Ocular melanoma is not associated with CDKN2A or MC1R variants - a population-based study


Autoria(s): Vajdic, C; Kricker, A; Duffy, DL; Aitken, JF; Stark, M; ter Huurne, JAC; Martin, NG; Armstrong, BK; Hayward, NK
Data(s)

01/08/2003

Resumo

Germline variants in the melanocortin 1 receptor gene (MC1R) and the p16 gene (CDKN2A) are associated with an increased risk of cutaneous melanoma. The frequency of these germline variants was examined in a population-based, incident series of 62 ocular melanoma cases and ethnicity-matched population controls. In both cases and controls, 59% of individuals carried at least one MC1R variant and there were no significant differences in the frequency of any of the five most common variants of MC1R. We also found no significant differences between cases and controls in the frequency of any of the four most common variants of CDKN2A, and no melanoma case carried a deleterious germline CDKN2A mutation. Our findings argue against an important predisposing effect of the MC1R and CDKN2A genes for ocular melanoma.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:64965

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Lippincott Williams & Wilkins

Palavras-Chave #Oncology #Dermatology #Medicine, Research & Experimental #Cdkn2a #Mc1r #Ocular Melanoma #Polymorphisms #Kinase-4 Inhibitor Gene #Uveal Melanoma #Germline Mutations #Risk #Families #Brca2 #P16 #Melanogenesis #Pigmentation #P16(ink4a) #C1 #321011 Medical Genetics #730107 Inherited diseases (incl. gene therapy)
Tipo

Journal Article