Publication: A Prospective Study of Duration of Smoking Cessation and Colorectal Cancer Risk by Epigenetics-related Tumor Classification
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2013
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Nishihara, Reiko, Teppei Morikawa, Aya Kuchiba, Paul Lochhead, Mai Yamauchi, Xiaoyun Liao, Yu Imamura, et al. 2013. “A Prospective Study of Duration of Smoking Cessation and Colorectal Cancer Risk by Epigenetics-Related Tumor Classification.” American Journal of Epidemiology 178 (1): 84–100. https://doi.org/10.1093/aje/kws431.
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Abstract
The effect of duration of cigarette smoking cessation on colorectal cancer risk by molecular subtypes remains unclear. Using duplication-method Cox proportional-hazards regression analyses, we examined associations between duration of smoking cessation and colorectal cancer risk according to status of CpG island methylator phenotype (CIMP), microsatellite instability, v-raf murine sarcoma viral oncogene homolog B1 (BRAF) mutation, or DNA methyltransferase-3B (DNMT3B) expression. Follow-up of 134,204 individuals in 2 US nationwide prospective cohorts (Nurses' Health Study (1980-2008) and Health Professionals Follow-up Study (1986-2008)) resulted in 1,260 incident rectal and colon cancers with available molecular data. Compared with current smoking, 10-19, 20-39, and >= 40 years of smoking cessation were associated with a lower risk of CIMP-high colorectal cancer, with multivariate hazard ratios (95% confidence intervals) of 0.53 (0.29, 0.95), 0.52 (0.32, 0.85), and 0.50 (0.27, 0.94), respectively (P-trend = 0.001), but not with the risk of CIMP-low/CIMP-negative cancer (P-trend = 0.25) (P-heterogeneity = 0.02, between CIMP-high and CIMP-low/CIMP-negative cancer risks). Differential associations between smoking cessation and cancer risks by microsatellite instability (P-heterogeneity = 0.02), DNMT3B expression (P-heterogeneity = 0.03), and BRAF (P-heterogeneity = 0.10) status appeared to be driven by the associations of CIMP-high cancer with microsatellite instability-high, DNMT3B-positive, and BRAF-mutated cancers. These molecular pathological epidemiology data suggest a protective effect of smoking cessation on a DNA methylation-related carcinogenesis pathway leading to CIMP-high colorectal cancer.
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