1. Functional Polymorphisms in the Cyclooxygenase 2 (COX-2) Gene and Risk of Breast Cancer in a Chinese Population.
- Author
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Jun Gao, Qiao Ke, Hong-Xia Ma, Yan Wang, Yan Zhou, Zhi-Bin Hu, Xiang-Jun Zhai, Xue-Chen Wang, Jian-Wei Qing, Wen-Sen Chen, Guang-Fu Jin, Ji-Yong Liu, Yong-Fei Tan, Xin-Ru Wang, and Hong-Bing Shen
- Subjects
BREAST cancer ,CANCER patients ,CYCLOOXYGENASE 2 ,ETIOLOGY of diseases ,CANCER cells ,GENETIC polymorphisms ,PROSTANOIDS ,INFLAMMATORY mediators ,WOMEN'S health - Abstract
Cyclooxygenase (COX), the rate-limiting enzyme in prostaglandins (PG) synthesis, exists in at least two isoforms, COX-1 and COX-2. COX-2 plays an important role in carcinogenesis, and overexpression may increase proliferation, inhibit apoptosis, and enhance the invasiveness of breast cancer cells. Polymorphisms in the regulatory regions of the COX-2 gene may influence function and/or expression and contribute to interindividual variability in susceptibility to cancer. In this study three variants (-1195G/A and -765G/C in the promoter and 8473C/T in 3'UTR) of COX-2 were examined for correlation with breast cancer risk. A case-control study of 615 histologically confirmed breast cancer patients and 643 cancer-free controls frequency-matched for age were selected. Logistic regression analyses revealed that no overall significant associations were detected in the single-locus analysis between three polymorphisms of COX-2 and the risk of breast cancer. However, a significantly increased risk of breast cancer was associated with the combined genotypes containing "more than 3 variant alleles"' (adjusted OR = 1.37, 95% CI 1.01-1.84) compared with the combined genotypes with "0-3 variant alleles." Haplotype analyses showed that haplotypes A-1195G-765T8473 and A-1195C-765T8473 were significantly associated with breast cancer risk (OR = 1.20, 95% CI 1.01-1.43 for A-1195G-765T8473; OR = 9.16, 95% CI 1.14-73.51 for A-1195C-765T8473) compared with the most common haplotype, G-1195G-765T8473. These findings indicate that these three variants in the regulatory regions of COX-2 may contribute to the etiology of breast cancer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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