In this paper, we review data of recent literature on the distribution in centenarians of germ-line polymorphisms, which are supposed to affect the individual susceptibility to cancer (p53, HRAS1, BRCA1, glutathione transferases, cytochrome oxidases, steroid-5 alpha-reductase enzyme type II).
Polymorphisms in the TP53 tumor suppressor gene and HRAS1 proto-oncogene have been associated in some studies with this cancer; we sought to replicate these associations in an ethnically diverse population in Hawaii.
The question of whether cancer risk is associated with rare minisatellite HRAS1 alleles needs to be revisited with the use of new methods that have a greater ability to distinguish rare alleles from similarly sized common alleles.
Therefore, while the HRAS1 minisatellite may serve as a reporter for a broad-based group of mutational mechanisms, these results are consistent with a direct pathogenetic contribution by high-risk alleles as the biological basis underlying cancer association of this VNTR.
The HRAS1 variable number of tandem repeats (VNTR) polymorphism, located 1 kilobase (kb) downstream of the HRAS1 proto-oncogene (chromosome 11p15.5) is one possible genetic modifier of cancer penetrance.
However, there are also commoner genes conferring lower risks but accounting for a more substantial fraction of cancer cases; those so far identified include the ataxia-telangiectasia gene and the HRAS1 minisatellite locus.
Both the present case-control study (odds ratio, 1.83; 95 percent confidence interval, 1.28 to 2.67; P = 0.002) and the present study combined with our previous study (odds ratio, 2.07; 95 percent confidence interval, 1.47 to 2.92; P < 0.001), as well as the meta-analysis of all 23 studies (odds ratio, 1.93; 95 percent confidence interval, 1.63 to 2.30; chi-square = 57.58; P < 0.001), replicated our original finding and demonstrated a significant association of rare HRAS1 alleles with cancer.