235 results on '"Kanetsky, P. A."'
Search Results
2. Association of functional, inherited vitamin D-binding protein variants with melanoma-specific death.
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Gallagher, Richard, Zanetti, Roberto, Rosso, Stefano, Sacchetto, Lidia, Edmiston, Sharon, Conway, Kathleen, Ollila, David, Begg, Colin, Berwick, Marianne, Ward, Sarah, Orlow, Irene, Gibbs, David, Thomas, Nancy, Kanetsky, Peter, Luo, Li, Busam, Klaus, Cust, Anne, and Anton-Culver, Hoda
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Humans ,Vitamin D-Binding Protein ,Vitamin D ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Melanoma - Abstract
BACKGROUND: It is unclear whether genetic variants affecting vitamin D metabolism are associated with melanoma prognosis. Two functional missense variants in the vitamin D-binding protein gene (GC), rs7041 and rs4588, determine 3 common haplotypes, Gc1s, Gc1f, and Gc2, of which Gc1f may be associated with decreased all-cause death among melanoma patients based on results of a prior study, but the association of Gc1f with melanoma-specific death is unclear. METHODS: We investigated the association of the Gc1s, Gc1f, and Gc2 haplotypes with melanoma-specific and all-cause death among 4490 individuals with incident, invasive primary melanoma in 2 population-based studies using multivariable Cox-proportional hazards regression. RESULTS: In the pooled analysis of both datasets, the patients with the Gc1f haplotype had a 37% lower risk of melanoma-specific death than the patients without Gc1f (hazard ratio [HR] = 0.63, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.47 to 0.83, P = .001), with adjustments for age, sex, study center, first- or higher-order primary melanoma, tumor site, pigmentary phenotypes, and Breslow thickness. Associations were similar in both studies. In pooled analyses stratified by Breslow thickness, the corresponding melanoma-specific death HRs for those patients with the Gc1f haplotype compared with those without Gc1f were 0.89 (95% CI = 0.63 to 1.27) among participants with tumor Breslow thickness equal to or less than 2.0 mm and 0.40 (95% CI = 0.25 to 0.63) among participants with tumor Breslow thickness greater than 2.0 mm (Pinteraction = .003). CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that individuals with the GC haplotype Gc1f may have a lower risk of dying from melanoma-specifically from thicker, higher-risk melanoma-than individuals without this Gc1f haplotype.
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- 2023
3. Genome-wide analyses characterize shared heritability among cancers and identify novel cancer susceptibility regions
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Lindström, Sara, Wang, Lu, Feng, Helian, Majumdar, Arunabha, Huo, Sijia, Macdonald, James, Harrison, Tabitha, Turman, Constance, Chen, Hongjie, Mancuso, Nicholas, Bammler, Theo, Consortium, Breast Cancer Association, Gallinger, Steve, Gruber, Stephen B, Gunter, Marc J, Le Marchand, Loic, Moreno, Victor, Offit, Kenneth, Study, Genetics And Epidemiology Of Colorectal Cancer Consortium Colorectal Transdisciplinary Study Colon Cancer Family Registry, De Vivo, Immaculata, O’Mara, Tracy A, Spurdle, Amanda B, Tomlinson, Ian, Consortium, Endometrial Cancer Association, Fitzgerald, Rebecca, Gharahkhani, Puya, Gockel, Ines, Jankowski, Janusz, Macgregor, Stuart, Schumacher, Johannes, Barnholtz-Sloan, Jill, Bondy, Melissa L, Houlston, Richard S, Jenkins, Robert B, Melin, Beatrice, Wrensch, Margaret, Brennan, Paul, Christiani, David C, Johansson, Mattias, Mckay, James, Aldrich, Melinda C, Amos, Christopher I, Landi, Maria Teresa, Tardon, Adonina, Consortium, International Lung Cancer, Bishop, D Timothy, Demenais, Florence, Goldstein, Alisa M, Iles, Mark M, Kanetsky, Peter A, Law, Matthew H, Consortium, Ovarian Cancer Association, Amundadottir, Laufey T, Stolzenberg-Solomon, Rachael, Wolpin, Brian M, Consortium, Pancreatic Cancer Cohort, Klein, Alison, Petersen, Gloria, Risch, Harvey, Consortium, The PRACTICAL Consortium Pancreatic Cancer Case-Control, Chanock, Stephen J, Purdue, Mark P, Scelo, Ghislaine, Pharoah, Paul, Kar, Siddhartha, Hung, Rayjean J, Pasaniuc, Bogdan, and Kraft, Peter
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Human Genome ,Genetics ,Digestive Diseases ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Urologic Diseases ,Cancer ,Rare Diseases ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Male ,Humans ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Neoplasms ,Risk Factors ,Transcriptome ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Breast Cancer Association Consortium ,Colorectal Transdisciplinary Study (CORECT) ,Colon Cancer Family Registry Study (CCFR) ,Genetics And Epidemiology Of Colorectal Cancer Consortium ,Endometrial Cancer Association Consortium ,International Lung Cancer Consortium ,Ovarian Cancer Association Consortium ,Pancreatic Cancer Cohort Consortium ,Pancreatic Cancer Case-Control Consortium (Panc4) ,The PRACTICAL Consortium ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis ,Oncology and carcinogenesis - Abstract
BackgroundThe shared inherited genetic contribution to risk of different cancers is not fully known. In this study, we leverage results from 12 cancer genome-wide association studies (GWAS) to quantify pairwise genome-wide genetic correlations across cancers and identify novel cancer susceptibility loci.MethodsWe collected GWAS summary statistics for 12 solid cancers based on 376 759 participants with cancer and 532 864 participants without cancer of European ancestry. The included cancer types were breast, colorectal, endometrial, esophageal, glioma, head and neck, lung, melanoma, ovarian, pancreatic, prostate, and renal cancers. We conducted cross-cancer GWAS and transcriptome-wide association studies to discover novel cancer susceptibility loci. Finally, we assessed the extent of variant-specific pleiotropy among cancers at known and newly identified cancer susceptibility loci.ResultsWe observed widespread but modest genome-wide genetic correlations across cancers. In cross-cancer GWAS and transcriptome-wide association studies, we identified 15 novel cancer susceptibility loci. Additionally, we identified multiple variants at 77 distinct loci with strong evidence of being associated with at least 2 cancer types by testing for pleiotropy at known cancer susceptibility loci.ConclusionsOverall, these results suggest that some genetic risk variants are shared among cancers, though much of cancer heritability is cancer-specific and thus tissue-specific. The increase in statistical power associated with larger sample sizes in cross-disease analysis allows for the identification of novel susceptibility regions. Future studies incorporating data on multiple cancer types are likely to identify additional regions associated with the risk of multiple cancer types.
