Muci et al published in JAMA the results of a trial that suggests
that approximately one-third of all cancers are due to inherited genes.
The investigators
looked at data from 80 309 monozygotic and 123 382 same-sex dizygotic twin
individuals (N = 203 691) within the population-based registers of Denmark, Finland,
Norway, and Sweden, who were part of the Nordic Twin Study of Cancer.
Twins
were followed up a median of 32 years between 1943 and 2010. There were 50 990
individuals who died of any cause, and 3804 who emigrated and were lost to
follow-up.
The
main outcome was incident cancer and time-to-event analyses were used to
estimate familial risk.
A
total of 27 156 incident cancers were diagnosed in 23 980 individuals,
translating to a cumulative incidence of 32%. Cancer was diagnosed in both
twins among 1383 monozygotic (2766 individuals) and 1933 dizygotic (2866
individuals) pairs. Of these, 38% of monozygotic and 26% of dizygotic pairs
were diagnosed with the same cancer type.
The analysis of data found that overall heritability for cancer
was 33 percent among the entire study population, and significantly higher for
certain types of cancers. Significant
heritability was found in 58 percent of diagnosed skin melanomas, 57 percent of
prostate cancers, 43 percent of non-melanoma skin cancers, 39 percent of
ovarian cancers, 38 percent of kidney cancers, 31 percent of breast cancers and
27 percent of uterine cancers. In the
same study researchers identified a set of cancers in which genetics play a
very small role. This group includes lung cancer (18 percent), colon cancer (15
percent), rectal cancer (14 percent), and head and neck cancer (9 percent).”
In
this long-term follow-up study among Nordic twins, there was significant
familial risk for cancer overall and for specific types of cancer. This information about hereditary risks of
cancers may be helpful in patient education and cancer risk counseling.
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Monday, February 1, 2016
One-third of all cancers maybe inherited
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