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Nasopharyngeal Epstein‐Barr virus DNA loads in high‐risk nasopharyngeal carcinoma families: Familial aggregation and host heritability

Authors :
Lu-Ting Luo
Xia-Ting Tong
Lei-Lei Yuan
Ting Zhou
Wen-Qiong Xue
Chang-Mi Deng
Tong-Min Wang
Wen-Li Zhang
Ling‐Ling Tang
Yi-Jing Jia
Wei Hua Jia
Xi-Zhao Li
Yan-Xia Wu
Zi-Yi Wu
Yong-Qiao He
Jiang-Bo Zhang
Ying Liao
Yun‐Fei Xia
Jianbing Mu
Da-Wei Yang
Dan-Hua Li
Mei-Qi Zheng
Source :
Journal of Medical Virology
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
John Wiley and Sons Inc., 2020.

Abstract

Nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC), the most common head and neck cancer, is characterized by distinct geographic distribution and familial aggregation. Multiple risk factors, including host genetics, environmental factor and EBV infection, have been linked to the development of NPC, particularly in the familial clustering cases. However, the cause of NPC endemicity remains enigmatic due possibly to the complicated interplay between these risk factors. Recently, positive Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) DNA loads at nasopharyngeal (NP) cavity has been found to reflect NPC development and applied in NPC screening. To examine whether the increased NP EBV loads could aggregate in the families and be affected by host genetics and environmental factor, EBV loads were obtained by 510 NP brushing samples from eligible unaffected individuals, who have 2 or more relatives affected with NPC, in 116 high-risk NPC families. The correlation of relative pairs was estimated using S.A.G.E. (version 6.4, 2016), and host heritability of NP EBV loads was calculated with variance component models using SOLAR (version 8.4.2, 2019). In result, significant correlations of EBV loads were observed between parent-offspring pairs and sibling-sibling pairs (P

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10969071 and 01466615
Volume :
92
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Medical Virology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....38a63546b140697a55dca56d43efbdff