Goldgar D E, Easton D F, Cannon-Albright L A, Skolnick M H
Department of Medical Informatics, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City.
J Natl Cancer Inst. 1994 Nov 2;86(21):1600-8. doi: 10.1093/jnci/86.21.1600.
Cancer has long been recognized to have a familial component. Elevated risks for cancers at the same site for relatives of cancer probands have been reported for both common cancers and a number of the rarer cancer sites. For a particular cancer site, however, the estimated risks to relatives have varied considerably depending on criteria for selection of probands, how cancers were determined in relatives, and overall study design. Not surprisingly, the estimated risks of other cancers in relatives of probands with cancer at a given site have been subject to even more variation.
The aim of this study was to use the Utah Population Database resource to systematically study familial clustering of 28 distinct cancer site definitions among first-degree relatives (parents, siblings, and off-spring) of cancer probands.
We estimated familial relative risks from the Utah Population Database by identifying all cases of cancer in these first-degree relatives. These observed values were compared with those expected based on cohort-specific internal rates calculated from 399,786 relatives of all individuals in the Utah Population Database known to have died in Utah.
All sites showed an excess of cancers of the same site among relatives, with thyroid and colon cancers and lymphocytic leukemia showing the highest familial risks. When the analyses were restricted to cases with early ages at diagnosis, increased familial components for most cancer sites became evident. A significant difference in familial relative risk (FRR) between male (FRR = 4.04; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 3.13-5.07) and female (FRR = 2.24; 95% CI = 1.54-3.08) probands was found for colon cancer. Highly significant familial associations (one-sided; P < .001) were found among breast, colon, and prostate cancers and between breast and thyroid cancers. Statistically significant (one-sided, P < .01) associations were also found between tobacco-associated sites (lung, larynx, lip, and cervix).
This study represents a unique comprehensive population-based study of familial cancer. The familial associations reported here will be useful in generating hypotheses about specific genetic and environmental factors that can be tested in genetic linkage and case-control studies.
长期以来,人们一直认识到癌症具有家族性因素。对于常见癌症以及一些较为罕见的癌症部位,均有报道称癌症先证者的亲属在同一部位患癌的风险升高。然而,对于特定的癌症部位,根据先证者的选择标准、亲属中癌症的判定方式以及总体研究设计的不同,对亲属的估计风险差异很大。不出所料,患有特定部位癌症的先证者亲属患其他癌症的估计风险变化更大。
本研究旨在利用犹他州人口数据库资源,系统地研究癌症先证者的一级亲属(父母、兄弟姐妹和子女)中28种不同癌症部位定义的家族聚集情况。
我们通过识别这些一级亲属中的所有癌症病例,从犹他州人口数据库中估计家族相对风险。将这些观察值与根据犹他州人口数据库中已知在犹他州死亡的所有个体的399,786名亲属的队列特异性内部率计算得出的预期值进行比较。
所有部位在亲属中均显示出同一部位癌症的超额发生,甲状腺癌、结肠癌和淋巴细胞白血病的家族风险最高。当分析仅限于诊断时年龄较小的病例时,大多数癌症部位的家族性因素增加变得明显。发现男性(家族相对风险[FRR]=4.04;95%置信区间[CI]=3.13 - 5.07)和女性(FRR = 2.24;95% CI = 1.54 - 3.08)结肠癌先证者的家族相对风险存在显著差异。在乳腺癌、结肠癌和前列腺癌之间以及乳腺癌和甲状腺癌之间发现了高度显著的家族关联(单侧;P <.001)。在与烟草相关的部位(肺癌、喉癌、唇癌和宫颈癌)之间也发现了具有统计学意义(单侧,P <.01)的关联。
本研究是一项独特的基于人群的家族性癌症综合研究。这里报告的家族关联将有助于生成关于特定遗传和环境因素的假设,这些假设可在基因连锁和病例对照研究中进行检验。