Genetic variations indicate risk of recurrence, secondary cancer among head and neck cancer patients

Source: www.eurekalert.org Author: public release Eighteen single-point genetic variations indicate risk of recurrence for early-stage head and neck cancer patients and their likelihood of developing a second type of cancer, researchers at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center reported at the American Association for Cancer Research Frontiers in Cancer Prevention Research Conference. The team examined 241 single nucleotide polymorphisms - variations of a single DNA building block in a gene - in eight genes involved in the creation of micro RNA (miRNA), small bits of RNA that regulate genes, and 130 miRNA binding sites on host genes where miRNAs exert their effects on regulating gene expression. "We focus on miRNA pathways because these small molecules regulate between one third and half of genes," said senior author Xifeng Wu, M.D., Ph.D., professor in M. D. Anderson's Department of Epidemiology in the Division of Cancer Prevention and Population Sciences. "Genetic variations in miRNA biogenesis genes and miRNA binding sites have been associated with the risk of having multiple solid tumors, so we hypothesized that these variations might be associated with the risk of recurrence or secondary primary tumors in these patients," Wu said. About 10 percent of patients have a recurrence, and 15-25 percent go on to develop secondary primary tumors. The team conducted a case-control study of 150 patients with recurrence or a second cancer and 300 patients without either. They found eighteen SNPs to be associated with recurrence/secondary cancer risk, including eleven SNPs in three miRNA biogenesis [...]

2009-12-08T18:30:22-07:00December, 2009|Oral Cancer News|

Gene study finds link to cancer of thyroid

Source: nytimes.com Author: Nicholas Wade Scientists have identified two genetic variations that account for 57 percent of cases of thyroid cancer, a finding that could lead to earlier detection among people at high risk for the disease. The report, from the Icelandic company Decode Genetics, may also lead to a resurgence of interest in the quest for the genetic roots of other common maladies like heart disease and schizophrenia. Genetic variants for many such diseases have been identified, but most have turned out to account for a disappointingly small percentage of cases. A scientific team led by Julius Gudmundsson of Decode Genetics reported Friday in the journal Nature Genetics that the two variants each lie at a site on the human genome near genes that control development of the thyroid gland. The variants are changes in a single chemical unit of the genome, which is some three billion units in length. Compared with people who have neither variant, “the risk associated with these variants was almost sixfold, which is quite extraordinary,” said Dr. Erich M. Sturgis, a head and neck surgeon at the M. D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston who was not connected with the research. Dr. James A. Fagin, chief of endocrinology at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York, said the new study was a significant advance, noting that the Decode Genetics scientists had bolstered their results by replicating the findings among Icelanders in two other populations of European descent, in Columbus, Ohio, and in Spain. [...]

2009-02-08T18:21:44-07:00February, 2009|Oral Cancer News|
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