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Oxidant
Stress and Glioblastoma Multiforme Risk: Serum Antioxidants, γ-Glutamyl
Transpeptidase, and Ferritin
Judith
A. Schwartzbaum, David G. Cornwell
Case-control
studies of serum antioxidants are difficult to interpret, because antioxidants
may be altered by the disease under study.
However, because glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is a relatively rare disease, a
cohort study would require a large sample observed for many years.
In the present case-control pilot study (34 cases and 35 controls), we evaluated
the association between serum levels of ascorbic acid (AA) and α-
and γ-tocopherol
(α-T
and γ-T)
measured before diagnostic surgery.
To control for influence of GBM on serum AA, α-T,
and γ-T,
we adjusted for oxidant stress indexes (γ-glutamyl
transpeptidase and uric acid) and an acute-phase response index (serum
ferritin).
When adjusted, AA is inversely related to GBM (p for trend = 0.007).
In addition, AA interacts with α-T
to further reduce GBM risk (test for interaction, p = 0.04).
γ-T
is not associated with GBM (p = 0.71).
However, γ-glutamyl
transpeptidase (p = 0.004), coenzyme Q (p = 0.01), and ferritin (p = 0.009) are
positively and uric acid (p = 0.000) is negatively related to GBM.
We conclude that
1) AA and α-T
are jointly related to GBM after adjustment for GBM-produced oxidant stress
and
2) there is a strong association between the presence of GBM and oxidant stress.
©
Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc.
Source: http://fiordiliji.ingentaselect.com/vl=468277/cl=29/nw=1/rpsv/~803/v38n1/s7/p40
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