Abstract

Abstract Introduction: Short constitutional telomere length is associated with aging and cancer, but the correlation of telomere length and age at diagnosis of CRC has not been evaluated. Methods: We measured telomere length using quantitative PCR of peripheral blood leukocyte DNA in 1026 individuals diagnosed with MSS CRC who were ≤60 years of age and were chemo-radiotherapy naïve at the time of blood draw. We compared telomere length with 1972 unrelated healthy controls who were frequency matched for gender and age at time of blood collection. We used constructed percentiles of telomere length using the data from the controls. Results: Overall, regardless of cancer status, there was a weak negative correlation of telomere length with age such that as age increased telomere length decreased (Pearson correlation coefficient =−0.1, p< 0.0001); and men had shorter telomeres than women (p=0.0002). The odds ratio (OR) for MSS CRC increased with longer telomere length (OR 1.62 [CI: 1.31-1.99] for those with telomere lengths in the 90th percentile compared to those with telomere lengths in the 50th percentile. In multivariate analysis with adjustment for gender, BMI, smoking, alcohol, and diabetes, telomere length remained an independent risk factor for CRC (p< 0.001), with interaction between telomere length and age (≤50, longer telomeres increased CRC risk; > 50 years old, increasing telomere length associated with decreased CRC risk). Risk was higher for MSS CRC ≤50 years for patients with telomere lengths in the 90th percentile compared to those in the 50th percentile (OR 2.31; CI:1.65-3.23). For subjects diagnosed 50-60 yrs, longer telomere length was associated with lower risk of CRC, and shorter telomere length was associated with the development of CRC (OR 1.22 for telomere lengths in the 10th percentile compared to those in the 50th percentile (OR 1.22:CI; 1.05-1.43). Conclusion: Telomere dynamics appear to influence MSS CRC risk and may differ on the basis of age of cancer diagnosis. Citation Format: {Authors}. {Abstract title} [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 102nd Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2011 Apr 2-6; Orlando, FL. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2011;71(8 Suppl):Abstract nr 2994. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2011-2994

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