Exploring the Causes of the Low Incidence of Cervical Cancer in Western Asia
Exploring the Causes of the Low Incidence of Cervical Cancer in Western Asia
Asian Pac J Cancer Prev. 2018 Jun 25;19(6):1425-1429
Authors: Alsbeih G
Abstract
Anecdotal epidemiologic observations can provide valuable tools to study various biologic elements in complex
diseases such as cancer. Although cervical cancer is one of the most frequent malignancy affecting women in the world,
it displays wide geographical variations remnant of socioeconomic, ethnic and genetic predisposing factors. The observed
low incidence of cervical cancer in western Asia has triggered scientists to try to delineate the causes of this reduced
occurrence. Although this region including Saudi Arabia is known for being conservative societies with low incidence of
sexually transmitted infections including human papillomavirus (HPV) and associated cervical cancer, scientific
research points out multifaceted biological explanations including host genetic variations. Researchers observed that
a protective genetic variant TP53 codon 72 proline allele was more commonly found in this population and appear to
be over-transmitted compared to others known for their high rate of cervical cancer. Thus, the combination of relative
low rate of HPV infection, over-transmission of protective genetic variant along with societal variables are the rationale
behind the low incidence of cervical cancer in women in the region of western Asia. The influence of the genetic
makeup o...
Source: Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention - Category: Cancer & Oncology Tags: Asian Pac J Cancer Prev Source Type: research
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