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- 2023
4. Sex-Specific Associations of MDM2 and MDM4 Variants with Risk of Multiple Primary Melanomas and Melanoma Survival in Non-Hispanic Whites
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Ward, Sarah V, Autuori, Isidora, Luo, Li, LaPilla, Emily, Yoo, Sarah, Sharma, Ajay, Busam, Klaus J, Olilla, David W, Dwyer, Terence, Anton-Culver, Hoda, Zanetti, Roberto, Sacchetto, Lidia, Cust, Anne E, Gallagher, Richard P, Kanetsky, Peter A, Rosso, Stefano, Begg, Colin B, Berwick, Marianne, Thomas, Nancy E, and Orlow, Irene
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Genetics ,Cancer ,Prevention ,MDM2 ,MDM4 ,melanoma ,gene ,polymorphism ,risk ,survival ,sex ,functional ,estrogen-receptor ,GEM Study Group ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis - Abstract
MDM2-SNP309 (rs2279744), a common genetic modifier of cancer incidence in Li-Fraumeni syndrome, modifies risk, age of onset, or prognosis in a variety of cancers. Melanoma incidence and outcomes vary by sex, and although SNP309 exerts an effect on the estrogen receptor, no consensus exists on its effect on melanoma. MDM2 and MDM4 restrain p53-mediated tumor suppression, independently or together. We investigated SNP309, an a priori MDM4-rs4245739, and two coinherited variants, in a population-based cohort of 3663 primary incident melanomas. Per-allele and per-haplotype (MDM2_SNP309-SNP285; MDM4_rs4245739-rs1563828) odds ratios (OR) for multiple-melanoma were estimated with logistic regression models. Hazard ratios (HR) for melanoma death were estimated with Cox proportional hazards models. In analyses adjusted for covariates, females carrying MDM4-rs4245739*C were more likely to develop multiple melanomas (ORper-allele = 1.25, 95% CI 1.03-1.51, and Ptrend = 0.03), while MDM2-rs2279744*G was inversely associated with melanoma-death (HRper-allele = 0.63, 95% CI 0.42-0.95, and Ptrend = 0.03). We identified 16 coinherited expression quantitative loci that control the expression of MDM2, MDM4, and other genes in the skin, brain, and lungs. Our results suggest that MDM4/MDM2 variants are associated with the development of subsequent primaries and with the death of melanoma in a sex-dependent manner. Further investigations of the complex MDM2/MDM4 motif, and its contribution to the tumor microenvironment and observed associations, are warranted.
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- 2023
5. Comparison of community pathologists with expert dermatopathologists evaluating Breslow thickness and histopathologic subtype in a large international population-based study of melanoma
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Yardman-Frank, Joseph Michael, Bronner, Baillie, Rosso, Stefano, From, Lynn, Busam, Klaus, Groben, Pam, Tucker, Paul, Cust, Anne, Armstrong, Bruce, Kricker, Anne, Marrett, Loraine, Anton-Culver, Hoda, Gruber, Stephen, Gallagher, Rick, Zanetti, Roberto, Sacchetto, Lidia, Dwyer, Terry, Venn, Alison, Orlow, Irene, Kanetsky, Peter, Luo, Li, Thomas, Nancy, Begg, Colin, Berwick, Marianne, Team, GEM Study, Busam, Klaus J, Autuori, Isidora, Roy, Pampa, Reiner, Anne, Boyce, Tawny W, Cust, Anne E, Armstrong, Bruce K, Dwyer, Terence, Gallagher, Richard P, Marrett, Loraine D, Gruber, Stephen B, Bonner, Joseph D, Thomas, Nancy E, Conway, Kathleen, Ollila, David W, Groben, Pamela A, Edmiston, Sharon N, Hao, Honglin, Parrish, Eloise, Frank, Jill S, Gibbs, David C, Rebbeck, Timothy R, Kanetsky, Peter A, Taylor, Julia Lee, and Madronich, Sasha
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Data Management and Data Science ,Information and Computing Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,GEM Study Team - Published
- 2021
6. Skin cancer prevention behaviors, beliefs, distress, and worry among hispanics in Florida and Puerto Rico
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Lacson, John Charles A., Soto-Torres, Brenda, Sutton, Steven K., Doyle, Scarlet H., Kim, Youngchul, Roetzheim, Richard G., Vadaparampil, Susan T., and Kanetsky, Peter A.
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- 2023
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7. Skin cancer prevention behaviors, beliefs, distress, and worry among hispanics in Florida and Puerto Rico
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John Charles A. Lacson, Brenda Soto-Torres, Steven K. Sutton, Scarlet H. Doyle, Youngchul Kim, Richard G. Roetzheim, Susan T. Vadaparampil, and Peter A. Kanetsky
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Skin cancer ,Hispanic/Latino ,Prevention behaviors ,Protection motivation theory ,Florida ,Puerto Rico ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Incidence of skin cancer has been increasing among U.S. Hispanics, who often are diagnosed with larger lesions and at later stage disease. Behaviors to decrease exposure to ultraviolet radiation can reduce risk of skin cancer. We describe skin cancer prevention behaviors and psychosocial variables among Hispanic participants recruited into a skin cancer prevention trial. Methods Self-reported Hispanic participants from eight primary care clinics in Tampa, Florida and Ponce, Puerto Rico were recruited into a randomized controlled prevention trial. Information on demographics, sun-related behaviors, and psychosocial variables were collected before intervention materials were provided. Multivariable regression models were used to compare baseline sun-related behaviors and psychosocial variables across groups defined by geographic location and language preference. Results Participants reported low levels of intentional outdoor tanning, weekday and weekend sun exposure, and very low levels of indoor tanning. However, only a minority of participants practiced sun-protective behaviors often or always, and about 30% experienced a sunburn in the past year. Participants had low levels of recent worry and concern about skin cancer, modest levels of perceived risk and severity, and high levels of response efficacy and self-efficacy. When comparing across groups defined by geographic location and language preference, English-preferring Tampa residents (hereafter referred to as Tampeños) had the highest proportion who were sunburned (35.9%) and tended toward more risky behavior but also had higher protective behavior than did Spanish-preferring Tampeños or Puerto Ricans. Spanish-preferring Puerto Ricans had higher recent concern about skin cancer, comparative chance of getting skin cancer, and response efficacy compared to either English- or Spanish-preferring Tampeños. Spanish-preferring Tampeños had the highest levels of familism and recent distress about skin cancer. Conclusions Our results mirror previous observations of low levels of sun-protective behavior among U.S. Hispanics compelling the need for culturally appropriate and translated awareness campaigns targeted to this population. Because Hispanics in Tampa and Puerto Rico reported modest levels of perceived risk and severity, and high levels of response efficacy and self-efficacy, interventions aiming to improve skin cancer prevention activities that are anchored in Protection Motivation Theory may be particularly effective in this population subgroup.
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- 2023
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8. Associations between social COVID-19 exposure and psychological functioning
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Lewicka, Malwina, Hamilton, Jada G., Waters, Erika A., Orom, Heather, Schofield, Elizabeth, Kiviniemi, Marc T., Kanetsky, Peter A., and Hay, Jennifer L.
