Prediagnostic circulating inflammation-related biomarkers and gastric cancer: A case-cohort study in Japan.

2021 
Gastric cancer is preceded by a chronic inflammatory process. Circulating levels of inflammation-related markers may reveal molecular pathways contributing to cancer development. Our study evaluated risk associations of gastric cancer with a wide range of systemic soluble inflammation and immune-response proteins. We performed a case-cohort analysis within the JPHC Study II, including a subcohort of 410 participants selected randomly within defined age and sex groups, and 414 individuals with incident gastric cancer. Ninety-two biomarkers were measured in baseline plasma using proximity extension assays. Gastric cancer multivariable hazard ratios were calculated for two to four quantiles used as ordinal variables of each biomarker by Cox proportional hazards regression models with age as the time metric. Of 73 evaluable biomarkers, three (CCL11, CCL20 and IL17C) were associated with increased gastric cancer risk and two (CCL23 and MMP1) with reduced cancer risk (Ptrends < 0.05). However, no association was statistically significant after a false discovery rate correction. This study largely expands the range of inflammation molecules evaluated for gastric cancer risk but failed to identify novel associations with this neoplasia.
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