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Cigarette Smoking, N-Acetyltransferase 2 Acetylation Status, and Bladder Cancer Risk: A Case-Series Meta-analysis of a Gene-Environment Interaction
Tobacco use is an established cause of bladder cancer. The ability to detoxify aromatic amines, which are present in tobacco and are potent bladder carcinogens, is compromised in persons with the N -acetyltransferase 2 slow acetylation polymorphism. The relationship of cigarette smoking with bladder...
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Published in: | Cancer epidemiology, biomarkers & prevention biomarkers & prevention, 2000-05, Vol.9 (5), p.461 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Tobacco use is an established cause of bladder cancer. The ability to
detoxify aromatic amines, which are present in tobacco and are potent
bladder carcinogens, is compromised in persons with the
N -acetyltransferase 2 slow acetylation polymorphism. The
relationship of cigarette smoking with bladder cancer risk therefore
has been hypothesized to be stronger among slow acetylators. The few
studies to formally explore such a possibility have produced
inconsistent results, however. To assess this potential
gene-environment interaction in as many bladder cancer studies as
possible and to summarize results, we conducted a meta-analysis using
data from 16 bladder cancer studies conducted in the general population
( n = 1999 cases). Most had been conducted in
European countries. Because control subjects were unavailable for a
number of these studies, we used a case-series design, which can be
used to assess multiplicative gene-environment interaction without
inclusion of control subjects. A case-series interaction odds ratio
(OR) >1.0 indicates that the relationship of cigarette smoking and
bladder cancer risk is stronger among slow acetylators as compared with
rapid acetylators. We observed an interaction between smoking and
N -acetyltransferase 2 slow acetylation (OR, 1.3; 95%
confidence interval, 1.0–1.6) that was somewhat stronger when analyses
were restricted to studies conducted in Europe (OR, 1.5; confidence
interval, 1.1–1.9), a pooling that included nearly 80% of the
collected data. Using the predominantly male European study population
and assuming a 2.5-fold elevation in bladder cancer risk from smoking,
we estimated that the population attributable risk percent was 35% for
slow acetylators who had ever smoked and 13% for rapid acetylators who
had ever smoked. These results suggest that the relationship of smoking
and bladder cancer is stronger among slow acetylators than among rapid
acetylators. |
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ISSN: | 1055-9965 1538-7755 |