Association between XRCC1 G399A polymorphism and late complications to radiotherapy in Saudi head and neck cancer patients

Joint Authors

al-Subayh, Ghazi Atiyyah
al-Subayi, Midhat Muhammad
al-Rajihi, Nasir Muhammad
al-Harbi, Najla Muhammad
al-Hadyan, Khalid Salih
al-Buhayri, Munirah Hamad
Miftah, Bilal Ali
al-Shabanah, Muhammad Uthman
Abu Amiru, Khalid Qadir

Source

Journal of the Egyptian National Cancer Institute

Issue

Vol. 20, Issue 3 (30 Sep. 2008), pp.302-308, 7 p.

Publisher

Cairo University National Cancer Institute

Publication Date

2008-09-30

Country of Publication

Egypt

No. of Pages

7

Main Subjects

Medicine

Topics

Abstract EN

Background : It has been hypothesized that patient to patient variation in normal tissue reactions to radiotherapy is associated with the presence of polymorphic variations in genes involved in DNA repair.

Purpose : To test for a possible association between two single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), XRCC1 399 G>A Arg/Gln and XRCC3 241 C>T Thr/Met and late reactions to radiotherapy.

Patients and Methods : In this case control study, 50 Head and Neck cancer patients were retrospectively recruited.

The grade (G) of fibrosis, a late complication to radiotherapy, was scored using the RTOG / EORTC grading system.

Radiosensitive patients with moderate to severe subcutaneous and deep tissue fibrosis (cases, G2-3, n = 25) where matched with patients with minimal fibrotic reactions (control, G0-1, n=25).

The two nonsynonymous SNPs were genotyped by direct sequencing of DNA extracted from blood or cultured fibroblasts.

Results: Allelic frequency showed significant association with grade of fibrosis for XRCC1 399 G/A (p = 0.05), but not for XRCC3 241 C>T (p = 0.10).

Conclusions : This pilot study corroborates the association between XRCC1 399 G>A and risk of late normal tissue complications following radiotherapy in our patients.

Large studies are required to unravel more SNPs that can influence radiosensitivity and ascertain the associations with reactions to radiotherapy in order to be used as genetic predictive biomarkers of individual radiosensitivity.

American Psychological Association (APA)

al-Subayh, Ghazi Atiyyah& al-Subayi, Midhat Muhammad& al-Rajihi, Nasir Muhammad& al-Harbi, Najla Muhammad& al-Hadyan, Khalid Salih& al-Buhayri, Munirah Hamad…[et al.]. 2008. Association between XRCC1 G399A polymorphism and late complications to radiotherapy in Saudi head and neck cancer patients. Journal of the Egyptian National Cancer Institute،Vol. 20, no. 3, pp.302-308.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-355921

Modern Language Association (MLA)

al-Subayh, Ghazi Atiyyah…[et al.]. Association between XRCC1 G399A polymorphism and late complications to radiotherapy in Saudi head and neck cancer patients. Journal of the Egyptian National Cancer Institute Vol. 20, no. 3 (Sep. 2008), pp.302-308.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-355921

American Medical Association (AMA)

al-Subayh, Ghazi Atiyyah& al-Subayi, Midhat Muhammad& al-Rajihi, Nasir Muhammad& al-Harbi, Najla Muhammad& al-Hadyan, Khalid Salih& al-Buhayri, Munirah Hamad…[et al.]. Association between XRCC1 G399A polymorphism and late complications to radiotherapy in Saudi head and neck cancer patients. Journal of the Egyptian National Cancer Institute. 2008. Vol. 20, no. 3, pp.302-308.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-355921

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references : p. 308

Record ID

BIM-355921