FAMILIAL PREDISPOSITION TO CANCER AND AGE AT ONSET OF DISEASE IN RANDOMLY SELECTED CANCER-PATIENTS

  • 1 January 1983
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 35 (3), 454-467
Abstract
Incidence of malignancy among close relatives was used to evaluate the relationship of early age at diagnosis and familial cancer predisposition in a general population of cancer patients. The occurrence of cancer and other conditions in families of more than 1350 randomly selected patients with a wide variety of malignancies was ascertained. Each patient was assigned to one of four study groups based on comparison of his age at diagnosis with the distribution of ages at diagnosis for his cancer site compiled by the Third National Cancer Survey. These groups consisted of patients whose ages at diagnosis were in the lowest decile, the median decile, above the median decile and between the lowest and median deciles. Person-yr and calendar time at risk were calculated for 1st-degree relatives in each group. The numbers of cancers expected among these relatives were calculated using age- and time-specific incidence rates of a standard population. Statistical analysis of the numbers of reported vs. expected cancers in relatives and the numbers of families reporting cancer in parents or siblings of patients showed that a familial tendency to develop cancer exists in this randomly selected population of cancer patients, regardless of age at onset of malignancy in the proband. Early age at diagnosis of cancer may indicate genetic predisposition to malignancy only in exceptional cases.