Background: The aim of this study was to examine the association of a family history of cancer with the risk of testicular cancer in young adults. Methods: This is a prospective cohort study including 1,974,287 males born 1951–2015, of whom 2686 were diagnosed with TC before the age of 30. Results: A history of TC in male relatives was significantly associated with a diagnosis of TC among children and young adults, including brothers (6.3-fold), sons (4.7-fold), fathers (4.4-fold), paternal uncles (2.0-fold) and maternal uncles (1.9-fold). Individuals with a father diagnosed with a carcinoma or sarcoma showed an elevated risk (1.1-fold and 1.8-fold, respectively). A family history of mesothelioma was positively associated with a risk of TC [(father (2.8-fold), mother (4.6-fold) and maternal uncles and aunt (4.4-fold)]. Elevated risks were also observed when siblings were diagnosed with malignant melanoma (1.4-fold). The risk of TC was also increased when fathers (11.1-fold), paternal (4.9-fold) and maternal uncles and aunts (4.6-fold) were diagnosed with malignant neuroepithelial-tumours. Conclusion: We found an increased risk of TC among children and young adults with a family history of TC, carcinoma, mesothelioma, sarcoma, malignant melanoma and malignant neuroepithelial tumours. Hereditary cancer syndromes might underlie some of the associations reported in this study.
CITATION STYLE
Del Risco Kollerud, R., Ruud, E., Haugnes, H. S., Cannon-Albright, L. A., Thoresen, M., Nafstad, P., … Claussen, B. (2019). Family history of cancer and risk of paediatric and young adult’s testicular cancer: A Norwegian cohort study. British Journal of Cancer, 120(10), 1007–1014. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41416-019-0445-2
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