Background: Current and recent smoking have been associated with a greater risk of prostate cancer recurrence and mortality, though the underlying mechanism is unknown.
Methods: To determine if telomere shortening, which has been associated with poor outcomes, may be a potential underlying mechanism, we prospectively evaluated the association between smoking status and telomere length in 567 participants in the Health Professionals Follow-up Study, who were surgically treated for prostate cancer. Using tissue microarrays (TMA), we measured telomere length in cancer and benign tissue, specifically stromal cells in the same TMA spot using a telomere-specific fluorescence in situ hybridization assay. Smoking status was collected via questionnaire 2-years before diagnosis. Adjusting for age, pathologic stage and grade, the median and standard deviation of the per-cell telomere signals were determined for each man for stromal cells and cancer cells by smoking categories. In sub-analyses, we restricted to men without major co-morbidities diagnosed before prostate cancer.
Results: Overall, there were no associations between smoking status and telomere length or variability in stromal cells or cancer cells. However, among men without comorbidities, current smokers and former smokers who quit <10 years ago had the most variable telomere length in stromal cells (29.3% more variable than never smokers; P-trend = 0.0005) and in cancer cells (27.7% more variable than never smokers; P-trend = 0.05). Among men without comorbidities, mean telomere length did not differ by smoking status in stromal cells or cancer cells.
Conclusion: Telomere variability in prostate cells may be one mechanism through which smoking influences poor prostate cancer outcomes.
Keywords: prostate cancer; smoking; stromal cells; telomere length.
© 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.