Abstract

Background: Lung cancer has inherited susceptibility and show familial aggregation, the characteristics of familial lung cancer exhibit population heterogeneity. Despite previous studies, familial lung cancer in China's Yunnan-Guizhou plateau remains understudied.Methods: Between 2015 and 2017, 1,023 lung cancer patients (residents of Yunnan-Guizhou plateau) were enrolled with no limitation on other parameters, 152 subjects had familial lung cancer. Clinicopathologic parameters were analyzed and compared, 4,754 lung cancer patients from NCI-GDC were used to represent a general population.Results: Familial lung cancer (FLC) subjects showed unique characters: early-onset; increased rate of female, adenocarcinoma, stage IV and other cancer history; unbalance in anatomic sites; all ruling out significant difference in smoking status. Unbalanced distribution of co-existing diseases or symptoms was also discovered. FLC patients were more likely to develop benign lesions (polyps, nodules, cysts) early in life, especially early-growth of multiple pulmonary nodules at higher frequency. Typical diseases with family history like diabetes and hypertension were also increased in FLC population. Compared to GDC data, our subject population was younger: the age peak of our FLC group was in 50–59; our sporadic group had an age peak around 60; while GDC patients' age peak was in 60–69. Importantly, the biggest difference happened in age 40–49: our FLC group and sporadic group had 3 times and 2 times higher ratio than GDC population, respectively. Moreover, the age peaks of our FLC males and FLC females were both in 50–59; while our sporadic females had the age peak in 50–59, much earlier than sporadic males (around 60–69); reflecting gender-specific or age-specific characters in our subject population.Conclusions: Familial lung cancer in China's Yunnan-Guizhou plateau showed unique clinicopathologic characters, differences were found in gender, age, histologic type, TNM stage and co-existing diseases or symptoms. Identification of hereditary factors which lead to increased lung cancer risk will be a challenge of both scientific and clinical significance.

Highlights

  • Lung cancer is often cited as a malignancy largely determined by environmental factors [1]

  • (3) Subject with familial lung cancer is defined as individual has three or more first-degree relatives affected by lung cancer

  • There were 152 patients who were classified as having familial lung cancer

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Summary

Introduction

Lung cancer is often cited as a malignancy largely determined by environmental factors [1]. Epidemiological surveys suggest that lung cancer show familial aggregation after proper adjustments for tobacco smoking and other environmental factors, indicating inherited genetic susceptibility is a typical feature of familial lung cancer [1,2,3,4]. Familial lung cancer (FLC) exhibit special features when compared with the sporadic counterpart, previous findings show similarity and diversity in different FLC populations, depending on the subjects’ source. Some support certain ethnic groups are affected more by inherited lung cancer susceptibility [6, 7]; others find first-degree female relatives have a higher risk than first-degree male relatives [4, 8]; and another suggests there seems to be a particular link between FLC and EGFR mutation in tumors of affected family members [3]. Familial lung cancer in China’s Yunnan-Guizhou plateau remains understudied

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