[The PROGENE study, the French project of genetic analysis of familial prostatic cancer: recruitment and analysis]

Prog Urol. 1996 Apr;6(2):226-35.
[Article in French]

Abstract

Objectives: To initiate a genetic linkage study in order to localize one or several predisposition gene(s) for hereditary prostatic cancer (PC), as various epidemiological studies have demonstrated a possible family aggregation in about 25% of cases. A family segregation study [14] has also shown that a genetic predisposition, with autosomal dominant transmission and high penetrance (88% at 85 years) could be responsible for 9% of all PC.

Methods: A national collection of families with at least 2 cases of PC allowed: 1) identification of families with hereditary forms of PC, 2) creation of a constitutional DNA bank after collecting blood samples from subjects belonging to these families, and 3) a simulation study of genetic linkage analysis prior to microsatellite genotyping.

Results: From July 1994 to September 1995, we included 67 families (180 cases of PC). Another 45 families are currently being included. 24 of these 67 families (89 PC, 54 survivors) satisfied at least one of the criteria defined in the study by CARTER et al. for hereditary forms of familial PC. Two families were also included as the 3 patients with PC were second degree relatives. A total of 26 families therefore presented a hereditary form, 18 of which (73 PC, 46 survivors) were considered to be informative for a genetic linkage study (lod score = 4 for theta = 0.001 with an 8 allele marker). The constitutional DNA of 271 individuals of these informative families was extracted from circulating cells obtained from blood samples, immortalized lymphocytes, and the genotyping was initiated for 216 microsatellite markers distributed throughout the genome, an average of every 20 cM.

Conclusion: Although the recruitment allowed us to identify many informative families for an inherited risk of PC, the predictive study suggested a high probability for localization of a predisposition gene by genetic linkage analysis. It would therefore be possible to identify, within the families concerned, the subjects carrying the genetic anomaly and consequently at high-risk of PC. Finally, the demonstration of the locus would allow cloning and identification of the gene (s) involved.

Publication types

  • English Abstract

MeSH terms

  • Female
  • France
  • Genetic Linkage
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Pedigree
  • Prostatic Neoplasms / genetics*