Abstract

BackgroundNumerous efforts have been made to elucidate the etiology and improve the treatment of lung cancer, but the overall five-year survival rate is still only 15%. Although cigarette smoking is the primary risk factor for lung cancer, only 7% of female lung cancer patients in Taiwan have a history of smoking. Since cancer results from progressive accumulation of genetic aberrations, genomic rearrangements may be early events in carcinogenesis.ResultsIn order to identify biomarkers of early-stage adenocarcinoma, the genome-wide DNA aberrations of 60 pairs of lung adenocarcinoma and adjacent normal lung tissue in non-smoking women were examined using Affymetrix Genome-Wide Human SNP 6.0 arrays. Common copy number variation (CNV) regions were identified by ≥30% of patients with copy number beyond 2 ± 0.5 of copy numbers for each single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) and at least 100 continuous SNP variant loci. SNPs associated with lung adenocarcinoma were identified by McNemar’s test. Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) SNPs were identified in ≥18% of patients with LOH in the locus. Aberration of SNP rs10248565 at HDAC9 in chromosome 7p21.1 was identified from concurrent analyses of CNVs, SNPs, and LOH.ConclusionThe results elucidate the genetic etiology of lung adenocarcinoma by demonstrating that SNP rs10248565 may be a potential biomarker of cancer susceptibility.

Highlights

  • Numerous efforts have been made to elucidate the etiology and improve the treatment of lung cancer, but the overall five-year survival rate is still only 15%

  • We demonstrated that single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs10248565 in HDAC9 may be a potential biomarker for identifying important genetic determinants of cancer susceptibility and elucidating the genetic etiology of lung cancer in non-smoking females

  • Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) SNPs were identified in ≥18% of patients with LOH in the locus

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Summary

Introduction

Numerous efforts have been made to elucidate the etiology and improve the treatment of lung cancer, but the overall five-year survival rate is still only 15%. In the United States and other Western countries, the 5-year survival rate of lung cancer is only 15% and has not improved over several decades. In Taiwan, lung cancer mortality rates have become the highest in the world [2,3]. Even though numerous research efforts have been devoted to the development of lung cancer treatment over the past few decades, the overall 5year survival rate is still as low as 15% [4]. Smoking is the primary risk factor for lung cancer [5]. In Western countries, 70-90% of lung cancers are attributable to cigarette smoking, whereas in Taiwan, only 7%

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