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- 2023
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9. Disease-Associated Risk Variants in ANRIL Are Associated with Tumor-Infiltrating Lymphocyte Presence in Primary Melanomas in the Population-Based GEM Study
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Davari, Danielle R, Orlow, Irene, Kanetsky, Peter A, Luo, Li, Edmiston, Sharon N, Conway, Kathleen, Parrish, Eloise A, Hao, Honglin, Busam, Klaus J, Sharma, Ajay, Kricker, Anne, Cust, Anne E, Anton-Culver, Hoda, Gruber, Stephen B, Gallagher, Richard P, Zanetti, Roberto, Rosso, Stefano, Sacchetto, Lidia, Dwyer, Terence, Ollila, David W, Begg, Colin B, Berwick, Marianne, Thomas, Nancy E, and Group, on behalf of the GEM Study
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Clinical Research ,Human Genome ,Cardiovascular ,Cancer ,Genetics ,Diabetes ,Heart Disease ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Aged ,Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor p15 ,Female ,GTP Phosphohydrolases ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Humans ,Lymphocytes ,Tumor-Infiltrating ,Male ,Melanoma ,Membrane Proteins ,Middle Aged ,Mutation ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins B-raf ,Skin Neoplasms ,coronary artery disease ,coronary artery calci fi cation ,myocardial ,GEM Study Group ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Epidemiology - Abstract
BackgroundGenome-wide association studies have reported that genetic variation at ANRIL (CDKN2B-AS1) is associated with risk of several chronic diseases including coronary artery disease, coronary artery calcification, myocardial infarction, and type 2 diabetes mellitus. ANRIL is located at the CDKN2A/B locus, which encodes multiple melanoma tumor suppressors. We investigated the association of these variants with melanoma prognostic characteristics.MethodsThe Genes, Environment, and Melanoma Study enrolled 3,285 European origin participants with incident invasive primary melanoma. For each of ten disease-associated SNPs at or near ANRIL, we used linear and logistic regression modeling to estimate, respectively, the per allele mean changes in log of Breslow thickness and ORs for presence of ulceration and tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL). We also assessed effect modification by tumor NRAS/BRAF mutational status.ResultsRs518394, rs10965215, and rs564398 passed false discovery and were each associated (P ≤ 0.005) with TILs, although only rs564398 was independently associated (P = 0.0005) with TILs. Stratified by NRAS/BRAF mutational status, rs564398*A was significantly positively associated with TILs among NRAS/BRAF mutant, but not wild-type, cases. We did not find SNP associations with Breslow thickness or ulceration.ConclusionsANRIL rs564398 was associated with TIL presence in primary melanomas, and this association may be limited to NRAS/BRAF-mutant cases.ImpactPathways related to ANRIL variants warrant exploration in relationship to TILs in melanoma, especially given the impact of TILs on immunotherapy and survival.
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- 2021
10. Germline ATM variants predispose to melanoma: a joint analysis across the GenoMEL and MelaNostrum consortia
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Dalmasso, B, Pastorino, L, Nathan, V, Shah, NN, Palmer, JM, Howlie, M, Johansson, PA, Freedman, ND, Carter, BD, Beane-Freeman, L, Hicks, B, Molven, A, Helgadottir, H, Sankar, A, Tsao, H, Stratigos, AJ, Helsing, P, Van Doorn, R, Gruis, NA, Visser, M, Wadt, KAW, Mann, G, Holland, EA, Nagore, E, Potrony, M, Puig, S, Menin, C, Peris, K, Fargnoli, MC, Calista, D, Soufir, N, Harland, M, Bishop, T, Kanetsky, PA, Elder, DE, Andreotti, V, Vanni, I, Bruno, W, Höiom, V, Tucker, MA, Yang, XR, Andresen, PA, Adams, DJ, Landi, MT, Hayward, NK, Goldstein, AM, and Ghiorzo, P
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Genetics ,Human Genome ,Cancer ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Ataxia Telangiectasia ,Ataxia Telangiectasia Mutated Proteins ,Australia ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Germ-Line Mutation ,Humans ,Melanoma ,GenoMEL ,MelaNostrum consortia ,Clinical Sciences ,Genetics & Heredity - Abstract
PurposeAtaxia-Telangiectasia Mutated (ATM) has been implicated in the risk of several cancers, but establishing a causal relationship is often challenging. Although ATM single-nucleotide polymorphisms have been linked to melanoma, few functional alleles have been identified. Therefore, ATM impact on melanoma predisposition is unclear.MethodsFrom 22 American, Australian, and European sites, we collected 2,104 familial, multiple primary (MPM), and sporadic melanoma cases who underwent ATM genotyping via panel, exome, or genome sequencing, and compared the allele frequency (AF) of selected ATM variants classified as loss-of-function (LOF) and variants of uncertain significance (VUS) between this cohort and the gnomAD non-Finnish European (NFE) data set.ResultsLOF variants were more represented in our study cohort than in gnomAD NFE, both in all (AF = 0.005 and 0.002, OR = 2.6, 95% CI = 1.56-4.11, p
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- 2021
11. Sharing and seeking information about skin cancer risk and prevention among Hispanic people from Florida and Puerto Rico
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Jessica N. Rivera Rivera, John Charles A. Lacson, Youngchul Kim, Richard G. Roetzheim, Steven K. Sutton, Brenda Soto-Torres, Susan T. Vadaparampil, and Peter A. Kanetsky
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Information-seeking ,Communication ,MC1R ,Skin cancer prevention ,Genetic risk ,Hispanic people ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Objective: To explore factors associated with communication and information-seeking after receipt of skin cancer prevention information among Hispanic individuals. Methods: Multivariable logistic regression was used to analyze existing data on demographics, personal experience, salience, and beliefs variables collected from Hispanic individuals to determine independent associations with sharing and seeking information about skin cancer prevention. Results: Of 578 participants, 53% reported any communication about skin cancer prevention behaviors or skin cancer genetic risk; and 31% and 21% sought additional information about preventive behaviors or genetic risk, respectively. Female sex, greater perceived severity, higher comparative chance of getting skin cancer, and lower health literacy were associated with greater communication, while having no idea of one's own skin cancer risk was related to less communication. Greater health numeracy and higher cancer worry were associated with information-seeking about prevention behaviors and genetic risk. Conclusion: Up to half of participants reported communication or information-seeking, although factors associated with specific activities differed. Future studies should evaluate how to promote communication behaviors in the Hispanic community and how sharing and seeking information influence an individual's network prevention practices. Innovation: Several factors related to communication behaviors among Hispanic people after obtaining skin cancer prevention information were identified.Trial registration: This trial was registered on clinicaltrials.gov (NCT03509467).
