Each year, 51,200 people in the United States are diagnosed with bladder cancer and 10,600 die of the disease. Exposure to environmental chemicals as well as genetic factors play a significant role in initiation of bladder cancer. Epidemiologic investigations have clearly shown an increased risk of bladder and other cancers associated with arsenic exposure, but the level at which it poses a measurable health risk has been the topic of considerable debate, and its precise mechanism of action remains unknown. Furthermore, a number of studies have reported an interaction between smoking, genetic polymorphisms and cancer risk. We will test the hypothesis that polymorphisms in the nucleotide excision repair pathway are associated with increased bladder cancer risk. We will address this hypothesis using exposure data and blood samples collected in a large population-based study of bladder cancer in the New Hampshire (850 cases, 1,365 controls).
The specific aims of the project will be to 1) test the hypothesis that genetic variants in the nucleotide excision repair pathway genes (XPD, XPC, XPA, and ERCC1), are associated with increased risk of bladder cancer, and 2) determine whether environmental exposures (arsenic, smoking) and nucleotide excision repair polymorphisms interact to increase bladder cancer risk. This study presents a unique opportunity to clarify how genetic and environmental factors affect DNA repair and contribute to bladder cancer susceptibility. Through our study, we hope to contribute to both our mechanistic understanding of bladder cancer and to identify subgroups of the population that may be at greater risk of environmentally-induced cancers.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Small Research Grants (R03)
Project #
1R03CA099500-01A1
Application #
6695392
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZCA1-SRRB-Q (M1))
Program Officer
Verma, Mukesh
Project Start
2003-07-01
Project End
2005-06-30
Budget Start
2003-07-01
Budget End
2004-06-30
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2003
Total Cost
$79,000
Indirect Cost
Name
Dartmouth College
Department
Family Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
041027822
City
Hanover
State
NH
Country
United States
Zip Code
03755
Andrew, Angeline S; Gui, Jiang; Hu, Ting et al. (2015) Genetic polymorphisms modify bladder cancer recurrence and survival in a USA population-based prognostic study. BJU Int 115:238-47
Andrew, Angeline S; Marsit, Carmen J; Schned, Alan R et al. (2015) Expression of tumor suppressive microRNA-34a is associated with a reduced risk of bladder cancer recurrence. Int J Cancer 137:1158-66
Su, Chengwei; Andrew, Angeline; Karagas, Margaret R et al. (2013) Using Bayesian networks to discover relations between genes, environment, and disease. BioData Min 6:6
Andrew, Angeline S; Hu, Ting; Gu, Jian et al. (2012) HSD3B and gene-gene interactions in a pathway-based analysis of genetic susceptibility to bladder cancer. PLoS One 7:e51301
Kwong, Ryan C; Karagas, Margaret R; Kelsey, Karl T et al. (2010) Arsenic exposure predicts bladder cancer survival in a US population. World J Urol 28:487-92
Andrew, Angeline S; Mason, Rebecca A; Memoli, Vincent et al. (2009) Arsenic activates EGFR pathway signaling in the lung. Toxicol Sci 109:350-7
Pattin, Kristine A; White, Bill C; Barney, Nate et al. (2009) A computationally efficient hypothesis testing method for epistasis analysis using multifactor dimensionality reduction. Genet Epidemiol 33:87-94
Andrew, Angeline S; Gui, Jiang; Sanderson, Arthur C et al. (2009) Bladder cancer SNP panel predicts susceptibility and survival. Hum Genet 125:527-39
Andrew, Angeline S; Mason, Rebecca A; Kelsey, Karl T et al. (2009) DNA repair genotype interacts with arsenic exposure to increase bladder cancer risk. Toxicol Lett 187:10-4
Mason, Rebecca A; Morlock, Elaine V; Karagas, Margaret R et al. (2009) EGFR pathway polymorphisms and bladder cancer susceptibility and prognosis. Carcinogenesis 30:1155-60

Showing the most recent 10 out of 15 publications