Impact of exposure to tobacco smoke, arsenic, and phthalates on locally advanced cervical cancer treatment—preliminary results

Background Cancer research is a national and international priority, with the efficiency and effectiveness of current anti-tumor therapies being one of the major challenges with which physicians are faced. Objective To assess the impact of exposure to tobacco smoke, arsenic, and phthalates on cervic...

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Main Authors: Iulia A. Neamtiu, Michael S. Bloom, Irina Dumitrascu, Carmen A. Roba, Cristian Pop, Claudia Ordeanu, Ovidiu Balacescu, Eugen S. Gurzau
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2016-09-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/2448.pdf
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spelling doaj-b1cc01a85b604ea99c59a0fdb9e4b9642020-11-24T23:22:53ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592016-09-014e244810.7717/peerj.2448Impact of exposure to tobacco smoke, arsenic, and phthalates on locally advanced cervical cancer treatment—preliminary resultsIulia A. Neamtiu0Michael S. Bloom1Irina Dumitrascu2Carmen A. Roba3Cristian Pop4Claudia Ordeanu5Ovidiu Balacescu6Eugen S. Gurzau7Health Department, Environmental Health Center, Cluj-Napoca, RomaniaHealth Department, Environmental Health Center, Cluj-Napoca, RomaniaPhysico-chemical and Biotoxicological Analysis Laboratory, Environmental Health Center, Cluj-Napoca, RomaniaFaculty of Environmental Science and Engineering, Babes-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca, RomaniaPhysico-chemical and Biotoxicological Analysis Laboratory, Environmental Health Center, Cluj-Napoca, RomaniaRadiotherapy II Department, The Oncology Institute “Prof. Dr. Ion Chiricuta”, Cluj-Napoca, RomaniaFunctional Genomics, Proteomics and Experimental Pathology Laboratory, The Oncology Institute “Prof. Dr. Ion Chiricuta”, Cluj-Napoca, RomaniaHealth Department, Environmental Health Center, Cluj-Napoca, RomaniaBackground Cancer research is a national and international priority, with the efficiency and effectiveness of current anti-tumor therapies being one of the major challenges with which physicians are faced. Objective To assess the impact of exposure to tobacco smoke, arsenic, and phthalates on cervical cancer treatment. Methods We investigated 37 patients with locally advanced cervical carcinoma who underwent chemotherapy and radiotherapy. We determined cotinine and five phthalate metabolites in urine samples collected prior to cancer treatment, by gas chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry, and urinary total arsenic by atomic absorption spectrometry with hydride generation. We used linear regression to evaluate the effects of cotinine, arsenic, and phthalates on the change in tumor size after treatment, adjusted for confounding variables. Results We detected no significant associations between urinary cotinine, arsenic, or phthalate monoesters on change in tumor size after treatment, adjusted for urine creatinine, age, baseline tumor size, and cotinine (for arsenic and phthalates). However, higher %mono-ethylhexyl phthalate (%MEHP), a putative indicator of phthalate diester metabolism, was associated with a larger change in tumor size (β = 0.015, 95% CI [0.003–0.03], P = 0.019). Conclusion We found no statistically significant association between the urinary levels of arsenic, cotinine, and phthalates metabolites and the response to cervical cancer treatment as measured by the change in tumor size. Still, our results suggested that phthalates metabolism may be associated with response to treatment for locally advanced cervical cancer. However, these observations are preliminary and will require confirmation in a larger, more definitive investigation.https://peerj.com/articles/2448.pdfTreatment responseLocally advanced cervical cancerArsenicPhthalatesExposureTobacco smoke
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Iulia A. Neamtiu
Michael S. Bloom
Irina Dumitrascu
Carmen A. Roba
Cristian Pop
Claudia Ordeanu
Ovidiu Balacescu
Eugen S. Gurzau
spellingShingle Iulia A. Neamtiu
Michael S. Bloom
Irina Dumitrascu
Carmen A. Roba
Cristian Pop
Claudia Ordeanu
Ovidiu Balacescu
Eugen S. Gurzau
Impact of exposure to tobacco smoke, arsenic, and phthalates on locally advanced cervical cancer treatment—preliminary results
PeerJ
Treatment response
Locally advanced cervical cancer
Arsenic
Phthalates
Exposure
Tobacco smoke
author_facet Iulia A. Neamtiu
Michael S. Bloom
Irina Dumitrascu
Carmen A. Roba
Cristian Pop
Claudia Ordeanu
Ovidiu Balacescu
Eugen S. Gurzau
author_sort Iulia A. Neamtiu
title Impact of exposure to tobacco smoke, arsenic, and phthalates on locally advanced cervical cancer treatment—preliminary results
title_short Impact of exposure to tobacco smoke, arsenic, and phthalates on locally advanced cervical cancer treatment—preliminary results
title_full Impact of exposure to tobacco smoke, arsenic, and phthalates on locally advanced cervical cancer treatment—preliminary results
title_fullStr Impact of exposure to tobacco smoke, arsenic, and phthalates on locally advanced cervical cancer treatment—preliminary results
title_full_unstemmed Impact of exposure to tobacco smoke, arsenic, and phthalates on locally advanced cervical cancer treatment—preliminary results
title_sort impact of exposure to tobacco smoke, arsenic, and phthalates on locally advanced cervical cancer treatment—preliminary results
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2016-09-01
description Background Cancer research is a national and international priority, with the efficiency and effectiveness of current anti-tumor therapies being one of the major challenges with which physicians are faced. Objective To assess the impact of exposure to tobacco smoke, arsenic, and phthalates on cervical cancer treatment. Methods We investigated 37 patients with locally advanced cervical carcinoma who underwent chemotherapy and radiotherapy. We determined cotinine and five phthalate metabolites in urine samples collected prior to cancer treatment, by gas chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry, and urinary total arsenic by atomic absorption spectrometry with hydride generation. We used linear regression to evaluate the effects of cotinine, arsenic, and phthalates on the change in tumor size after treatment, adjusted for confounding variables. Results We detected no significant associations between urinary cotinine, arsenic, or phthalate monoesters on change in tumor size after treatment, adjusted for urine creatinine, age, baseline tumor size, and cotinine (for arsenic and phthalates). However, higher %mono-ethylhexyl phthalate (%MEHP), a putative indicator of phthalate diester metabolism, was associated with a larger change in tumor size (β = 0.015, 95% CI [0.003–0.03], P = 0.019). Conclusion We found no statistically significant association between the urinary levels of arsenic, cotinine, and phthalates metabolites and the response to cervical cancer treatment as measured by the change in tumor size. Still, our results suggested that phthalates metabolism may be associated with response to treatment for locally advanced cervical cancer. However, these observations are preliminary and will require confirmation in a larger, more definitive investigation.
topic Treatment response
Locally advanced cervical cancer
Arsenic
Phthalates
Exposure
Tobacco smoke
url https://peerj.com/articles/2448.pdf
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