Bapat Bharati, Lindor Noralane M, Baron John, Siegmund Kim, Li Lin, Zheng Yingye, Haile Robert, Gallinger Steve, Jass Jeremy R, Young Joanne P, Cotterchio Michelle, Jenkins Mark, Grove John, Casey Graham, Thibodeau Stephen N, Bishop D Timothy, Hopper John L, Ahnen Dennis, Newcomb Polly A, Le Marchand Loic, Potter John D, Seminara Daniela
Department of Pathology and Lab Medicine, Mount Sinai Hospital, and Samuel Lunenfeld Research Institute, University of Toronto, 60 Murray Street, Box 30, Toronto, M5T 3L9, Ontario, Canada.
Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 2009 Mar;18(3):967-75. doi: 10.1158/1055-9965.EPI-08-0878. Epub 2009 Mar 3.
Family history is a strong predictor of colorectal cancer risk; however, a diagnosis of colorectal cancer among first-degree relatives has not been systematically investigated as a function of the colorectal cancer molecular subtypes related to tumor microsatellite instability (MSI) status. We investigated whether the observable familial colorectal cancer risks differed according to tumor MSI subtypes, stratified as MSI-High (>30% instability), MSI-Low (<30% instability), and MSS (no instability). Data from 3,143 population-based colorectal cancer cases from five institutions were assessed for family history according to the Amsterdam criteria and the Bethesda guidelines, age at diagnosis, sex, tumor location, and MSI status. The distribution of patient characteristics by MSI status was compared using polytomous logistic regression. Overall, 2.8% colorectal cancer cases met the Amsterdam criteria and 37% met the Bethesda guidelines. There were 14% MSI-High, 13% MSI-Low, and 73% MSS colorectal cancers. MSI-High (P<0.0001) and MSI-Low tumors (P=0.01) were more proximally located than MSS tumors. MSI-High tumors were more common among females (P<0.001). The highest proportion of MSI-High tumors occurred in cases<40 years of age whereas the age-dependent distribution of MSI-Low tumors was unchanged. MSI-High tumors showed a statistically significant association with increasing numbers of first-degree relatives with colorectal cancer (P=0.002); this association disappeared, however, when MSI-High cases meeting Amsterdam criteria were removed from the analysis. MSI-Low tumors did not show a similar association with family history of colorectal cancer. Familial risk associated with MSI-High tumors is primarily driven by the Amsterdam-criteria patients. MSI-Low tumors may represent a distinct subtype of colorectal cancer with respect to certain epidemiologic variables studied here.
家族史是结直肠癌风险的一个重要预测指标;然而,一级亲属中结直肠癌的诊断尚未作为与肿瘤微卫星不稳定性(MSI)状态相关的结直肠癌分子亚型的函数进行系统研究。我们调查了根据肿瘤MSI亚型(分为微卫星高度不稳定(MSI-High,>30%不稳定性)、微卫星低度不稳定(MSI-Low,<30%不稳定性)和稳定(MSS,无不稳定性))观察到的家族性结直肠癌风险是否存在差异。根据阿姆斯特丹标准和贝塞斯达指南、诊断年龄、性别、肿瘤位置和MSI状态,对来自五个机构的3143例基于人群的结直肠癌病例的数据进行家族史评估。使用多分类逻辑回归比较不同MSI状态患者特征的分布。总体而言,2.8%的结直肠癌病例符合阿姆斯特丹标准,37%符合贝塞斯达指南。结直肠癌中微卫星高度不稳定占14%,微卫星低度不稳定占13%,稳定占73%。微卫星高度不稳定(P<0.0001)和微卫星低度不稳定肿瘤(P=0.01)比稳定肿瘤更靠近近端。微卫星高度不稳定肿瘤在女性中更常见(P<0.001)。微卫星高度不稳定肿瘤比例最高的发生在年龄<40岁的病例中,而微卫星低度不稳定肿瘤的年龄依赖性分布没有变化。微卫星高度不稳定肿瘤与患结直肠癌的一级亲属数量增加存在统计学显著关联(P=0.002);然而,当从分析中排除符合阿姆斯特丹标准的微卫星高度不稳定病例时,这种关联消失了。微卫星低度不稳定肿瘤与结直肠癌家族史没有类似的关联。与微卫星高度不稳定肿瘤相关的家族风险主要由符合阿姆斯特丹标准的患者驱动。就此处研究的某些流行病学变量而言,微卫星低度不稳定肿瘤可能代表结直肠癌的一种独特亚型。