has a reduced ability to metabolize acetaldehyde |
| At 95% CI | There was a difference in tobacco and alcohol use between patients and controls | ALDH2*2 allele results in a glutamate to lysine substitution, leading to an increased risk for EC | |
| At 95% CI | Inactive | Genotype frequencies of the inactive enzyme (GA heterozygote) are higher in male patients with ESCC | |
| ALDH2*2 results in an allele E487K results in change of glutamate to lysine | 2.35 at 95% CI | Associated with increased sensitivity to alcohol consumption | The low activity of |
| At 95% CI 0.70 | Nominal evidence of association with ESCC in current smokers | Significantly associated with a reduced risk of ESCC in the mixed ancestry population | |
| ADH catalyzes the reversible oxidation of alcohols to corresponding aldehydes or ketones | |||
| 3.67 at 95% CI | Moderate-to-heavy drinkers with the less-active | The polymorphism influences the enzyme activity. The less-active enzyme is associated with an increased ESCC risk in males | |
| (Arg) at codon 48 8 | 1.67 at 95% CI | There was a significant risk for ESCC attached to alcohol consumption | Increases the risk of EC |
| 1.20 at 95% CI | Significantly associated with smoking | The variant T allele significantly increases ESCC risk. Rs1789924 is located at 5′ near the gene | |
| 2.19 at 95% CI | Is significantly associated with increased risk for EC in black patients | ||
| 0.52 at 95% CI | Associated with ESCC in current smokers | Is associated with decreased ESCC risk in a mixed ancestry population | |
Abbreviations: EC, esophageal cancer; ESCC, esophageal squamous cell carcinoma; rs, reference SNP cluster ID; SNP, single-nucleotide polymorphism.
GST polymorphisms involved in esophageal cancer
| Gene/mutation | OR | Interaction with environmental factors | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| rs1695 | ||||
| rs1138272 | ||||
| At 95% CI | Increased risk in both black Xhosa and mixed ancestry populations in South Africa | |||
| 313G divergence | 3.60 | Decreased activity of the GSTP1 variant within the tobacco smokers, alcohol users or those utilizing wood or charcoal for cooking and heating has a higher risk of developing ESCC | ||
| GSTM1 | ||||
| 1.71 at 95% CI | The homozygous | |||
| 2.17 at 95% CI | ||||
| GSTT2 gene | ||||
| 0.71 At 95% CI | ||||
Note: The table lists the polymorphisms affecting the three GST genes GSTP1, GSTM1 and GSTT2 in South Africa and China and relates how these polymorphisms affect the risk for esophageal cancer.
Abbreviations: ESCC, esophageal squamous cell carcinoma; rs, reference SNP cluster ID; SNP, single-nucleotide polymorphism.
Genetic polymorphisms in DNA mismatch repair genes that influence the risk of developing esophageal carcinoma in South Africa and China
| Mutation | OR | Effect on ESCC risk |
|---|---|---|
| G/G vs A/A or A/G genotype polymorphism in | 2.71 at 95% CI | Allied with increased ESCC susceptibility in mixed ancestry South Africans |
| G-allele in | 1.73 at 95% CI | Allied with increased ESCC susceptibility in mixed ancestry South Africans |
| A-allele in | 2.07 at 95% CI | Allied with increased ESCC susceptibility in mixed ancestry South Africans. Compromises the structure and function of MLH3 protein. The ternary complex formed between heterodimers MSH2–MSH3 and MLH1–PMS1 is a critical incident in ESCC development |
| DNA mismatch repair gene | 3.36 at 95% CI | Polymorphisms increase the risk for EC |
| DNA mismatch repair gene | 1.70 at 95% CI | Polymorphisms increase the risk for EC |
| DNA lesion repair enzyme | At 95% CI | Some polymorphisms in the gene lead to increased risk of |
| At 95% CI | Significantly increase the risk for developing ESCC | |
| 0.51 at 95% CI | Associated with a protective effect on ESCC progression | |
| 2.20 at 95% CI | Increased risk of ESCC metastasis | |
| 2.21 at 95% CI | Significantly increased risk for developing ESCC | |
Note: The table describes genetic polymorphisms in DNA repair pathway genes that are found in South African and Chinese populations.
Abbreviations: ESCC, esophageal squamous cell carcinoma; rs, Reference SNP cluster ID; SNP, single-nucleotide polymorphism.
Genetic polymorphisms in CYP/CYP450 genes relating to ESCC in South Africa and China
| Country and polymorphism | OR | Interaction with the environment | Effect on ESCC risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| <a> | |||
| 1053C > T (rs2031920) | 5.04 | Changes in the 5′ UTR of the gene changes the transcription of the gene | |
| (*c1/*c1) homozygote (*c1/*c2) heterozygote (*c2/*c2) mutated homozygote | 2.89 | In moderate-to-heavy drinkers, the CYP2E1 (*c1/*c1) genotype significantly increased the risk of cancer | The c1/c1 genotype correlated with susceptibility to EC. Differences in |
| Genotype frequencies were higher among patients with ESCC | |||
| <a> | |||
| Found in 65%–73% of Chinese individuals | Splicing defect preventing expression | ||
| Found in 70% of Chinese individuals | Splicing defect preventing expression | ||
| Found in 0.9% of Chinese individuals | |||
| Found in 0.9% of Chinese individuals | Splicing defect leading to alternatively spliced mRNA | ||
| 1.00 | Black subjects are more likely to convert environmental toxins they are exposed to into more reactive intermediates that may play a role in the initiation of EC | A potentially high CYP3A5 activity may increase EC risk. | |
| CYP3A homozygous (GG) heterozygotes (GA) | Declined ESCC risk in homozygous Increased risk of ESCC in heterozygous | ||
| <b>CYP1A1 | |||
| 1.25 | Polymorphism increases the risk of ESCC | ||
| 3.35 | CYP1A1 | Individuals carrying | |
Abbreviations: EC, esophageal cancer; ESCC, esophageal squamous cell carcinoma; rs, reference SNP cluster ID; SNP, single-nucleotide polymorphism.
The extent to which different risk factors influence the odds of developing ESCC in Swedish males and females165
| Risk factor | OR at 95% CI | |
|---|---|---|
| Male | Female | |
| Obesity | 5.4 | 10.3 |
| Smoking | 2.8 | 5.3 |
| Reflux | 3.4 | 4.6 |
Abbreviation: ESCC, esophageal squamous cell carcinoma.