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- 2023
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12. Risk factors for melanoma by anatomical site: an evaluation of aetiological heterogeneity*
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Laskar, R, Ferreiro‐Iglesias, A, Bishop, DT, Iles, MM, Kanetsky, PA, Armstrong, BK, Law, MH, Goldstein, AM, Aitken, JF, Giles, GG, Investigators, Australian Melanoma Family Study, Investigators, Leeds Case–Control Study, Robbins, HA, and Cust, AE
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Clinical Research ,Climate-Related Exposures and Conditions ,Cancer ,Prevention ,Australia ,Humans ,Melanoma ,Risk Factors ,Skin Neoplasms ,Ultraviolet Rays ,Australian Melanoma Family Study Investigators ,Leeds Case-Control Study Investigators ,Clinical Sciences ,Dermatology & Venereal Diseases ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundMelanoma aetiology has been proposed to have two pathways, which are determined by naevi and type of sun exposure and related to the anatomical site where melanoma develops.ObjectivesWe examined associations with melanoma by anatomical site for a comprehensive set of risk factors including pigmentary and naevus phenotypes, ultraviolet radiation exposure and polygenic risk.MethodsWe analysed harmonized data from 2617 people with incident first invasive melanoma and 975 healthy controls recruited through two population-based case-control studies in Australia and the UK. Questionnaire data were collected by interview using a single protocol, and pathway-specific polygenic risk scores were derived from DNA samples. We estimated adjusted odds ratios using unconditional logistic regression that compared melanoma cases at each anatomical site with all controls.ResultsWhen cases were compared with control participants, there were stronger associations for many naevi vs. no naevi for melanomas on the trunk, and upper and lower limbs than on the head and neck (P-heterogeneity
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- 2021
13. Differences in Melanoma Between Canada and New South Wales, Australia: A Population-Based Genes, Environment, and Melanoma (GEM) Study
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Yardman-Frank, Joseph Michael, Glassheim, Elyssa, Kricker, Anne, Armstrong, Bruce K, Marrett, Loraine D, Luo, Li, Cust, Anne E, Busam, Klaus J, Orlow, Irene, Gallagher, Richard P, Gruber, Stephen B, Anton-Culver, Hoda, Rosso, Stefano, Zanetti, Roberto, Sacchetto, Lidia, Kanetsky, Peter A, Dwyer, Terence, Venn, Alison, Lee-Taylor, Julia, Begg, Colin B, Thomas, Nancy E, and Berwick, Marianne
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Climate Change Impacts and Adaptation ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Environmental Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Cancer - Abstract
In an effort to understand the difference between melanomas diagnosed in Australia (New South Wales) and Canada, where the incidence in New South Wales is almost three times greater than in Canada, and mortality is twice as high although survival is slightly more favorable, we had one pathologist review 1,271 melanomas from British Columbia and Ontario, Canada, to compare these to melanomas in New South Wales, Australia. We hypothesized that histopathologic characteristics might provide insight into divergent pathways to melanoma development. We found a number of differences in risk factors and tumor characteristics between the two geographic areas. There were higher mole counts and darker phenotypes in the Canadian patients, while the Australian patients had greater solar elastosis, more lentigo maligna melanomas, and more tumor infiltrating lymphocytes. We hypothesize that the differences observed may illustrate different etiologies – the cumulative exposure pathway among Australian patients and the nevus pathway among Canadian patients. This is one of the largest studies investigating the divergent pathway hypothesis and is particularly robust due to the evaluation of all lesions by one dermatopathologist.
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- 2021
14. Association of Melanoma-Risk Variants with Primary Melanoma Tumor Prognostic Characteristics and Melanoma-Specific Survival in the GEM Study
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Davari, Danielle R, Orlow, Irene, Kanetsky, Peter A, Luo, Li, Busam, Klaus J, Sharma, Ajay, Kricker, Anne, Cust, Anne E, Anton-Culver, Hoda, Gruber, Stephen B, Gallagher, Richard P, Zanetti, Roberto, Rosso, Stefano, Sacchetto, Lidia, Dwyer, Terence, Gibbs, David C, Ollila, David W, Begg, Colin B, Berwick, Marianne, and Thomas, Nancy E
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Genetics ,Clinical Research ,Human Genome ,Cancer ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Humans ,Lymphocytes ,Tumor-Infiltrating ,Melanoma ,Prognosis ,Skin Neoplasms ,melanoma ,single nucleotide polymorphism ,Breslow thickness ,ulceration ,mitoses ,tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes ,survival ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis - Abstract
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and candidate pathway studies have identified low-penetrant genetic variants associated with cutaneous melanoma. We investigated the association of melanoma-risk variants with primary melanoma tumor prognostic characteristics and melanoma-specific survival. The Genes, Environment, and Melanoma Study enrolled 3285 European origin participants with incident invasive primary melanoma. For each of 47 melanoma-risk single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), we used linear and logistic regression modeling to estimate, respectively, the per allele mean changes in log of Breslow thickness and odds ratios for presence of ulceration, mitoses, and tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs). We also used Cox proportional hazards regression modeling to estimate the per allele hazard ratios for melanoma-specific survival. Passing the false discovery threshold (p = 0.0026) were associations of IRF4 rs12203592 and CCND1 rs1485993 with log of Breslow thickness, and association of TERT rs2242652 with presence of mitoses. IRF4 rs12203592 also had nominal associations (p < 0.05) with presence of mitoses and melanoma-specific survival, as well as a borderline association (p = 0.07) with ulceration. CCND1 rs1485993 also had a borderline association with presence of mitoses (p = 0.06). MX2 rs45430 had nominal associations with log of Breslow thickness, presence of mitoses, and melanoma-specific survival. Our study indicates that further research investigating the associations of these genetic variants with underlying biologic pathways related to tumor progression is warranted.
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- 2021
15. Association of Known Melanoma Risk Factors with Primary Melanoma of the Scalp and Neck
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Wood, Renee P, Heyworth, Jane S, McCarthy, Nina S, Mauguen, Audrey, Berwick, Marianne, Thomas, Nancy E, Millward, Michael J, Anton-Culver, Hoda, Cust, Anne E, Dwyer, Terence, Gallagher, Richard P, Gruber, Stephen B, Kanetsky, Peter A, Orlow, Irene, Rosso, Stefano, Moses, Eric K, Begg, Colin B, and Ward, Sarah V
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Dental/Oral and Craniofacial Disease ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Cancer ,Clinical Research ,Aged ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Melanoma ,Middle Aged ,Neck ,Risk Factors ,Scalp ,Skin Neoplasms ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Epidemiology ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
BackgroundScalp and neck (SN) melanoma confers a worse prognosis than melanoma of other sites but little is known about its determinants. We aimed to identify associations between SN melanoma and known risk genes, phenotypic traits, and sun exposure patterns.MethodsParticipants were cases from the Western Australian Melanoma Health Study (n = 1,200) and the Genes, Environment, and Melanoma Study (n = 3,280). Associations between risk factors and SN melanoma, compared with truncal and arm/leg melanoma, were investigated using binomial logistic regression. Facial melanoma was also compared with the trunk and extremities, to evaluate whether associations were subregion specific, or reflective of the whole head/neck region.ResultsCompared with other sites, increased odds of SN and facial melanoma were observed in older individuals [SN: OR = 1.28, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.92-1.80, P trend = 0.016; Face: OR = 4.57, 95% CI = 3.34-6.35, P trend < 0.001] and those carrying IRF4-rs12203592*T (SN: OR = 1.35, 95% CI = 1.12-1.63, P trend = 0.002; Face: OR = 1.29, 95% CI = 1.10-1.50, P trend = 0.001). Decreased odds were observed for females (SN: OR = 0.49, 95% CI = 0.37-0.64, P < 0.001; Face: OR = 0.66, 95% CI = 0.53-0.82, P < 0.001) and the presence of nevi (SN: OR = 0.66, 95% CI = 0.49-0.89, P = 0.006; Face: OR = 0.65, 95% CI = 0.52-0.83, P < 0.001).ConclusionsDifferences observed between SN melanoma and other sites were also observed for facial melanoma. Factors previously associated with the broader head and neck region, notably older age, may be driven by the facial subregion. A novel finding was the association of IRF4-rs12203592 with both SN and facial melanoma.ImpactUnderstanding the epidemiology of site-specific melanoma will enable tailored strategies for risk factor reduction and site-specific screening campaigns.
