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Age-specific familial risks in cancer as clues to germline genetic and environmental causes: focus on colorectal, endometrial, prostate, kidney, breast and lung cancers

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Author
Hemminki, Kari JussiORCiD Profile - 0000-0002-2769-3316
Försti, Asta
Hemminki, Otto
Scott, Rodney J
Hemminki, Akseli

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Publication date
2025
Published in
Hereditary Cancer in Clinical Practice
Publisher / Publication place
Termedia
Volume / Issue
23 (1)
ISBN / ISSN
ISSN: 1731-2302
ISBN / ISSN
eISSN: 1897-4287
Funding Information
MSM//LX22NPO5102
MSM//EH22_008/0004644
MZ0/NU/NU21-03-00506
GA0/GA/GA23-05609S
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This publication has a published version with DOI 10.1186/s13053-024-00301-8

Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Swedish Family-Cancer Database (FCD) is the largest source of data on familial cancer in the world, including practically complete family structures and individual cancer diagnoses from the high-quality cancer registry. We present a novel application of FCD by analyzing age-specific familial risks and interpreting them through likely causes, such as germline pathogenic variants and/or environmental exposures. MAIN BODY: The basic assumption for this approach is that a discrete familial clustering in a narrow age-interval is not random but may provide causal clues. For this analysis we selected reasonably common cancers to meaningfully scrutinize familial risk through adulthood in which cancers are diagnosed, that included colorectal (CRC) and endometrial cancers, prostate and kidney cancers and breast and lung cancers. The interpretation is based on the literature. The highest familial relative risks for CRC and endometrial cancers were found at ages 40-44 years, matching the peak impact of mismatch repair gene mutations. However endometrial cancer showed also a small early onset component which could not be explained. Age-related familial risks for breast, prostate and kidney cancers also matched data from large-scale sequencing; these included the early onset component in kidney cancer which was likely due to VHL mutations. Age distribution of familial lung cancer was unique in showing a wide peak extending from middle to old ages, which would be consistent with a combination of direct genetic effects and indirect influence on inheritance of smoking dependence. CONCLUSIONS: The present review of age-specific familial risks and age-of-onset data from the literature may allow an interpretation that the familial and germline landscapes are reasonably harmonious for relatively early onset cancers but at higher ages no discrete peaks can be found which may implicate attenuated impact of high-risk genes and polygenic influence.
Keywords
Age of onset, Early onset, Familial risk, Germline genetics, Heredity
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14178/3181
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WOS:001428255000003
SCOPUS:2-s2.0-85218421545
PUBMED:39985094
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Full text of this result is licensed under: Creative Commons Uveďte původ 4.0 International

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