Audio By Carbonatix
Researchers have for the first time found inherited genetic factors which raise the risk of testicular cancer.
A UK team found many testicular cancer patients shared common DNA variants on chromosomes five, six and 12 that healthy men did not have.
This finding was echoed in a separate US study in the same journal, Nature Genetics, which highlighted two of the same variations.
Both studies raise hopes of better treatments and diagnostic tests.
The UK team, from the Institute of Cancer Research, compared the profile of 730 testicular cancer patients with those of healthy men.
They found men who inherit any of the three genetic variants have a raised risk of the disease.
Those who carry the variant most closely linked to the disease have two to three times the risk of the general population.
And inheriting all three variants raises the risk by up to fourfold.
However, it is still the case that only a small proportion of men who carry the higher risk variations will actually develop testicular cancer.
Researcher Dr Elizabeth Rapley said: "We have known for some time that men whose father, brothers or sons had testicular cancer are much more likely to get it themselves and we have been searching for this genetic link.
'More to be found'
"We have identified three genetic factors linked to an increased risk of testicular cancer. We believe there are more still to be found and we are working on identifying the rest."
Professor Mike Stratton, from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, also worked on the study.
He said: "By combining these genetic risks with other known risk factors it may be possible in future to identify men who are at high risk of developing testicular cancer, particularly those who have a brother or father already affected by the disease.
"This may allow early detection or prevention.
All three genetic variants uncovered by the study were found near genes involved in the survival and development of cells which go on to form sperm.
The finding suggests that disrupting the work of these genes may be one mechanism by which cancer is able to grow.
More tests due
One of the variants was found in a gene called KITLG, which is also known to play a role in skin pigmentation.
The higher risk variant was found much more commonly in white men, and may explain why they seem to have a higher risk of testicular cancer.
Ed Yong, of the charity Cancer Research UK, said: "While more than 95% of testicular cancer patients are successfully treated, finding genes that increase the risk of this cancer is important.
"It tells us more about its basic biology and presents new opportunities to prevent, diagnose and treat the disease in those men most at risk - men aged under 50."
Previously, a small US study found a specific gene was more active in some types of testicular cancer cells, but did not establish whether it was inherited, or triggered only in cancer cells after the disease started to develop.
In the latest study, the researchers established the key genetic variations were found in every cell of the patients' bodies - clear evidence that they were definitely inherited.
The researchers are now looking for up to 3,000 men who have had testicular cancer to participate in the study to identify more genetic risk factors.
Source: BBC
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Ghana’s response to Ghanaian evacuees was not necessary- Julius Malema
3 minutes -
Childhood kidney care strained by shortage of specialists, limited equipment—Paediatric Nephrologist
5 minutes -
Over 3m Ghanaians live with mild mental health conditions—GloMeFÂ
19 minutes -
US justice department launches criminal investigation into Trump accuser E Jean Carroll, reports say
23 minutes -
BoG pushes stronger property checks to reduce fraud in real estate sector
26 minutes -
Six students hospitalised after clash between Offinso Technical Institute students and town youth
26 minutes -
No prior notice was given – Weija-Gbawe MCE raises concern over Dam spillage
28 minutes -
Africa’s problem is not ideas but inconsistent execution — Alex Apau Dadey
30 minutes -
Ghana’s building inflation holds steady at 2.2% in April 2026
35 minutes -
Former US Attorney General Pam Bondi diagnosed with cancer
37 minutes -
An unhealthy focus on sex – Married at First Sight UK insiders on show’s ‘toxic’ culture
37 minutes -
Ousted BP chairman hits back at ‘lies’ about his behaviour
37 minutes -
Young people out of work or training costing UK ÂŁ125bn as report warns of ‘perfect storm’
37 minutes -
Cannabis worth an estimated €4.2m seized
37 minutes -
Canada signs landmark LNG energy deal with Germany
38 minutes