Blood Cells with DNA Errors Common in Over-60s: Study Reveals Increase in Risk of Leukemia and Inflammatory Diseases, but No Connection to Lifestyle Factors Like Smoking and Drinking

by time news

2023-05-05 08:51:53

When a mistake occurs in the DNA of a blood cell by accident, this cell can grow and divide faster than other blood cells. Dividing faster is also a property of tumor cells. Yet such blood cells with a mistake do not immediately turn into cancer. In fact, it now appears that blood cells with errors associated with leukemia are common in people who have no complaints at all: in forty percent of the over-60s.

A team of researchers, including Joop Jansen and Aniek de Graaf from Radboudumc, and Gerwin Huls and Isabelle van Zeventer from UMC Groningen, wanted to know when blood cells with errors do turn into tumor cells. That was not yet known. For their study, they analyzed the DNA of more than 7000 blood samples from 3359 people over the age of sixty from the Groningen Lifelines cohort. Two or three samples were available from the participants, each with almost four years between them, so that the researchers could track the development of the blood cells with errors.

Results

The study shows that the presence of groups of cells with errors increases the risk of leukemia. These cells are also a risk factor for inflammatory diseases that are common with aging, such as cardiovascular disease and COPD. The researchers show exactly which DNA errors cause the fastest growth of blood cells and the highest risk of blood cancer, such as an error in the JAK2 gene. They also show that the combination with an abnormality of the blood, such as anemia, increases the risk of cancer.

Many other data were also known about all the people who participated in the study. For example, whether they smoke, how much alcohol they drink, what medicines they take and what work they do. The researchers found no link between the increase in blood cells with errors in the DNA and factors known to increase the risk of cancer, such as smoking, alcohol intake and obesity.

According to laboratory specialist Aniek de Graaf, it is currently not useful to screen all over-60s for errors in their blood cells. “As far as we are concerned, that makes little sense if you are healthy. You cannot do anything about those mistakes. We see no connection with risk factors, such as smoking. In addition, mistakes increase the risk of leukemia, but that chance is still very small. if you go to the doctor with complaints, an analysis of blood cells is important, because this can have consequences for the treatment and monitoring of the course.”

Now that it is known which specific groups run a very high risk, a first step has been taken towards prevention. Professor of Experimental Hematology Joop Jansen: “With our follow-up research, we are looking further for genetic factors and environmental factors that influence the development of leukemia, especially in people with a high risk.”

By: National Care Guide

#Research #DNA #errors #predict #leukemia

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