AI Article Synopsis

  • EGF and EGFR are significant in lung cancer development, and a specific SNP in the EGF promoter (EGF+61 A>G) has been linked to cancer risk, but its role in lung cancer remains unclear.
  • A study involving 669 lung cancer patients and 1104 controls in Brazil found no significant association between the EGF+61 A>G SNP and lung cancer risk, despite recognizing tobacco use and age as significant factors.
  • The research determined that genotype frequencies in patients and controls did not show meaningful differences, concluding that EGF+61 A>G SNP is not a risk factor for lung cancer in the Brazilian population.

Article Abstract

Epidermal growth factor (EGF) and its receptor (EGFR) play an important role in lung carcinogenesis. A functional single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in EGF promoter region (EGF+61 A>G-rs4444903) has been associated with cancer susceptibility. Yet, in lung cancer, the EGF+61 A>G role is unclear. The aim of this study was to evaluate the risk of lung cancer associated with EGF+61 A>G SNP in the Brazilian population. For that, 669 lung cancer patients and 1104 controls were analyzed. EGF+61 A>G genotype was assessed by PCR-RFLP and TaqMan genotyping assay. Both patients and controls were in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium. As expected, uni- and multivariate analyses showed that tobacco consumption and age were significant risk factors for lung cancer. The genotype frequencies in lung cancer patients were 27.3% of AA, 47.4% of AG and 25.3% of GG, and for controls were 25.3% of AA, 51.6% of AG and 23.1% of GG. The allele frequencies were 51.1% of A and 48.9% of G for both cases and controls. No significant differences for the three genotypes (AA, AG and GG-codominant model) were observed between cases and controls. We then grouped AG and GG (recessive model) genotypes, as well as AA and AG (dominant model), and again, no significant differences were also found. This is the largest study to explore EGF+61 A>G polymorphism association with lung cancer risk and suggests that this SNP is not a risk factor for lung cancer in the Brazilian population.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11033-019-04702-0DOI Listing

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