Evidence for an association between compound heterozygosity for germ line mutations in the hemochromatosis (HFE) gene and increased risk of colorectal cancer
Evidence for an association between compound heterozygosity for germ line mutations in the hemochromatosis (HFE) gene and increased risk of colorectal cancer
Whereas a recent study reported an increased risk of colorectal cancer associated with any HFE germ line mutation (C282Y or H63D), other investigators have concluded there is no increased risk, or that any increase is dependent on polymorphisms in HFE-interacting genes such as the transferrin receptor (TFR). We have established the frequency of HFE mutations in colorectal cancer patients (n = 327) with a family history of the disease and randomly selected controls (n = 322); this design increases greatly the study's power. Genotyping for the TRF S142G polymorphism was also conducted on a large proportion of the study group. Using PCR, restriction enzyme mapping, sequencing followed by data analysis with Fisher's exact test and logistic regression, we show that the presence of any HFE mutation (Y282 or D63) was not associated with colorectal cancer risk (P = 0.57). In contrast, individuals compound heterozygous for both mutations (15 cases versus 5 controls) had thrice the odds of developing colorectal cancer (odds ratio, 3.03; 95% confidence interval, 1.06-8.61) compared with those with a single mutation. This finding did not quite reach statistical significance after allowing for multiple post hoc testing (P observed = 0.038 versus P = 0.025, with Bonferonni correction). Overall, our data indicate that individuals with a single HFE mutation, C282Y or H63D, are unlikely predisposed to develop colorectal cancer. However, risk of colorectal cancer might be increased by compound heterozygosity for the HFE mutations in the small number of subjects studied. TFR gene polymorphism was not an independent risk factor and did not modify the disease risk associated with HFE mutation.
1460-1463
Robinson, James P.
69debbe2-4fd3-46dd-b69d-0f74008e76ca
Johnson, Victoria L.
def21b5f-5a46-4b3c-a41e-f71b478a8676
Rogers, Pauline A.
09d15c95-fe5f-40b6-839a-4d07eb3cbd89
Houlston, Richard S.
0292e06f-2fd2-4b71-a629-00b288016474
Maher, Earmonn R.
80ea2b3e-3336-421f-9f59-e23db5d7517a
Bishop, D. Timothy
78aed201-1293-4bd9-8428-89f77cfb1f52
Evans, D. Gareth R.
879bb945-4b7f-4cd6-b62c-f6b75f45f02c
Thomas, Huw J.W.
b0296ab1-0ca0-4107-acfa-bcc9f47052c6
Tomlinson, Ian P.M.
0142a37c-4819-4473-a9a7-90f617b5355e
Silver, Andrew R.J.
0904b2b8-1e44-4c4c-a928-05300d9f36a2
Hodgson, Shirley
a9f6b2c4-f329-40b5-8b07-a74b3fdd1a0c
Izatt, Louise
5d6201a8-8a56-4923-ac9d-75dca6be0a40
Lucassen, Anneke
2eb85efc-c6e8-4c3f-b963-0290f6c038a5
1 June 2005
Robinson, James P.
69debbe2-4fd3-46dd-b69d-0f74008e76ca
Johnson, Victoria L.
def21b5f-5a46-4b3c-a41e-f71b478a8676
Rogers, Pauline A.
09d15c95-fe5f-40b6-839a-4d07eb3cbd89
Houlston, Richard S.
0292e06f-2fd2-4b71-a629-00b288016474
Maher, Earmonn R.
80ea2b3e-3336-421f-9f59-e23db5d7517a
Bishop, D. Timothy
78aed201-1293-4bd9-8428-89f77cfb1f52
Evans, D. Gareth R.
879bb945-4b7f-4cd6-b62c-f6b75f45f02c
Thomas, Huw J.W.
b0296ab1-0ca0-4107-acfa-bcc9f47052c6
Tomlinson, Ian P.M.
0142a37c-4819-4473-a9a7-90f617b5355e
Silver, Andrew R.J.
0904b2b8-1e44-4c4c-a928-05300d9f36a2
Hodgson, Shirley
a9f6b2c4-f329-40b5-8b07-a74b3fdd1a0c
Izatt, Louise
5d6201a8-8a56-4923-ac9d-75dca6be0a40
Lucassen, Anneke
2eb85efc-c6e8-4c3f-b963-0290f6c038a5
Robinson, James P., Johnson, Victoria L., Rogers, Pauline A., Houlston, Richard S., Maher, Earmonn R., Bishop, D. Timothy, Evans, D. Gareth R., Thomas, Huw J.W., Tomlinson, Ian P.M., Silver, Andrew R.J., Hodgson, Shirley, Izatt, Louise and Lucassen, Anneke
(2005)
Evidence for an association between compound heterozygosity for germ line mutations in the hemochromatosis (HFE) gene and increased risk of colorectal cancer.
Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers and Prevention, 14 (6), .
(doi:10.1158/1055-9965.EPI-04-0672).
Abstract
Whereas a recent study reported an increased risk of colorectal cancer associated with any HFE germ line mutation (C282Y or H63D), other investigators have concluded there is no increased risk, or that any increase is dependent on polymorphisms in HFE-interacting genes such as the transferrin receptor (TFR). We have established the frequency of HFE mutations in colorectal cancer patients (n = 327) with a family history of the disease and randomly selected controls (n = 322); this design increases greatly the study's power. Genotyping for the TRF S142G polymorphism was also conducted on a large proportion of the study group. Using PCR, restriction enzyme mapping, sequencing followed by data analysis with Fisher's exact test and logistic regression, we show that the presence of any HFE mutation (Y282 or D63) was not associated with colorectal cancer risk (P = 0.57). In contrast, individuals compound heterozygous for both mutations (15 cases versus 5 controls) had thrice the odds of developing colorectal cancer (odds ratio, 3.03; 95% confidence interval, 1.06-8.61) compared with those with a single mutation. This finding did not quite reach statistical significance after allowing for multiple post hoc testing (P observed = 0.038 versus P = 0.025, with Bonferonni correction). Overall, our data indicate that individuals with a single HFE mutation, C282Y or H63D, are unlikely predisposed to develop colorectal cancer. However, risk of colorectal cancer might be increased by compound heterozygosity for the HFE mutations in the small number of subjects studied. TFR gene polymorphism was not an independent risk factor and did not modify the disease risk associated with HFE mutation.
This record has no associated files available for download.
More information
Published date: 1 June 2005
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 469438
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/469438
ISSN: 1055-9965
PURE UUID: b1e0eb8a-b9ed-4f8e-bad0-b7699ecaac92
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 14 Sep 2022 16:51
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:54
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
James P. Robinson
Author:
Victoria L. Johnson
Author:
Pauline A. Rogers
Author:
Richard S. Houlston
Author:
Earmonn R. Maher
Author:
D. Timothy Bishop
Author:
D. Gareth R. Evans
Author:
Huw J.W. Thomas
Author:
Ian P.M. Tomlinson
Author:
Andrew R.J. Silver
Author:
Shirley Hodgson
Author:
Louise Izatt
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics