Cigarette smoking and chromosome 9 alterations in bladder cancer Journal Article


Authors: Zhang, Z. F.; Shu, X. M.; Cordon-Cardo, C.; Orlow, I.; Lu, M. L.; Millon, T. V.; Cao, P. Q.; Connolly-Jenks, C.; Dalbagni, G.; Lianes, P.; Lacombe, L.; Reuter, V. E.; Scher, H.
Article Title: Cigarette smoking and chromosome 9 alterations in bladder cancer
Abstract: Epidemiological studies suggest that bladder cancer may be caused by carcinogens in tobacco and certain occupational exposures. Molecular studies have shown that chromosome 9 alterations and TP53 mutations are the most frequent events in bladder cancer. To date, the relationships between epidemiological risk factors and genetic alterations have not been fully explored in bladder cancer. The purpose of this study was to explore the association between smoking and chromosome 9 aberrations in bladder cancer cases. Seventy-three patients with bladder cancer at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center were evaluated for smoking history, occupational history, and chromosome 9 alterations. The epidemiological data were abstracted from medical charts. Patients' tumor tissues were analyzed using RFLP and microsatellite polymorphism assays for detection of chromosome 9 alterations. Elevated odds ratios (ORs) were found for chromosome 9 alterations in smokers compared to those in nonsmokers (OR = 4.2; 95% confidence interval, 1.02- 17.0) after controlling for age, sex, race, occupational history, and stage of disease. The ORs were 3.6 for those smoking ≤20 cigarettes per day and 5.8 for those smoking >20 cigarettes per day. No association was found between occupational history and chromosome 9 alterations. This study supplies evidence suggestive of the link between smoking and chromosome 9 alterations in the etiology of bladder cancer and indicates that potential tumor suppressor genes on chromosome 9 may be involved in smoking-related bladder carcinogenesis.
Keywords: human tissue; gene mutation; cigarette smoking; polymerase chain reaction; dna damage; disease association; chromosomes, human, pair 9; odds ratio; smoking; bladder cancer; risk factor; urinary bladder neoplasms; confidence intervals; tumor suppressor gene; gene expression regulation, neoplastic; urinary bladder; tumor suppressor protein p53; chromosome aberrations; environmental factor; bladder carcinogenesis; genes, tumor suppressor; genetic heterogeneity; chromosome mapping; dna polymorphism; occupational exposure; chromosome 9; polymorphism, restriction fragment length; cocarcinogenesis; humans; human; priority journal; article
Journal Title: Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers and Prevention
Volume: 6
Issue: 5
ISSN: 1055-9965
Publisher: American Association for Cancer Research  
Date Published: 1997-05-01
Start Page: 321
End Page: 326
Language: English
PUBMED: 9149891
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Source: Scopus
Citation Impact
MSK Authors
  1. Guido Dalbagni
    325 Dalbagni
  2. Minglan Lu
    23 Lu
  3. Irene Orlow
    247 Orlow
  4. Victor Reuter
    1223 Reuter
  5. Howard Scher
    1129 Scher
  6. Zuo-Feng Zhang
    102 Zhang
  7. Louis Lacombe
    19 Lacombe
  8. Pilar Llanes
    11 Lianes