Mueller Christine M, Caporaso Neil, Greene Mark H
Clinical Genetics Branch, Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health/DHHS, Rockville, MD 20852, USA.
Urol Oncol. 2008 Sep-Oct;26(5):451-64. doi: 10.1016/j.urolonc.2008.02.016. Epub 2008 Jun 18.
Environmental exposures, including tobacco smoke and occupational exposure to aromatic amines, have been implicated in bladder cancer etiology. However, the pathogenesis of urinary bladder transitional cell carcinoma remains incompletely defined. In epidemiologic studies, family history confers a 2-fold increase in bladder cancer risk, but it is uncertain whether this represents evidence of a genetic and/or a shared environmental basis for familial aggregation. Polymorphisms in genes involved in the metabolism of environmental toxins (e.g., NAT2) clearly modify individual susceptibility to bladder cancer. A genetic predisposition has also been suggested by case reports describing multiple-case families, and the development of bladder cancer in association with several well-described Mendelian disorders (e.g., HNPCC, retinoblastoma). Here we update a previously reported family, report a new multiple-case kindred, critically review previously reported bladder cancer families, and the epidemiologic literature related to family history of transitional cell carcinoma of the urinary tract (TCCUT) as a risk factor, as well as provide a brief summary of genetic factors that have been implicated in TCCUT risk. We conclude that familial TCCUT is either very uncommon or significantly under-reported, perhaps on the assumption that this is an environmental rather than a genetic disorder. The interaction between multiple genetic and environmental factors has made it challenging to identify genetic components responsible for many common diseases; therefore, a proposed genome-wide association study (GWAS) for urinary bladder cancer may help to clarify the etiologic role of the candidate genetic pathways reviewed here, as well as characterize gene/environment interactions that contribute to TCCUT carcinogenesis.
包括烟草烟雾和职业性接触芳香胺在内的环境暴露已被认为与膀胱癌的病因有关。然而,膀胱移行细胞癌的发病机制仍未完全明确。在流行病学研究中,家族史会使患膀胱癌的风险增加两倍,但尚不确定这是否代表家族聚集存在遗传和/或共同环境基础的证据。参与环境毒素代谢的基因(如NAT2)中的多态性明显改变个体对膀胱癌的易感性。描述多病例家族的病例报告以及与几种明确的孟德尔疾病(如遗传性非息肉病性结直肠癌、视网膜母细胞瘤)相关的膀胱癌发生情况也提示了遗传易感性。在此,我们更新了之前报道的一个家族,报告了一个新的多病例家族,批判性地回顾了之前报道的膀胱癌家族,以及与尿路移行细胞癌(TCCUT)家族史作为危险因素相关的流行病学文献,并简要总结了与TCCUT风险相关的遗传因素。我们得出结论,家族性TCCUT要么非常罕见,要么报告严重不足,这可能是基于其被认为是一种环境而非遗传疾病的假设。多种遗传和环境因素之间的相互作用使得识别导致许多常见疾病的遗传成分具有挑战性;因此,拟议的膀胱癌全基因组关联研究(GWAS)可能有助于阐明本文所综述的候选遗传途径的病因学作用,以及确定促成TCCUT致癌的基因/环境相互作用。