Frontiers in Oncology (Sep 2021)

The Association of Fat-Mass-and Obesity-Associated Gene Polymorphism (rs9939609) With Colorectal Cancer: A Case-Control Study

  • Maryam Gholamalizadeh,
  • Mohammad Esmail Akbari,
  • Saeid Doaei,
  • Sayed Hossein Davoodi,
  • Bojlul Bahar,
  • Ghasem Azizi Tabesh,
  • Hossein Sadeghi,
  • Melika Razavi Hashemi,
  • Elham Kheyrani,
  • Samira Rastgoo,
  • Azadeh Hajipour,
  • Zahra Aslany,
  • Reza Mirfakhraie,
  • Alireza Mosavi Jarrahi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2021.732515
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

Read online

Background and AimThe association between the rs9939609 polymorphism of fat mass and obesity-associated gene (FTO) and risk of colorectal cancer is controversial. This study aims to evaluate the relationship between FTO rs9939609 polymorphism and colorectal cancer (CRC) in Iranian people.MethodsA case-control study was conducted on 125 patients with CRC and 250 healthy subjects in Tehran, Iran. Demographic data and blood samples were collected from all participants. Genotyping of rs9939609 polymorphism was performed by the tetra-primer amplification refractory mutation system-polymerase chain reaction (T-ARMS-PCR) method.ResultsThe occurrence of AA genotype of FTO rs9939609 polymorphism in the colorectal cancer patients was significantly higher compared to that of healthy subjects (16.4 vs. 2.9%, respectively, P=0.02). The association between the frequency of risk allele of the FTO polymorphism and CRC (B=1.67, P=0.042) remained significant after adjustment for age. Further adjustment for gender (model 2) and marital status (model 3) did not change this result (B=1.67, P= 0.042 and B=1.67, P=0.043, respectively). The results remained significant after additional adjustment for ethnicity (B=1.57, P= 0.047).ConclusionWe found a positive association between the A allele of the rs9939609 polymorphism and CRC. Future studies are required to identify the underlying mechanisms.

Keywords