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Sex specific familial risk in lung cancer through changing histologies in Sweden

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Author
Hemminki, Kari JussiORCiD Profile - 0000-0002-2769-3316
Zitrický, FrantišekORCiD Profile - 0000-0001-7600-7143
Sundquist, Kristina
Sundquist, Jan
Försti, Asta
Hemminki, Akseli

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Publication date
2025
Published in
International Journal of Cancer
Publisher / Publication place
Wiley-Liss
Volume / Issue
157 (5)
ISBN / ISSN
ISSN: 0020-7136
ISBN / ISSN
eISSN: 1097-0215
Funding Information
UK//COOP
MSM//LX22NPO5102
MSM//EH22_008/0004644
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  • Faculty of Medicine in Pilsen

This publication has a published version with DOI 10.1002/ijc.35431

Abstract
Familial clustering of lung cancer (LC) is related to shared smoking habits but the contribution of other potential factors such as sex or histology is not well known, and these are the subjects of the present study in Sweden. Family relationships (from Multigeneration register) and diagnosed cancers (from Cancer registry) were obtained from the national registers from 1961 to 2021. The overall familial risk for LC was constant from the 1990s but the male familial risk decreased while the female familial risk doubled at the same time when female incidence doubled. The female familial risk for mother-daughter pairs was higher (SIR = 2.2 [2.0-2.3], N = 716) than for father-son pairs (SIR = 1.6 [1.5-1.8], N = 962). The histology-specific familial risks for adenocarcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, small cell and large cell carcinoma were highest for concordant histology but also present for discordant histology. The number of family members diagnosed with LC was a strong determinant of familial risk. The novel results showed that familial risk of LC depends on the background incidence of LC and is higher for women compared to men. We demonstrated further an increased familial risk for each of the four histological types of LC which was higher for concordant than discordant histologies but was even detected between discordant histologies suggesting that LC histology is not a genetic trait.
Keywords
adenocarcinoma, age of onset, incidence trend, proband, sibling risk
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14178/3256
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WOS:001459854100001
SCOPUS:2-s2.0-105001855926
PUBMED:40156379
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Full text of this result is licensed under: Creative Commons Uveďte původ 4.0 International

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