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- 2020
16. The Association of MUC16 Mutation with Tumor Mutation Burden and Its Prognostic Implications in Cutaneous Melanoma.
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Wang, Xuefeng, Yu, Xiaoqing, Krauthammer, Michael, Hugo, Willy, Duan, Chunzhe, Kanetsky, Peter, Teer, Jamie, Thompson, Zachary, Kalos, Denise, Tsai, Kenneth, Smalley, Keiran, Sondak, Vernon, Chen, Y, and Conejo-Garcia, Jose
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Biomarkers ,Tumor ,CA-125 Antigen ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Melanoma ,Membrane Proteins ,Mutation ,Prognosis ,Skin Neoplasms ,Survival Analysis - Abstract
BACKGROUND: MUC16 is a mucin marker that is frequently mutated in melanoma, but whether MUC16 mutations could be useful as a surrogate biomarker for tumor mutation burden (TMB) remains unclear. METHODS: This study rigorously evaluates the MUC16 mutation as a clinical biomarker in cutaneous melanoma by utilizing genomic and clinical data from patient samples from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) and two independent validation cohorts. We further extended the analysis to studies with patients treated with immunotherapies. RESULTS: Analysis results showed that samples with MUC16 mutations had a higher TMB than the samples of wild-type, with strong statistical significance (P < 0.001) in all melanoma cohorts tested. Associations between MUC16 mutations and TMB remained statistically significant after adjusting for potential confounding factors in the TCGA cohort [OR, 9.28 (95% confidence interval (CI), 5.18-17.39); P < 0.001], Moffitt cohort [OR, 31.95 (95% CI, 8.71-163.90); P < 0.001], and Yale cohort [OR, 8.09 (95% CI, 3.12-23.79); P < 0.01]. MUC16 mutations were also found to be associated with overall survival in the TCGA [HR, 0.62; (95% CI, 0.45-0.85); P < 0.01] and Moffitt cohorts [HR, 0.49 (95% CI, 0.28-0.87); P = 0.014]. Strikingly, MUC16 is the only top frequently mutated gene for which prognostic significance was observed. MUC16 mutations were also found valuable in predicting anti-CTLA-4 and anti-PD-1 therapy responses. CONCLUSIONS: MUC16 mutation appears to be a useful predictive marker of global TMB and patient survival in melanoma. IMPACT: This is, to the best of our knowledge, the first systematic evaluation of MUC16 mutation as a clinical biomarker and a predictive biomarker for immunotherapy in melanoma.
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- 2020
17. Assessment of polygenic architecture and risk prediction based on common variants across fourteen cancers.
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Zhang, Yan Dora, Hurson, Amber N, Zhang, Haoyu, Choudhury, Parichoy Pal, Easton, Douglas F, Milne, Roger L, Simard, Jacques, Hall, Per, Michailidou, Kyriaki, Dennis, Joe, Schmidt, Marjanka K, Chang-Claude, Jenny, Gharahkhani, Puya, Whiteman, David, Campbell, Peter T, Hoffmeister, Michael, Jenkins, Mark, Peters, Ulrike, Hsu, Li, Gruber, Stephen B, Casey, Graham, Schmit, Stephanie L, O'Mara, Tracy A, Spurdle, Amanda B, Thompson, Deborah J, Tomlinson, Ian, De Vivo, Immaculata, Landi, Maria Teresa, Law, Matthew H, Iles, Mark M, Demenais, Florence, Kumar, Rajiv, MacGregor, Stuart, Bishop, D Timothy, Ward, Sarah V, Bondy, Melissa L, Houlston, Richard, Wiencke, John K, Melin, Beatrice, Barnholtz-Sloan, Jill, Kinnersley, Ben, Wrensch, Margaret R, Amos, Christopher I, Hung, Rayjean J, Brennan, Paul, McKay, James, Caporaso, Neil E, Berndt, Sonja I, Birmann, Brenda M, Camp, Nicola J, Kraft, Peter, Rothman, Nathaniel, Slager, Susan L, Berchuck, Andrew, Pharoah, Paul DP, Sellers, Thomas A, Gayther, Simon A, Pearce, Celeste L, Goode, Ellen L, Schildkraut, Joellen M, Moysich, Kirsten B, Amundadottir, Laufey T, Jacobs, Eric J, Klein, Alison P, Petersen, Gloria M, Risch, Harvey A, Stolzenberg-Solomon, Rachel Z, Wolpin, Brian M, Li, Donghui, Eeles, Rosalind A, Haiman, Christopher A, Kote-Jarai, Zsofia, Schumacher, Fredrick R, Al Olama, Ali Amin, Purdue, Mark P, Scelo, Ghislaine, Dalgaard, Marlene D, Greene, Mark H, Grotmol, Tom, Kanetsky, Peter A, McGlynn, Katherine A, Nathanson, Katherine L, Turnbull, Clare, Wiklund, Fredrik, Breast Cancer Association Consortium (BCAC), Barrett’s and Esophageal Adenocarcinoma Consortium (BEACON), Colon Cancer Family Registry (CCFR), Transdisciplinary Studies of Genetic Variation in Colorectal Cancer (CORECT), Endometrial Cancer Association Consortium (ECAC), Genetics and Epidemiology of Colorectal Cancer Consortium (GECCO), Melanoma Genetics Consortium (GenoMEL), Glioma International Case-Control Study (GICC), International Lung Cancer Consortium (ILCCO), Integrative Analysis of Lung Cancer Etiology and Risk (INTEGRAL) Consortium, International Consortium of Investigators Working on Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma Epidemiologic Studies (InterLymph), Ovarian Cancer Association Consortium (OCAC), Oral Cancer GWAS, Pancreatic Cancer Case-Control Consortium (PanC4), Pancreatic Cancer Cohort Consortium (PanScan), and Prostate Cancer Association Group to Investigate Cancer Associated Alterations in the Genome (PRACTICAL)
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Breast Cancer Association Consortium ,Barrett’s and Esophageal Adenocarcinoma Consortium ,Colon Cancer Family Registry ,Transdisciplinary Studies of Genetic Variation in Colorectal Cancer ,Endometrial Cancer Association Consortium ,Genetics and Epidemiology of Colorectal Cancer Consortium ,Melanoma Genetics Consortium ,Glioma International Case-Control Study ,International Lung Cancer Consortium ,Integrative Analysis of Lung Cancer Etiology and Risk (INTEGRAL) Consortium ,International Consortium of Investigators Working on Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma Epidemiologic Studies ,Ovarian Cancer Association Consortium ,Oral Cancer GWAS ,Pancreatic Cancer Case-Control Consortium ,Pancreatic Cancer Cohort Consortium ,Prostate Cancer Association Group to Investigate Cancer Associated Alterations in the Genome ,Renal Cancer GWAS ,Testicular Cancer Consortium ,Animals ,Humans ,Neoplasms ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Incidence ,Risk Assessment ,Risk Factors ,Multifactorial Inheritance ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Models ,Genetic ,Female ,Male ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Human Genome ,Prevention ,Cancer ,Prostate Cancer ,Genetics ,Urologic Diseases ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors - Abstract
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have led to the identification of hundreds of susceptibility loci across cancers, but the impact of further studies remains uncertain. Here we analyse summary-level data from GWAS of European ancestry across fourteen cancer sites to estimate the number of common susceptibility variants (polygenicity) and underlying effect-size distribution. All cancers show a high degree of polygenicity, involving at a minimum of thousands of loci. We project that sample sizes required to explain 80% of GWAS heritability vary from 60,000 cases for testicular to over 1,000,000 cases for lung cancer. The maximum relative risk achievable for subjects at the 99th risk percentile of underlying polygenic risk scores (PRS), compared to average risk, ranges from 12 for testicular to 2.5 for ovarian cancer. We show that PRS have potential for risk stratification for cancers of breast, colon and prostate, but less so for others because of modest heritability and lower incidence.
