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Short Communication |
1 Cancer Research Program, Garvan Institute of Medical Research, St. Vincent's Hospital, Darlinghurst, Sydney, New South Wales; 2 Cancer Epidemiology Centre, The Cancer Council Victoria, Carlton; and 3 Department of Pathology and 4 Centre for Genetic Epidemiology, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Requests for reprints: Vanessa M. Hayes, Cancer Research Program, Garvan Institute of Medical Research, St. Vincent's Hospital, 384 Victoria Street, Darlinghurst, New South Wales 2010, Australia. Phone: 61-2-9295-8345; Fax: 61-2-9295-8321. E-mail: v.hayes{at}garvan.org.au
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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The aim of this study was to re-address the hypothesis that polymorphisms in the VDR gene are associated with prostate cancer risk. We tested this hypothesis in a large case-control study of Caucasian men, where, in contrast to previous studies, age-matched controls were randomly sampled from the general population and the possible effect of the combination of the genotypes in relation to prostate cancer was assessed. As is becoming standard practice in the genetics literature, we refer to these common polymorphisms according to their genomic position (Genbank accession #AY342401), namely g.27823C > T for FokI and g.60890G > A for BsmI.
| Materials and Methods |
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A face-to-face interview was done using structured questionnaires to obtain information on potential risk factors including age, history of prostate cancer in first-degree relatives, country of birth, life-style (including diet), and other potential risk factors for prostate cancer. Tumor stage (stage I to IV) and grade (moderate, Gleason 5-7; high, Gleason 8-10) was recorded from histopathology reports. The great majority of subjects (98.5%) were born in Australia, the British Isles, or Western Europe and therefore of Caucasian descent. Informed consent was obtained from all study participants. Blood samples were collected from 862 cases (83%) and 745 controls (71%).
Genotyping
Genomic DNA was extracted from whole blood and genotyped in a blinded manner. Both the g.27823 and g.60890 SNPs were analyzed using denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis, which included the analysis of the entire coding region of exon 2, including intron-exon boundaries (VDR amplicon 2), and partial analysis of intron 8 (VDR amplicon i8), primer sequences and conditions are available on request (V.M. Hayes). As the genotyping assay used in this study is capable of detecting all sequence variation within the amplicons, the g.27878 (N16, AAC to AAT) and g.27975 (IVS2 +8C > T) SNPs were also detected and assessed. Genotyping was successfully performed on 812 cases and 713 controls.
Statistical Analysis
Estimates and comparisons of allele frequencies and tests of deviation from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium were carried out using exact methods. Linkage disequilibrium was measured using Lewontin's D' and tested with methods based on asymptotic likelihood theory. Unconditional logistic regression adjusted for age was used to estimate associations between the dimorphic SNPs and prostate cancer, and tests of significance were based on asymptotic likelihood theory. Influence of potential confounding variables was assessed by including them in the models and assessing any subsequent changes in estimates of genotype effects and their statistical significance. Two-sided Fisher's exact test was used to test for independence between the SNPs and categorized risk factors; namely age (<60, 60-69), country of birth (Australia, others), family history of prostate cancer (affected first-degree relatives, no affected relatives), baldness (no balding, frontal, vertex, frontal and vertex combined), history of benign prostatic hyperplasia (yes, no) and tumor stage (stage I to IV), and grade (moderate and high). The likelihood ratio test was used to test for an overall difference in genotype distribution between cases and controls. All statistical analyses were done using the R statistical language (www.r-project.org).
| Results |
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Table 1 shows that there was no evidence that any of the polymorphisms were not in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium for cases, controls, or cases and controls combined (all P
0.2). The prevalence of the g.27823 T allele was 36% in both the cases and controls, whereas the prevalence of the g.60890 A allele was 41% in the cases and 43% in the controls. The prevalences of the g.27878C > T and g.27975C > T SNPs were 2% and 4% in both cases and controls, respectively. Table 1 also shows that none of the four loci were associated with prostate cancer risk (all P
0.3). None were associated with any of the known measured prostate cancer risk factors including age, family history of prostate cancer, country of birth, and androgenetic alopecia (baldness), or with a personal history of benign prostatic hyperplasia (all P > 0.1). Genotype distribution did not vary by tumor grade (all P > 0.2). Although the genotype distribution was not associated with tumor stage for any of the SNPs, the proportion of homozygotes for the T (g.27823) and A allele (g.60890) was lowest in metastatic cases (9% versus 14% in stage I-III tumors for g.27823, P = 0.6 and 9% versus 18% for g.60890). Both rare polymorphisms were in linkage disequilibrium with g.27823, with the T alleles of g.27878 and g.27975 in linkage disequilibrium with the g.27823 T allele (D' = 0.96, P < 0.001) and C allele (D' = 0.66, P < 0.001), respectively. Neither was in linkage disequilibrium with g.60890 (both P
0.1).
