AI Article Synopsis

  • A study on cancer susceptibility showed that first-degree relatives of testicular tumor patients had a significantly increased risk of cancer, with odds ratios indicating a strong link to familial cases, especially among brothers and offspring with various childhood tumors.
  • The research found no significant cancer associations beyond testicular and certain childhood tumors, and no notable differences in fertility or socio-economic factors between testicular tumor patients and healthy controls; however, age at fathering the first child varied.
  • Notably, TTPs had a higher ratio of female to male children, suggesting hereditary factors may play a crucial role in both the occurrence of testicular tumors and related reproductive outcomes, warranting further molecular research.

Article Abstract

Cancer susceptibility was examined in first-degree relatives of 293 testicular tumor patients (TTPs) and 586 age-matched healthy males. Significantly increased risk was found in the families of TTPs (OR: 1.4; CI: 1.08-1.79), however, except for testicular cancer of 7 brothers (OR: 11.7; CI: 1.42-256.5), and 6 various childhood tumors (bilateral Wilms' tumor, neuroblastoma, medulloblastoma, ALL, histiocytosis-X, testicular tumor) of 200 offspring (OR: 12.9; CI: 1.54-286.2), no association with other malignancies was observed. No differences were seen between the fertility of patients and controls when occupational or socio-economic status of the families was taken into account. However, the majority of the controls (85%) fathered the first child between 20-30 years of age, while only 61% of TTPs had the first child in the same age group. TTPs fathered more girls than boys (P=0.009), and the lower male - higher female ratio of index children was also identical, irrespective of the conception taking place before or after the father's treatment. Occupations did not, but smoking might have influenced cancer susceptibility of the patients. Aggregation of fraternal testicular tumors, and both dramatically increased cancer risk and altered sex ratio of the offspring indicate a remarkable role of hereditary factors in tumorigenesis and later consequences of a certain portion of testicular malignancies, which must be refined by molecular studies.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF03033760DOI Listing

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