Rs867228 in FPR1 accelerates the manifestation of luminal B breast cancer.
Vincent CarbonnierJulie Le NaourThomas BachelotErika VacchelliFabrice AndréSuzette DelalogeGuido KroemerPublished in: Oncoimmunology (2023)
Formyl peptide receptor-1 (FPR1) is a pathogen recognition receptor involved in the detection of bacteria, in the control of inflammation, as well as in cancer immunosurveillance. A single nucleotide polymorphism in FPR1 , rs867228, provokes a loss-of-function phenotype. In a bioinformatic study performed on The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), we observed that homo-or heterozygosity for rs867228 in FPR1 (which affects approximately one-third of the population across continents) accelerates age at diagnosis of specific carcinomas including luminal B breast cancer by 4.9 years. To validate this finding, we genotyped 215 patients with metastatic luminal B mammary carcinomas from the SNPs To Risk of Metastasis (SToRM) cohort. The first diagnosis of luminal B breast cancer occurred at an age of 49.2 years for individuals bearing the dysfunctional TT or TG alleles ( n = 73) and 55.5 years for patients the functional GG alleles ( n = 141), meaning that rs867228 accelerated the age of diagnosis by 6.3 years ( p =0.0077, Mann & Whitney). These results confirm our original observation in an independent validation cohort. We speculate that it may be useful to include the detection of rs867228 in breast cancer screening campaigns for selectively increasing the frequency and stringency of examinations starting at a relatively young age.
Keyphrases
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