Association between methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase polymorphisms, alcohol intake and oropharyngolaryngeal carcinoma in northern Italy

Title
Association between methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase polymorphisms, alcohol intake and oropharyngolaryngeal carcinoma in northern Italy
Publication type
Journal Article
Year of Publication
2005
Journal
Journal of Laryngology and Otology
Volume
119
Issue
5
Pagination
371 - 376
Date published
2005
ISBN
00222151 (ISSN)
Abstract

Folate metabolism dysregulation may lead to abnormal cell proliferation and predispose to carcinogenesis by inducing DNA hypomethylation. Folate pathways may be modified by polymorphisms in relevant genes, such as that for methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR), or by alcohol consumption. We investigated the relationship between MTHFR mutations at nucleotides C677T and A1298C, which cause reduced MTHFR enzyme activity, and susceptibility to oropharyngolaryngeal carcinoma in 65 patients and 100 controls. We isolated DNA from peripheral blood leukocytes. In oropharyngolaryngeal carcinoma cases the C677T heterozygous genotype was more frequent (p = 0.018), the allele frequency of MTHFR 677T was greater (p = 0.019) and the genotype 677TT/1298AA was more frequent (p = 0.001). A higher risk of carcinoma was found in the case of moderate drinkers with mutant MTHFR homozygosis or double heterozygosis (OR = 21.2 and OR = 9.1, respectively; p trend = 0.002), and the association was maintained for the different cancer sites (glottic, supraglottic, oropharyngeal). Our findings support the hypothesis that the interaction of alcohol intake and MTHFR polymorphisms might contribute to susceptibility to carcinogenesis of the oropharyngolaryngeal tract.