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Abstract 3597: The Chicago Colorectal Cancer Consortium (CCCC) experience: Understanding colorectal cancer disparities

Authors :
Carol Braunchweig
Julia Clark
Shilpa Ravella
Rawson James
Rosa M. Xicola
Vivek Chaudhry
Jacob Shaw
Sonia S. Kupfer
Kattie Cerye
Katherine Mraz
Cenk Pusatcioglu
Mary Morrissey
Ashley Janoski
Gary Rodriguez
Grace Guzman
Hui Xie
Nathan A. Ellis
Xavier Llor
Vincent L. Freeman
Molly Gagnon
Joshua Melson
Source :
Cancer Research. 72:3597-3597
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2012.

Abstract

Colorectal cancer (CRC) affects disproportionally African Americans (AAs) who have a 20% higher incidence and a 40% higher mortality than Caucasians. Very few studies have specifically addressed CRC in AAs. In order to uncover the factors that underlie this disparity we set up the CCCC, a large, robust and well-characterized database and biorepository of CRC patients from the Chicago metropolitan area that is highly enriched with AAs. The project enrolls newly diagnosed CRCs, polyps at different stages, and cancer/polyp-free controls in 5 large hospitals. Extensive clinical, family history, demographic, dietary, toxic exposure data is collected along with tumor and uninvolved mucosa as well as plasma, serum, and paraffin-embedded samples. Tumors are molecularly characterized and germline DNA is used to assess genetic factors implicated in CRC development. The primary goal of the project is to study how genetic and environmental factors as well as their interaction contribute to CRC development and which factors make AAs more prone to develop this cancer. We will also assess specific factors that may contribute to the worse prognosis in AAs. Results: A total of 205 CRCs, (58% AAs), 86 patients with high-risk adenomas, 75 mild-risk adenomas, and 173 controls have been recruited so far. The mean age at diagnosis was 60.2 for AAs and 61.8 for whites (P=0.08), in both cases significantly lower than the mean age reported for the US CRCs in general (68-70). There was a significantly higher number of AA patients younger than age 50 at diagnosis (19.5% vs. 7.1% whites; P=0.043). In AA patients tumors were more often on the right side of the colon (43.3% vs. 22.7%; P=0.02) and more were undifferentiated (19.1% vs. 3.5%; P=0.03). Both groups had a similar number of colonoscopies before cancer diagnosis (60.2% for AAs vs. 68.3% for whites; P=0.11). While there was no significant difference among AA cases and controls regarding high tobacco use (>20 pack/years)(16.9% cases vs. 17.1% controls), more whites with CRC were heavy smokers (45.7% cases vs. 29.7 controls). Less AA patients reported family history of CRC than whites (16.4% vs. 35.2%; P0.02) or family history of polyps (21.7% vs. 44%). Conclusions: In our urban cohort both AA and white patients present CRC significantly earlier than expected. Very important differences are seen between AAs and whites that may have significant implications when considering CRC screening approaches, such as the high percentage of AA patients diagnosed before age 50 or the much higher number of right-sided tumors. Heavy tobacco use seems to associate with CRC in whites but not in AAs. Altogether points towards important biological differences that need to be further assessed. As we are ascertaining toxic and dietary exposure and molecularly characterizing all tumors, eventually we should be able to explain the biological basis of the significant disparity in CRC Citation Format: {Authors}. {Abstract title} [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 103rd Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2012 Mar 31-Apr 4; Chicago, IL. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2012;72(8 Suppl):Abstract nr 3597. doi:1538-7445.AM2012-3597

Details

ISSN :
15387445 and 00085472
Volume :
72
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........6d01bdd026d3cef7585f2510279aada7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/1538-7445.am2012-3597