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Determinants of the t(14;18) translocation and their role in t(14;18)-positive follicular lymphoma

Authors :
Kelly, Rachel S. Roulland, Sandrine Morgado, Ester Sungalee, Stephanie Jouve, Nathalie Tumino, Rosario Krogh, Vittorio and Panico, Salvatore Polidoro, Silvia Masala, Giovanna and Sanchez, Maria-Jose Chirlaque, Maria-Dolores Sala, Nuria and Barricarte Gurrea, Aurelio Dorronsoro, Miren Travis, Ruth C. and Riboli, Elio Gunter, Marc Murphy, Neil Vermeulen, Roel and Bueno-de-Mesquita, H. B. Peeters, Petra H. Trichopoulou, Antonia and Trichopoulos, Dimitrios Lagiou, Pagona Nieters, Alexandra and Canzian, Federico Kaaks, Rudolf Boeing, Heiner and Weiderpass, Elisabete Stocks, Tanja Melin, Beatrice Overvad, Kim Tjonneland, Anne Olsen, Anja Brennan, Paul and Johansson, Mattias Nadel, Bertrand Vineis, Paolo
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

The strong association between t(14;18) translocation and follicular lymphoma (FL) is well known. However, the determinants of this chromosomal aberration and their role in t(14;18) associated FL remain to be established. t(14;18) frequency within the B cell lymphoma 2 major breakpoint region was determined for 135 incident FL cases and 251 healthy controls as part of a nested case-control study within the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer cohort. Quantitative real-time PCR was performed in DNA extracted from blood samples taken at recruitment. The relationship between prevalence and frequency of the translocation with baseline anthropometric, lifestyle, and dietary factors in cases and controls was determined. Unconditional logistic regression was used to explore whether the risk of FL associated with these factors differed in t(14;18)(+) as compared to t(14;18)(-) cases. Among incident FL cases, educational level (chi (2) p = 0.021) and height (chi (2) p = 0.025) were positively associated with t(14;18) prevalence, and cases with high frequencies [t(14;18)(HF)] were significantly taller (t test p value = 0.006). These findings were not replicated in the control population, although there were a number of significant associations with dietary variables. Further analyses revealed that height was a significant risk factor for t(14;18)(+) FL [OR 6.31 (95 % CI 2.11, 18.9) in the tallest versus the shortest quartile], but not t(14;18)(-) cases. These findings suggest a potential role for lifestyle factors in the prevalence and frequency of the t(14;18) translocation. The observation that the etiology of FL may differ by t(14;18) status, particularly with regard to height, supports the subdivision of FL by translocation status.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......2127..3e749928d471ee881a826661cd8294bb