Segregation analysis of prostate cancer in 1719 white, African-American and Asian-American families in the United States and Canada

被引:37
作者
Gong, G
Oakley-Girvan, I
Wu, AH
Kolonel, LN
John, EM
West, DW
Felberg, A
Gallagher, RP
Whittemore, AS
机构
[1] Stanford Univ, Sch Med, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
[2] Univ So Calif, Kenneth Norris Jr Comprehens Canc Ctr, Los Angeles, CA 90089 USA
[3] Univ Hawaii Manoa, Canc Ctr Hawaii, Honolulu, HI 96822 USA
[4] No Calif Canc Ctr, Union City, CA USA
[5] British Columbia Canc Agcy, Vancouver, BC V5Z 4E6, Canada
关键词
dominant inheritance; prostate cancer; recessive inheritance; segregation analysis; X-linked inheritance;
D O I
10.1023/A:1015755219674
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Some data suggest that brothers of prostate cancer patients have higher disease risk than their fathers, supporting an X-linked or recessive mode of inheritance. However, higher observed frequencies in brothers than fathers may merely reflect the strong temporal changes in US incidence rates. Objectives: (a) to evaluate the fit of X-linked, recessive, and dominant modes of inheritance to prostate cancer incidence, specific for calendar year, age, and race, in population-based samples of US and Canadian families; and (b) to evaluate a simple multifactorial model for familial aggregation of prostate cancer due to shared low-penetrance variants of many genes or shared lifestyle factors. Methods: The data consist of reported prostate cancer incidence in first-degree relatives of 1719 white, African-American, and Asian-American men with and without prostate cancer at ages < 70 years. Model parameters were estimated by maximizing a pseudo-likelihood function of the data, and goodness of model fit was assessed by evaluating discrepancies between observed and expected numbers of pairs of relatives with prostate cancer. Results: After adjusting for temporal trends in prostate cancer incidence rates we found that the X-linked model fit poorly, underpredicting the observed number of affected father-son pairs. This also was true of the recessive model, although the evidence for poor fit did not achieve statistical significance. In contrast, the dominant model provided adequate fit to the data. In this model the race-specific penetrance estimates for carriers of deleterious genotypes were similar among African-Americans and whites, but lower among Asian-Americans: risk by age 80 years for carriers born in 1900 was estimated as 75.3% for African-Americans and whites, and 44.4% for Asian-Americans. None of the Mendelian models fit the data better than did the simple multifactorial model. Conclusions: The good fit of the multifactorial model suggests that multiple genes, each having low penetrance, may be responsible for most inherited prostate cancer susceptibility, and that the contribution of rare highly penetrant mutations is small.
引用
收藏
页码:471 / 482
页数:12
相关论文
共 55 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 1987, STAT ANAL MISSING DA
[2]  
[Anonymous], 1982, Cancer Surv
[3]   Evidence for a prostate cancer-susceptibillty locus on chromosome 20 [J].
Berry, R ;
Schroeder, JJ ;
French, AJ ;
McDonnell, SK ;
Peterson, BJ ;
Cunningham, JM ;
Thibodeau, SN ;
Schaid, DJ .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS, 2000, 67 (01) :82-91
[4]   Linkage analyses at the chromosome 1 Loci 1q24-25 (HPC1), 1q42.2-43 (PCAP), and 1p36 (CAPB) in families with hereditary prostate cancer [J].
Berry, R ;
Schaid, DJ ;
Smith, JR ;
French, AJ ;
Schroeder, JJ ;
McDonnell, SK ;
Peterson, BJ ;
Wang, ZY ;
Carpten, JD ;
Roberts, SG ;
Tester, DJ ;
Blute, ML ;
Trent, JM ;
Thibodeau, SN .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS, 2000, 66 (02) :539-546
[5]   Predisposing gene for early-onset prostate cancer, localized on chromosome 1q42.2-43 [J].
Berthon, P ;
Valeri, A ;
Cohen-Akenine, A ;
Drelon, E ;
Paiss, T ;
Wöhr, G ;
Latil, A ;
Millasseau, P ;
Mellah, I ;
Cohen, N ;
Blanché, H ;
Bellané-Chantelot, C ;
Demenais, F ;
Teillac, P ;
Le Duc, A ;
de Petriconi, R ;
Hautmann, R ;
Chumakov, I ;
Bachner, L ;
Maitland, NJ ;
Lidereau, R ;
Vogel, W ;
Fournier, G ;
Mangin, P ;
Cohen, D ;
Cussenot, O .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS, 1998, 62 (06) :1416-1424
[7]   EPIDEMIOLOGIC EVIDENCE REGARDING PREDISPOSING FACTORS TO PROSTATE-CANCER [J].
CARTER, BS ;
CARTER, HB ;
ISAACS, JT .
PROSTATE, 1990, 16 (03) :187-197
[8]   MENDELIAN INHERITANCE OF FAMILIAL PROSTATE-CANCER [J].
CARTER, BS ;
BEATY, TH ;
STEINBERG, GD ;
CHILDS, B ;
WALSH, PC .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1992, 89 (08) :3367-3371
[9]   Prostate cancer susceptibility locus on chromosome 1q: A confirmatory study [J].
Cooney, KA ;
McCarthy, JD ;
Lange, E ;
Huang, L ;
Miesfeldt, S ;
Montie, JE ;
Oesterling, JE ;
Sandler, HM ;
Lange, K .
JOURNAL OF THE NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE, 1997, 89 (13) :955-959
[10]   Segregation analyses of 1,476 population-based Australian families affected by prostate cancer [J].
Cui, JS ;
Staples, MP ;
Hopper, JL ;
English, DR ;
McCredie, MRE ;
Giles, GG .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS, 2001, 68 (05) :1207-1218