Smoking history and lung carcinoma: KRAS mutation is an early hit in lung adenocarcinoma development.
Publication year
2012Source
Lung Cancer, 75, 2, (2012), pp. 156-160ISSN
Annotation
1 februari 2012
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
Pulmonary Diseases
Journal title
Lung Cancer
Volume
vol. 75
Issue
iss. 2
Page start
p. 156
Page end
p. 160
Subject
N4i 3: Poverty-related infectious diseases ONCOL 5: Aetiology, screening and detectionAbstract
BACKGROUND: In a European multicenter prospective study patients with lung cancer were interviewed for smoking history and biological samples centrally collected. The aim of this study was to compare KRAS mutation analysis with smoking status at the time of diagnosis. METHODS: A nested case-study was performed on 233 non-small cell lung carcinomas. Cases were selected on the basis of progressive disease or disease-free post surgery based on specific criteria. KRAS mutation analysis was performed with the point-EXACCT method. RESULTS: KRAS mutations were found in 39 adenocarcinomas and 1 squamous cell carcinoma in the 233 NSCLC. The median quitting smoking time (QST) for patients with and without KRAS mutations was 9 years, interquartile range [IQR 16-38] and 3 years, IQR [13-50], respectively (p=0.039). No difference was found for age at initiation of smoking, duration of smoking, average tobacco consumption, and smoking status at the time of diagnosis. CONCLUSION: The QST was longer for patients with KRAS mutations, supporting the notion that the presence of a KRAS mutation is a dominant early effect, supporting its role as a driver oncogen.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [204860]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [81031]
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