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- 2020
18. Piloting the Sexual and Gender Minority Cancer Curricular Advances for Research and Education (SGM Cancer CARE) Workshop: Research Training in the Service of SGM Cancer Health Equity
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Kano, Miria, Tamí-Maury, Irene, Pratt-Chapman, Mandi L., Chang, Shine, Kosich, Mikaela, Quinn, Gwendolyn P., Poteat, Tonia, Kanetsky, Peter A., Elk, Ronit, Boehmer, Ulrike, Sanchez, Julian, Kamen, Charles, and Sanchez, Nelson F.
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- 2022
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19. Associations of pigmentary and naevus phenotype with melanoma risk in two populations with comparable ancestry but contrasting levels of ambient sun exposure
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Cust, AE, Drummond, M, Bishop, DT, Azizi, L, Schmid, H, Jenkins, MA, Hopper, JL, Armstrong, BK, Aitken, JF, Kefford, RF, Giles, GG, Demenais, F, Goldstein, AM, Barrett, JH, Kanetsky, PA, Elder, DE, Mann, GJ, and Newton‐Bishop, JA
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Clinical Research ,Cancer ,Climate-Related Exposures and Conditions ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Aged ,Australia ,Case-Control Studies ,Environmental Exposure ,Extremities ,Female ,Hair Color ,Humans ,Male ,Melanoma ,Middle Aged ,Nevus ,Pigmented ,Phenotype ,Risk Assessment ,Risk Factors ,Sex Factors ,Skin Neoplasms ,Skin Pigmentation ,Sunlight ,Tumor Burden ,United Kingdom ,White People ,Young Adult ,Clinical Sciences ,Dermatology & Venereal Diseases ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundPeople at high risk of developing melanoma are usually identified by pigmentary and naevus phenotypes.ObjectiveWe examined whether associations of these phenotypes with melanoma risk differed by ambient sun exposure or participant characteristics in two population-based, case-control studies with comparable ancestry but different ambient sun exposure.MethodsData were analysed from 616 cases and 496 controls from the Australian Melanoma Family Study and 2012 cases and 504 controls from the Leeds (UK) case-control study. Questionnaire, interview and dermatological skin examination data were collected using the same measurement protocols. Relative risks were estimated as odds ratios using unconditional logistic regression, adjusted for potential confounders.ResultsHair and skin colour were the strongest pigmentary phenotype risk factors. All associations of pigmentary phenotype with melanoma risk were similar across countries. The median number of clinically assessed naevi was approximately three times higher in Australia than Leeds, but the relative risks for melanoma associated with each additional common or dysplastic naevus were higher for Leeds than Australia, especially for naevi on the upper and lower limbs. Higher naevus counts on the head and neck were associated with a stronger relative risk for melanoma for women than men. The two countries had similar relative risks for melanoma based on self-reported naevus density categories, but personal perceptions of naevus number differed by country. There was no consistent evidence of interactions between phenotypes on risk.ConclusionsClassifying people at high risk of melanoma based on their number of naevi should ideally take into account their country of residence, type of counts (clinical or self-reported), body site on which the naevus counts are measured and sex. The presence of naevi may be a stronger indicator of a genetic predisposition in the UK than in Australia based on less opportunity for sun exposure to influence naevus development.
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- 2019
20. MC1R variants in childhood and adolescent melanoma: a retrospective pooled analysis of a multicentre cohort
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Pellegrini, Cristina, Botta, Francesca, Massi, Daniela, Martorelli, Claudia, Facchetti, Fabio, Gandini, Sara, Maisonneuve, Patrick, Avril, Marie-Françoise, Demenais, Florence, Paillerets, Brigitte Bressac-de, Hoiom, Veronica, Cust, Anne E, Anton-Culver, Hoda, Gruber, Stephen B, Gallagher, Richard P, Marrett, Loraine, Zanetti, Roberto, Dwyer, Terence, Thomas, Nancy E, Begg, Colin B, Berwick, Marianne, Puig, Susana, Potrony, Miriam, Nagore, Eduardo, Ghiorzo, Paola, Menin, Chiara, Manganoni, Ausilia Maria, Rodolfo, Monica, Brugnara, Sonia, Passoni, Emanuela, Sekulovic, Lidija Kandolf, Baldini, Federica, Guida, Gabriella, Stratigos, Alexandros, Ozdemir, Fezal, Ayala, Fabrizio, Fernandez-de-Misa, Ricardo, Quaglino, Pietro, Ribas, Gloria, Romanini, Antonella, Migliano, Emilia, Stanganelli, Ignazio, Kanetsky, Peter A, Pizzichetta, Maria Antonietta, García-Borrón, Jose Carlos, Nan, Hongmei, Landi, Maria Teresa, Little, Julian, Newton-Bishop, Julia, Sera, Francesco, Fargnoli, Maria Concetta, Raimondi, Sara, Group, IMI Study, Alaibac, Mauro, Ferrari, Andrea, Valeri, Barbara, Sicher, Mariacristina, Mangiola, Daniela, Nazzaro, Gianluca, Tosti, Giulio, Mazzarol, Giovanni, Giudice, Giuseppe, Ribero, Simone, Astrua, Chiara, Mazzoni, Laura, Group, GEM Study, Orlow, Irene, Mujumdar, Urvi, Hummer, Amanda, Busam, Klaus, Roy, Pampa, Canchola, Rebecca, Clas, Brian, Cotignola, Javiar, Monroe, Yvette, Armstrong, Bruce, Kricker, Anne, Litchfield, Melisa, Tucker, Paul, Stephens, Nicola, Switzer, Teresa, Theis, Beth, From, Lynn, Chowdhury, Noori, Vanasse, Louise, Purdue, Mark, Northrup, David, Rosso, Stefano, Sacerdote, Carlotta, Leighton, Nancy, Gildea, Maureen, Bonner, Joe, Jeter, Joanne, Klotz, Judith, Wilcox, Homer, Weiss, Helen, Millikan, Robert, Mattingly, Dianne, and Player, Jon
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Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Genetics ,Prevention ,Cancer ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Aged ,Biomarkers ,Tumor ,Case-Control Studies ,Child ,Female ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Germ-Line Mutation ,Humans ,Logistic Models ,Male ,Melanoma ,Middle Aged ,Odds Ratio ,Polymorphism ,Genetic ,Receptor ,Melanocortin ,Type 1 ,Retrospective Studies ,Skin Neoplasms ,IMI Study Group ,GEM Study Group ,M-SKIP Study Group - Abstract
