European journal of internal medicine
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The incidence of prostate cancer is related to aging. Its increase in the last 10 years, varies from country to country and according to ethnic group, with its greatest incidence among African-American males and the least among Asian males. Only two risk factors have thus far been clearly established for prostate cancer: familial aggregation and ethnic origin. ⋯ Using this transmission model and linkage analysis, three predisposing loci on chromosome 1: HPC-1 (hereditary prostate cancer 1: 1q24-25), PCaP (predisposing for prostate cancer: 1q42-43) and CAPB (predisposing for prostate and brain tumor: 1p36) and one locus on chromosome 20 (HPC20: 20q13) have been described. Moreover, X-linked transmission has been suggested and related to another predisposing gene locus: HPCX (Xq27-28). It is possible that a large proportion of familial prostate cancer is due not to segregation of a few major gene mutations transmitted according to a monogenic inheritance, but rather to familial sharing of alleles at many loci, each contributing to a small increase in cancer risk.