Margalit Danielle N, Jordahl Kristina M, Werner Lillian, Wang Xiaodong, Gwo-Shu Lee Mary, Penney Kathryn L, Batista Julie L, Martin Neil E, Chan June M, Kantoff Philip W, Stampfer Meir J, Nguyen Paul L, Mucci Lorelei A
Department of Radiation Oncology, Brigham and Women's Hospital/Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA.
Department of Epidemiology, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA.
Clin Genitourin Cancer. 2015 Aug;13(4):370-377.e1. doi: 10.1016/j.clgc.2014.12.018. Epub 2015 Jan 3.
Genetic variants in antioxidant pathways might decrease the efficacy of radiation therapy (RT) by suppressing the generation of reactive oxygen species. We studied the association between single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the antioxidant gene superoxide dismutase-2 (SOD2) and cancer-specific outcomes after RT.
Among 816 prostate cancer patients who received radiation as primary therapy from the Physicians' Health Study and the Health Professionals Follow-up Study, we evaluated the association of 7 tagging SNPs in SOD2 with lethal prostate cancer (death from prostate cancer or distant metastasis among living patients). We sought to validate findings in a separate cohort of 612 prostate cancer patients treated with RT with a greater proportion of intermediate and high-risk Gleason scores at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. Genetic effects were analyzed using a codominant model, using the genotype homozygous for the major allele as baseline.
Among patients who underwent RT in the test cohort, there was a significant association between 3 of the 7 SOD2 SNPs and lethal prostate cancer: rs6917589 (overall P = .006), rs2758331 (P = .04) and the functional valine to alanine polymorphism in rs4880 (P = .04). These SNPs were not associated with outcome among men who had undergone prostatectomy. The associations were not replicated in the validation cohort.
Germline genetic variation in the SOD2 gene might be a predictive biomarker of response to RT for prostate cancer but is not consistently associated with outcome after RT across prostate cancer cohorts with different clinical characteristics.
抗氧化途径中的基因变异可能通过抑制活性氧的产生而降低放射治疗(RT)的疗效。我们研究了抗氧化基因超氧化物歧化酶2(SOD2)中的单核苷酸多态性(SNP)与RT后癌症特异性结局之间的关联。
在来自医师健康研究和卫生专业人员随访研究的816例接受放射治疗作为主要治疗手段的前列腺癌患者中,我们评估了SOD2中7个标签SNP与致命性前列腺癌(前列腺癌死亡或存活患者发生远处转移)的关联。我们试图在达纳-法伯癌症研究所治疗的612例RT前列腺癌患者的独立队列中验证研究结果,这些患者中具有中高风险 Gleason评分的比例更高。使用共显性模型分析遗传效应,以主要等位基因纯合基因型作为基线。
在测试队列中接受RT的患者中,7个SOD2 SNP中的3个与致命性前列腺癌之间存在显著关联:rs6917589(总体P = 0.006)、rs2758331(P = 0.04)以及rs4880中功能性缬氨酸到丙氨酸多态性(P = 0.04)。这些SNP与接受前列腺切除术的男性的结局无关。这些关联在验证队列中未得到重复。
SOD2基因的种系遗传变异可能是前列腺癌对RT反应的预测生物标志物,但在具有不同临床特征的前列腺癌队列中,其与RT后的结局并非始终相关。