BackgroundGermline variants in the melanocortin 1 receptor gene (MC1R) might increase the risk of childhood and adolescent melanoma, but a clear conclusion is challenging because of the low number of studies and cases. We assessed the association of MC1R variants with childhood and adolescent melanoma in a large study comparing the prevalence of MC1R variants in child or adolescent patients with melanoma to that in adult patients with melanoma and in healthy adult controls.MethodsIn this retrospective pooled analysis, we used the M-SKIP Project, the Italian Melanoma Intergroup, and other European groups (with participants from Australia, Canada, France, Greece, Italy, the Netherlands, Serbia, Spain, Sweden, Turkey, and the USA) to assemble an international multicentre cohort. We gathered phenotypic and genetic data from children or adolescents diagnosed with sporadic single-primary cutaneous melanoma at age 20 years or younger, adult patients with sporadic single-primary cutaneous melanoma diagnosed at age 35 years or older, and healthy adult individuals as controls. We calculated odds ratios (ORs) for childhood and adolescent melanoma associated with MC1R variants by multivariable logistic regression. Subgroup analysis was done for children aged 18 or younger and 14 years or younger.FindingsWe analysed data from 233 young patients, 932 adult patients, and 932 healthy adult controls. Children and adolescents had higher odds of carrying MC1R r variants than did adult patients (OR 1·54, 95% CI 1·02-2·33), including when analysis was restricted to patients aged 18 years or younger (1·80, 1·06-3·07). All investigated variants, except Arg160Trp, tended, to varying degrees, to have higher frequencies in young patients than in adult patients, with significantly higher frequencies found for Val60Leu (OR 1·60, 95% CI 1·05-2·44; p=0·04) and Asp294His (2·15, 1·05-4·40; p=0·04). Compared with those of healthy controls, young patients with melanoma had significantly higher frequencies of any MC1R variants.InterpretationOur pooled analysis of MC1R genetic data of young patients with melanoma showed that MC1R r variants were more prevalent in childhood and adolescent melanoma than in adult melanoma, especially in patients aged 18 years or younger. Our findings support the role of MC1R in childhood and adolescent melanoma susceptibility, with a potential clinical relevance for developing early melanoma detection and preventive strategies.FundingSPD-Pilot/Project-Award-2015; AIRC-MFAG-11831.
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- 2019
21. Impact of personal genomic risk information on melanoma prevention behaviors and psychological outcomes: a randomized controlled trial
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Smit, Amelia K., Allen, Martin, Beswick, Brooke, Butow, Phyllis, Dawkins, Hugh, Dobbinson, Suzanne J., Dunlop, Kate L., Espinoza, David, Fenton, Georgina, Kanetsky, Peter A., Keogh, Louise, Kimlin, Michael G., Kirk, Judy, Law, Matthew H., Lo, Serigne, Low, Cynthia, Mann, Graham J., Reyes-Marcelino, Gillian, Morton, Rachael L., Newson, Ainsley J., Savard, Jacqueline, Trevena, Lyndal, Wordsworth, Sarah, and Cust, Anne E.
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- 2021
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22. Inherited Genetic Variants Associated with Melanoma BRAF/NRAS Subtypes
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Thomas, Nancy E, Edmiston, Sharon N, Orlow, Irene, Kanetsky, Peter A, Luo, Li, Gibbs, David C, Parrish, Eloise A, Hao, Honglin, Busam, Klaus J, Armstrong, Bruce K, Kricker, Anne, Cust, Anne E, Anton-Culver, Hoda, Gruber, Stephen B, Gallagher, Richard P, Zanetti, Roberto, Rosso, Stefano, Sacchetto, Lidia, Dwyer, Terence, Ollila, David W, Begg, Colin B, Berwick, Marianne, Conway, Kathleen, Begg, Colin, Roy, Pampa, Reiner, Anne, Leong, Siok, Guerrero, Sergio Corrales, Sadeghi, Keimya, Boyce, Tawny W, Venn, Alison, Tucker, Paul, Marrett, Loraine D, From, Lynn, Huang, Shu-Chen, Groben, Pamela A, Parrish, Eloise, Frank, Jill S, Rebbeck, Timothy R, Taylor, Julia Lee, and Madronich, Sasha
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Human Genome ,Cancer ,Genetic Testing ,Genetics ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Adult ,Aged ,Female ,GTP Phosphohydrolases ,Genetic Association Studies ,Genotype ,Group VI Phospholipases A2 ,Humans ,Interferon Regulatory Factors ,Male ,Melanoma ,Membrane Proteins ,Middle Aged ,Mutation ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins B-raf ,Risk ,Skin Neoplasms ,GEM Study Group ,Clinical Sciences ,Dermatology & Venereal Diseases ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BRAF and NRAS mutations arise early in melanoma development, but their associations with low-penetrance melanoma susceptibility loci remain unknown. In the Genes, Environment and Melanoma Study, 1,223 European-origin participants had their incident invasive primary melanomas screened for BRAF/NRAS mutations and germline DNA genotyped for 47 single-nucleotide polymorphisms identified as low-penetrant melanoma-risk variants. We used multinomial logistic regression to simultaneously examine each single-nucleotide polymorphism's relationship to BRAF V600E, BRAF V600K, BRAF other, and NRAS+ relative to BRAF-/NRAS- melanoma adjusted for study features. IRF4 rs12203592*T was associated with BRAF V600E (odds ratio [OR] = 0.59, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.43-0.79) and V600K (OR = 0.65, 95% CI = 0.41-1.03), but not BRAF other or NRAS+ melanoma. A global test of etiologic heterogeneity (Pglobal = 0.001) passed false discovery (Pglobal = 0.0026). PLA2G6 rs132985*T was associated with BRAF V600E (OR = 1.32, 95% CI = 1.05-1.67) and BRAF other (OR = 1.82, 95% CI = 1.11-2.98), but not BRAF V600K or NRAS+ melanoma. The test for etiologic heterogeneity (Pglobal) was 0.005. The IRF4 rs12203592 associations were slightly attenuated after adjustment for melanoma-risk phenotypes. The PLA2G6 rs132985 associations were independent of phenotypes. IRF4 and PLA2G6 inherited genotypes may influence melanoma BRAF/NRAS subtype development.
