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Genetic Risk Can Be Decreased: Quitting Smoking Decreases and Delays Lung Cancer for Smokers With High and Low CHRNA5 Risk Genotypes — A Meta-Analysis

Authors :
Lambertus A. Kiemeney
Kai Uwe Saum
Heike Bickeböller
Erik H.F.M. van der Heijden
Philip Lazarus
Younghun Han
Timothy B. Baker
Bo Deng
Aage Haugen
Shen Chih Chang
Rayjean J. Hung
Loic Le Marchand
Margaret R. Spitz
Eric J. Duell
Helen M. Hansen
M. Dawn Teare
Amy C. Horton
Hendrik Dienemann
Li-Shiun Chen
Vidar Skaug
John K. Wiencke
Margaret Wrensch
Angeline S. Andrew
Eric O. Johnson
Penella J. Woll
Iona Cheng
John McLaughlin
Jose I. Mayordomo
Xifeng Wu
Mala Pande
Shanbeh Zienolddiny
Angela Risch
Nancy L. Saccone
Geoffrey Liu
Sarah M. Hartz
Claire H. Kim
Ann G. Schwartz
Ping Yang
Angela S. Wenzlaff
Albert Rosenberger
Janet Horsman
Robert Culverhouse
Dorothy K. Hatsukami
Zuo-Feng Zhang
Hermann Brenner
Irene Brüske
Jason A. Wampfler
Katja K.H. Aben
Laura J. Bierut
Christopher I. Amos
Source :
EBioMedicine, Vol 11, Iss C, Pp 219-226 (2016), Ebiomedicine, 11, pp. 219-226, EBioMedicine, EBioMedicine 11, 219-226 (2016), Ebiomedicine, 11, 219-226
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2016.

Abstract

Background Recent meta-analyses show that individuals with high risk variants in CHRNA5 on chromosome 15q25 are likely to develop lung cancer earlier than those with low-risk genotypes. The same high-risk genetic variants also predict nicotine dependence and delayed smoking cessation. It is unclear whether smoking cessation confers the same benefits in terms of lung cancer risk reduction for those who possess CHRNA5 risk variants versus those who do not. Methods Meta-analyses examined the association between smoking cessation and lung cancer risk in 15 studies of individuals with European ancestry who possessed varying rs16969968 genotypes (N = 12,690 ever smokers, including 6988 cases of lung cancer and 5702 controls) in the International Lung Cancer Consortium. Results Smoking cessation (former vs. current smokers) was associated with a lower likelihood of lung cancer (OR = 0.48, 95%CI = 0.30–0.75, p = 0.0015). Among lung cancer patients, smoking cessation was associated with a 7-year delay in median age of lung cancer diagnosis (HR = 0.68, 95%CI = 0.61–0.77, p = 4.9 ∗ 10–10). The CHRNA5 rs16969968 risk genotype (AA) was associated with increased risk and earlier diagnosis for lung cancer, but the beneficial effects of smoking cessation were very similar in those with and without the risk genotype. Conclusion We demonstrate that quitting smoking is highly beneficial in reducing lung cancer risks for smokers regardless of their CHRNA5 rs16969968 genetic risk status. Smokers with high-risk CHRNA5 genotypes, on average, can largely eliminate their elevated genetic risk for lung cancer by quitting smoking- cutting their risk of lung cancer in half and delaying its onset by 7 years for those who develop it. These results: 1) underscore the potential value of smoking cessation for all smokers, 2) suggest that CHRNA5 rs16969968 genotype affects lung cancer diagnosis through its effects on smoking, and 3) have potential value for framing preventive interventions for those who smoke.<br />Highlights • CHRNA5 rs16969968 confers risk for earlier lung cancer diagnosis, but quitting produces benefit regardless of genotype. • Smokers can cut their risk of lung cancer in half and delay its onset by 7 years among those diagnosed. • Precision prevention allows clinicians to provide personalized health benefits of smoking cessation. This is a report on whether smoking cessation confers the same benefits in terms of lung cancer risk reduction for those who possess CHRNA5 risk variants versus those who do not. We determined that quitting smoking is highly beneficial in reducing lung cancer risk levels for smokers regardless of their CHRNA5 rs16969968 genetic risk status. Although CHRNA5 rs16969968 increases risk for earlier lung cancer by 4 years, quitting produces essentially the same benefit for smokers with either high or low genetic risks. Smokers can cut their risk of lung cancer in half and delay its onset by 7 years among those diagnosed. These results are important for smokers to prevent cancer. On average, smokers at all genetic risk levels can largely eliminate their elevated risk for lung cancer by quitting smoking.

Details

ISSN :
23523964
Volume :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
EBioMedicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7826ec8289b45adda914f7b438463c8b