Publication: The CAG repeat within the androgen receptor gene and its relationship to prostate cancer
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Date
1997
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National Academy of Sciences
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Giovannucci, E., M. J. Stampfer, K. Krithivas, M. Brown, A. Brufsky, J. Talcott, C. H. Hennekens, and P. W. Kantoff. 1997. “The CAG Repeat within the Androgen Receptor Gene and Its Relationship to Prostate Cancer.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 94 (7): 3320–23. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.94.7.3320.
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Abstract
The length of a polymorphic CAG repeat sequence, occurring in the androgen receptor gene, is inversely correlated with transcriptional activity by the andro gen receptor, Because heightened androgenic stimulation may Increase risk of prostate cancer development and progression, we examined whether shorter CAG repeats in the androgen receptor gene are related to higher risk of prostate cancel. We conducted a nested case-control study of 587 newly diagnosed cases of prostate cancer detected between 1982 and 1995, and 588 controls without prostate cancer, within the Physician's Health Study, An association existed between fewer androgen receptor gene CAG repeats and higher risk of total prostate [relative risk (RR) = 1.52; 95% confidence interval 0.92-2.49; P trend = 0.04; for men with CAG repeat lengths less than or equal to 18 relative to greater than or equal to 26 repeats], In particular, a shorter CAG repeat sequence was associated with cancers characterized hy extraprostatic extension or distant metastases (stage C or D) or high histologic grade (RR = 2.14; CI = 1.14-4.01; P trend = 0.001), This association was observed individually both for high stage (RR = 2.23) and high grade prostate cancer (RR = 1,89), Men with shorter repeats were at particularly high risk for distant metastatic and fatal prostate cancer, Variability in the CAG repeat length was not associated with low grade or low stage disease, These results demonstrate that a shorter CAG repeat sequence in the androgen receptor gene predicts higher grade and advanced stage of prostate cancer at diagnosis, and metastasis and mortality from the disease, The clinical implications of these results should be evaluated further.
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