1. Genetic polymorphisms of FAS and EVER genes in a Greek population and their susceptibility to cervical cancer : a case control study
- Author
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Antonio Barbadilla, Raquel Egea, Alexandros Daponte, Georgios M. Hadjigeorgiou, Efthimios Dardiotis, Theodoros Agorastos, and Evangelia Pavlidou
- Subjects
Adult ,Risk ,0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,Linkage disequilibrium ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cancer Research ,Genotype ,Uterine Cervical Neoplasms ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Linkage Disequilibrium ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Gene Frequency ,Polymorphism (computer science) ,Internal medicine ,Statistical significance ,EVER ,medicine ,Genetics ,Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,fas Receptor ,Polymorphism ,Allele frequency ,Alleles ,Neoplasm Staging ,Gynecology ,Cervical cancer ,Greece ,business.industry ,Case-control study ,Membrane Proteins ,Middle Aged ,FAS ,medicine.disease ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,030104 developmental biology ,Case-Control Studies ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Female ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
Ajuts: the present study was developed on a self-funding base, using a personal budget of Evangelia Pavlidou for the reagents used in the laboratory analysis. Background: the aim of the study was to evaluate the association of two SNPs of EVER1/2 genes' region (rs2290907, rs16970849) and the FAS-670 polymorphism with the susceptibility to precancerous lesions and cervical cancer in a Greek population. -Methods: among the 515 women who were included in the statistical analysis, 113 belong to the case group and present with precancerous lesions or cervical cancer (27 with persistent CIN1, 66 with CIN2/3 and 20 with cervical cancer) and 402 belong to the control group. The chi-squared test was used to compare the case and the control groups with an allelic and a genotype-based analysis. - Results: the results of the statistical analysis comparing the case and the control groups for all the SNPs tested were not statistically significant. Borderline significant difference (p value = 0.079) was only found by the allelic model between the control group and the CIN1/CIN2 patients' subgroup for the polymorphism rs16970849. The comparison of the other case subgroups with the control group did not show any statistically significant difference. Conclusions: None of the SNPs included in the study can be associated with statistical significance with the development of precancerous lesions or cervical cancer.
- Published
- 2016