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| Discussion and Conclusion |
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Previous studies assessing the g.27823 polymorphism and prostate cancer risk in Caucasian populations (Europe) were limited by their sizes (132 and 210 cases, 105 and 155 controls, respectively; refs. 7, 9), whereas Xu et al. (U.S., ref. 10), although finding no association with prostate cancer risk, suggested a protective effect of the TT genotype on disease progression. The g.60890 polymorphism has only been assessed by one Caucasian-based (U.S.) case-control study (372 cases and 591 controls), which found no overall association with prostate cancer risk, although in men with lower total free serum 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 levels, the AA genotype was associated with an increased risk of prostate cancer compared with the GG genotype (8). These markers were included in a meta-analysis of three studies of g.27823 (514 cases and 545 controls) and five studies of g.60890 (987 cases and 1,504 controls), which showed no evidence of an overall association of prostate cancer risk on a population basis (11). More recently, Keitheri Cheteri et al. (12), who did, prior to our study, the largest reported Caucasian-based case-control study of the g.27823, g.60890, and poly(A) repeat polymorphisms (U.S., 559 cases and 523 controls), showed no association between these markers and prostate cancer risk. They did report, however, an association between the g.60890 AA genotype and a modest, marginally significant, increase in the risk of localized prostate cancer (P = 0.04). The latter observation was not confirmed by our study. Although clinicopathologic correlations between the VDR polymorphisms have been suggested (reviewed in ref. 11), these studies have not been replicated either in previous studies or in our own.
It has been suggested that UV radiation protects against prostate cancer, and it has therefore been proposed that protection is also afforded by increased vitamin D intake (13). As vitamin D exerts its effects in the prostate via the VDR, this has led to the hypothesis that polymorphisms within the VDR may influence prostate cancer risk in a way that is dependent on the individual extent of UV radiation exposure (14). A recent study to determine the impact of VDR polymorphisms with prostate cancer risk in northern European men stratified into low and high UV radiation exposure, found the TT genotype to be associated with increased prostate cancer risk in men with UV radiation exposure above 1,100 hours per year (15). As the Australian population is exposed to UV radiation well in excess of that experienced by their Caucasian ancestors, one cannot exclude the possibility that the null findings in this study is not due to there being a modest effect of the VDR polymorphisms on VDR production and/or function which may only manifest in populations with inadequate sunlight hours.
Inconclusive findings for the role of VDR polymorphisms and prostate cancer risk may be attributed to inconsistencies or bias in both case and/or control selection, or to there being no real or detectable effect. In our study, we addressed the former issues by avoiding selection for family history in our cases and by recruiting the controls from the general population (via State Electoral rolls according to age-matching of cases) and not from a prostate cancer screening population. Use of prostate-specific antigen testing was already common in Australia at the time of the study. To reduce the possible impact of indolent, slow-growing tumors, we excluded well-differentiated tumors (Gleason < 5) and tumors in elderly men (age 70 or more). In agreement with most recent publications, we found a lack of association with prostate cancer risk between the g.27823 and g.60890 SNPs, as well as the previously unassessed rare g. 27878 and g.27975 SNPs. Neither the meta-analysis, nor the large U.S.-based study, performed analyses combining the genotypes of different SNPs. This latter type of analysis in our study did not reveal any significant contribution of the g.27823 and g.60890 SNPs combined with prostate cancer risk, and the confidence intervals were small. We therefore conclude that genetic markers of VDR alone and in combination do not seem to contribute appreciably to risk of prostate cancer.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked advertisement in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Received 9/ 7/04; revised 11/15/04; accepted 12/ 7/04.
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