Publication Details

AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH

biochemistry, genetics and molecular biology

Association of prostate cancer with vitamin D receptor haplotypes in African-Americans

Cancer Research, Volume 58, No. 8, Year 1998

In previous studies, allelic variation in the 3' end of the vitamin D receptor gene was associated with increased risk of prostate cancer in white men. Several polymorphisms, including a BsmI restriction site and a poly(A) microsatellite, can be used interchangeably to mark the unidentified locus in whites. In African-Americans, however, these markers are not interchangeable, due to weaker linkage disequilibrium in this genomic region in this population. Here, we germtyped both the BsmI and poly(A) markers for 151 African-American prostate cancer cases (102 localized and 49 advanced) and 174 African-American male controls from a large epidemiological cohort. A direct haplotyping procedure was devised to determine BsmI/poly(A) haplotypes for double heterozygotes so that haplotypes could be used as allelic markers in standard logistic regression analyses. Using BsmI alone, b alleles were associated with a 2-fold decrease in risk of advanced prostate cancer. The association was, however, confined to haplotypes carrying a long (L) allele of the poly(A) microsatellite. BL and bL haplotypes were associated with increased and decreased risk, respectively, whereas neither BS nor bS haplotypes were associated with prostate cancer risk. An allelic variant that confers increased risk of advanced prostate cancer appears to be associated with the BsmI/poly(A) BL haplotype in African-Americans.
Statistics
Citations: 133
Authors: 5
Affiliations: 2
Identifiers
ISSN: 00085472
Research Areas
Cancer
Genetics And Genomics
Study Design
Cross Sectional Study
Cohort Study
Participants Gender
Male