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Digestive and Liver Disease 2013-Jul

Macrophage stimulating protein variation enhances the risk of sporadic extrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma.

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Marcin Krawczyk
Aksana Höblinger
Florentina Mihalache
Frank Grünhage
Monica Acalovschi
Frank Lammert
Vincent Zimmer

Palabras clave

Abstracto

BACKGROUND

Primary sclerosing cholangitis confers risk of cholangiocarcinoma. Here, we assessed the primary sclerosing cholangitis-associated variant rs3197999 in the MST1 gene, coding for RON receptor tyrosine kinase ligand macrophage stimulating protein, in a large European cholangiocarcinoma cohort.

METHODS

223 cholangiocarcinoma patients including three primary sclerosing cholangitis individuals and 355 cancer- and primary sclerosing cholangitis-free controls were genotyped for MST1 rs3197999.

RESULTS

The cancer group departed from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium (p = 0.022) and exhibited a trend for rs3197999 [A] overrepresentation (31% vs. 26%: p = 0.10). Homozygous rs3197999 [AA] carrier status significantly increased overall (OR = 1.97; p = 0.023) and primary sclerosing cholangitis-unrelated biliary tract cancer risk (OR = 1.84; p = 0.044), relative to homozygous common allele carriers. The association was most pronounced in patients with extrahepatic tumours. This finding was robust to multivariate analysis (p < 0.05), validating the [AA] genotype as an independent cholangiocarcinoma risk factor.

CONCLUSIONS

These results suggest that the [AA] genotype of the common MST1 variant rs3197999 enhances genetic risk of sporadic extrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma irrespective of primary sclerosing cholangitis status, presumably by modulating inflammatory responses and/or altered MSP/RON signalling.

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