Oral epithelial cells provide an easily accessible source of germline DNA. Two methods for collection were compared in a 1992- 1995 case-control study of oral cancer in Puerto Rico. One group of subjects (55 controls without oral cancer) collected oral rinse samples at home or work under the direction of a nonmedically trained interviewer ('self-collection'); the other group (94 controls) participated in a clinic-based collection, which also included blood and urine samples, conducted by a medical technician ('clinic collection'). Participation was higher for self-collection (98.2%) than for clinic collection (70.7%) (p < 0.001). DNA yields ranged from 2.0 to 204.5 μg (median, 25.9 μg) and did not differ by collection method, although yields varied by interviewer among self-collected samples (p = 0.02). Success rates for polymerase chain reaction amplification of the ADH3, NAT1, and multiplex CYP1A1/GSTT1/GSTM1 genotyping assays ranged from 76.4% (NAT1) to 98.2% (ADH3) for self-collected samples and were similar to those for clinic- collected samples (87:2-97.9%). Failure to amplify was associated with low DNA content (p= 0.015). Similar results were observed among cases (91 self-collected, 66 clinic collected), except that DNA yields did not vary by interviewer and a larger fraction (10.2%) of samples contained less than 5 μg of DNA, perhaps because of disease-related oral impairment. Self-collection of oral epithelial DNA samples appears satisfactory and efficient for many epidemiologic studies.
CITATION STYLE
Harty, L. C., Shields, P. G., Winn, D. M., Caporaso, N. E., & Hayes, R. B. (2000). Self-collection of oral epithelial cell DNA under instruction from epidemiologic interviewers. American Journal of Epidemiology, 151(2), 199–205. https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a010188
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