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Different chromosome damage in lymphocytes of newly diagnosed gastrointestinal and breast cancer patients

Dita Kadlcikova,  Petra Musilova, Hana Hradska, Marketa Petrovova, Iveta Selingerova, Miluse Vozdova, Marek Svoboda, Jiri Rubes

Abstract:

Structural chromosome aberrations are a predictive biomarker of cancer risk. Conventional chromosome analysis widely used for these purposes detects unstable chromosome aberrations that are eliminated during cell division. Stable aberrations that may persist in the body and tend to accumulate during a lifetime can be detected by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). The aim of the study was to investigate the level of chromosome damage in newly diagnosed cancer patients and control subjects by FISH. Both groups of untreated cancer patients had increased frequency of aberrant cells. However, chromosome damage affected different cytogenetic endpoints. Stable translocations and cells with complex rearrangements were elevated in breast cancer patients whereas unstable chromosome aberrations (dicentric chromosomes and acentric fragments) were elevated in gastrointestinal cancer patients. These associations observed in nonsmokers were typically not pronounced in smokers (with the exception of dicentric chromosomes in gastrointestinal patients). Exposure to tobacco smoke increased aberrations in healthy controls but not in the cancer patients. Our study suggests an association between cancer and stable chromosomal rearrangements in breast cancer patients. Unstable aberrations elevated in gastrointestinal cancer patients may be at least partly ascribed to the exposure to diagnostic X-rays.

Received date: 06/04/2019

Accepted date: 09/18/2019

Ahead of print publish date: 02/09/2020

Issue: 3/2020

Volume: 67

Pages: 668 — 676

Keywords: breast cancer, gastrointestinal cancer, risk assessment, chromosome aberration, fluorescence in situ hybridization

DOI: 10.4149/neo_2020_190604N485

Pubmed

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