PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

Iron levels, genes involved in iron metabolism and antioxidative processes and lung cancer incidence.

  • Grzegorz Mariusz Sukiennicki,
  • Wojciech Marciniak,
  • Magdalena Muszyńska,
  • Piotr Baszuk,
  • Satish Gupta,
  • Katarzyna Białkowska,
  • Katarzyna Jaworska-Bieniek,
  • Katarzyna Durda,
  • Marcin Lener,
  • Sandra Pietrzak,
  • Tomasz Gromowski,
  • Karolina Prajzendanc,
  • Alicja Łukomska,
  • Piotr Waloszczyk,
  • Janusz Zenon Wójcik,
  • Rodney Scott,
  • Jan Lubiński,
  • Anna Jakubowska

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0208610
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
p. e0208610

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundLung cancer is the most common adult malignancy accounting for the largest proportion of cancer related deaths. Iron (Fe) is an essential trace element and is a component of several major metabolic pathways playing an important role in many physiological processes. In this study we evaluated the association between Fe concentration in serum, iron metabolism parameters and genetic variaton in 7 genes involved in iron metabolism and anti-oxidative processes with the incidence of lung cancer in Poland.Materials and methodsThe study included 200 lung cancer patients and 200 matched healthy control subjects. We analyzed serum iron concentration and iron metabolism parameters (TIBC, UIBC, serum ferritin and transferrin saturation), and genotyped seven variants in seven genes: HFE, TFR1, HAMP, TF, SOD2, CAT and GPX1.ResultsLung cancer patients compared to their matched controls had significantly higher mean serum iron level (p = 0.01), ferritin level (p = 0.007) and TIBC (p = 0.006). Analysis revealed that higher concentration of iron and ferritin (IVth quartile) compared to the lower concentration (Ist quartile) was associated with over 2-fold increased lung cancer incidence. We also found that higher transferrin saturation (p = 0.01) and lower TIBC (pConclusionsThe results of this case control study indicate that higher body iron represented by higher Fe and ferritin levels may be associated with lung cancer incidence. Rs10421768 in HAMP may be associated with about 3-times higher lung cancer risk. Higher Fe body content may be associated with better survival of lung cancer patients.