Cancer research
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A prospective study of N-acetyltransferase genotype, red meat intake, and risk of colorectal cancer.
Carcinogenic heterocyclic amines are activated by N-acetyltransferase (NAT) enzymes, encoded by NAT1 and NAT2, to genotoxic compounds that can form DNA adducts in the colon epithelium. We have examined the relation of polymorphisms in the genes coding for both enzymes to risk of colorectal cancer and the gene-environment interaction with red meat intake among participants in the prospective Physicians' Health Study. Baseline blood samples from 212 men subsequently diagnosed with colorectal cancer during 13 years of follow-up were genotyped, along with 221 controls. ⋯ We observed a stronger association of red meat intake with cancer risk among NAT rapid acetylators, especially among men 60 years old or older. Among those men who were rapid acetylators for both NAT1 and NAT2, consumption of >1 serving of red meat per day was associated with a relative risk of 5.82 (95% CI, 1.11-30.6) compared with consumption of < or = 0.5 serving per day (P, trend = 0.02). These prospective data, which need to be confirmed in other studies, suggest that polymorphisms in the NAT genes confer differential susceptibility to the effect of red meat consumption on colorectal cancer risk.