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- 2018
23. The interaction between vitamin D receptor polymorphisms and sun exposure around time of diagnosis influences melanoma survival
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Orlow, Irene, Shi, Yang, Kanetsky, Peter A, Thomas, Nancy E, Luo, Li, Corrales‐Guerrero, Sergio, Cust, Anne E, Sacchetto, Lidia, Zanetti, Roberto, Rosso, Stefano, Armstrong, Bruce K, Dwyer, Terence, Venn, Alison, Gallagher, Richard P, Gruber, Stephen B, Marrett, Loraine D, Anton‐Culver, Hoda, Busam, Klaus, Begg, Colin B, Berwick, Marianne, and Group, the GEM Study
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Cancer ,Climate-Related Exposures and Conditions ,Prevention ,Nutrition ,Genetics ,Female ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Haplotypes ,Humans ,Male ,Melanoma ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Receptors ,Calcitriol ,Risk Factors ,Sunlight ,Survival Analysis ,exposure ,haplotype ,interaction ,melanoma ,polymorphism ,SNP ,survival ,UVB ,vitamin D receptor ,GEM Study Group ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Dermatology & Venereal Diseases ,Biochemistry and cell biology ,Oncology and carcinogenesis - Abstract
Evidence on the relationship between the vitamin D pathway and outcomes in melanoma is growing, although it is not always clear. We investigated the impact of measured levels of sun exposure at diagnosis on associations of vitamin D receptor gene (VDR) polymorphisms and melanoma death in 3336 incident primary melanoma cases. Interactions between six SNPs and a common 3'-end haplotype were significant (p
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- 2018
24. Associations of MC1R Genotype and Patient Phenotypes with BRAF and NRAS Mutations in Melanoma
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Thomas, Nancy E, Edmiston, Sharon N, Kanetsky, Peter A, Busam, Klaus J, Kricker, Anne, Armstrong, Bruce K, Cust, Anne E, Anton-Culver, Hoda, Gruber, Stephen B, Luo, Li, Orlow, Irene, Reiner, Anne S, Gallagher, Richard P, Zanetti, Roberto, Rosso, Stefano, Sacchetto, Lidia, Dwyer, Terence, Parrish, Eloise A, Hao, Honglin, Gibbs, David C, Frank, Jill S, Ollila, David W, Begg, Colin B, Berwick, Marianne, Conway, Kathleen, Roy, Pampa, Patel, Himali, Paine, Susan, Venn, Alison, Tucker, Paul, Marrett, Loraine D, From, Lynn, Huang, Shu-Chen, Groben, Pamela A, Parrish, Eloise, Bramson, Jennifer I, Rebbeck, Timothy R, Taylor, Julia Lee, and Madronich, Sasha
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Cancer ,Genetics ,Adult ,Aged ,Australia ,Female ,GTP Phosphohydrolases ,Genotype ,Humans ,Male ,Melanoma ,Membrane Proteins ,Middle Aged ,Mutation ,Phenotype ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins B-raf ,Receptor ,Melanocortin ,Type 1 ,Skin Neoplasms ,United States ,GEM Study Group ,Clinical Sciences ,Dermatology & Venereal Diseases ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
Associations of MC1R with BRAF mutations in melanoma have been inconsistent between studies. We sought to determine for 1,227 participants in the international population-based Genes, Environment, and Melanoma (GEM) study whether MC1R and phenotypes were associated with melanoma BRAF/NRAS subtypes. We used logistic regression adjusted by age, sex, and study design features and examined effect modifications. BRAF+ were associated with younger age, blond/light brown hair, increased nevi, and less freckling, and NRAS+ with older age relative to the wild type (BRAF-/NRAS-) melanomas (all P < 0.05). Comparing specific BRAF subtypes to the wild type, BRAF V600E was associated with younger age, blond/light brown hair, and increased nevi and V600K with increased nevi and less freckling (all P < 0.05). MC1R was positively associated with BRAF V600E cases but only among individuals with darker phototypes or darker hair (Pinteraction < 0.05) but inversely associated with BRAF V600K (Ptrend = 0.006) with no significant effect modification by phenotypes. These results support distinct etiologies for BRAF V600E, BRAF V600K, NRAS+, and wild-type melanomas. MC1R's associations with BRAF V600E cases limited to individuals with darker phenotypes indicate that MC1R genotypes specifically provide information about BRAF V600E melanoma risk in those not considered high risk based on phenotype. Our results also suggest that melanin pathways deserve further study in BRAF V600E melanomagenesis.
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- 2017
25. Comparison of community pathologists with expert dermatopathologists evaluating Breslow thickness and histopathologic subtype in a large international population-based study of melanoma
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Joseph Michael Yardman-Frank, MPH, Baillie Bronner, BA, Stefano Rosso, PhD, Lynn From, MD, Klaus Busam, MD, Pam Groben, MD, Paul Tucker, MD, Anne Cust, PhD, Bruce Armstrong, MD, Anne Kricker, PhD, Loraine Marrett, PhD, Hoda Anton-Culver, PhD, Stephen Gruber, MD, Rick Gallagher, MA, Roberto Zanetti, MD, Lidia Sacchetto, PhD, Terry Dwyer, MD, Alison Venn, PhD, Irene Orlow, PhD, Peter Kanetsky, PhD, Li Luo, PhD, Nancy Thomas, MD, Colin Begg, PhD, Marianne Berwick, PhD, MPH, Marianne Berwick, MPH, PhD, Irene Orlow, PhD, MS, Klaus J. Busam, MD, Isidora Autuori, MS, Pampa Roy, PhD, Anne Reiner, MS, Tawny W. Boyce, MPH, Anne E. Cust, PhD, Bruce K. Armstrong, MD, PhD, Alison Venn, Terence Dwyer, Paul Tucker, Richard P. Gallagher, MA, Loraine D. Marrett, PhD, Stefano Rosso, MD, MSc, Stephen B. Gruber, MD, MPH, PhD, Joseph D. Bonner, PhD, Nancy E. Thomas, MD, PhD, Kathleen Conway, PhD, David W. Ollila, MD, Pamela A. Groben, MD, Sharon N. Edmiston, BA, Honglin Hao, Eloise Parrish, MSPH, Jill S. Frank, MS, David C. Gibbs, BS, Timothy R. Rebbeck, PD, Peter A. Kanetsky, MPH, PhD, Julia Lee Taylor, PhD, and Sasha Madronich, PhD
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Dermatology ,RL1-803 - Published
- 2021
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26. Association of Melanoma-Risk Variants with Primary Melanoma Tumor Prognostic Characteristics and Melanoma-Specific Survival in the GEM Study
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Danielle R. Davari, Irene Orlow, Peter A. Kanetsky, Li Luo, Klaus J. Busam, Ajay Sharma, Anne Kricker, Anne E. Cust, Hoda Anton-Culver, Stephen B. Gruber, Richard P. Gallagher, Roberto Zanetti, Stefano Rosso, Lidia Sacchetto, Terence Dwyer, David C. Gibbs, David W. Ollila, Colin B. Begg, Marianne Berwick, and Nancy E. Thomas
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melanoma ,single nucleotide polymorphism ,Breslow thickness ,ulceration ,mitoses ,tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and candidate pathway studies have identified low-penetrant genetic variants associated with cutaneous melanoma. We investigated the association of melanoma-risk variants with primary melanoma tumor prognostic characteristics and melanoma-specific survival. The Genes, Environment, and Melanoma Study enrolled 3285 European origin participants with incident invasive primary melanoma. For each of 47 melanoma-risk single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), we used linear and logistic regression modeling to estimate, respectively, the per allele mean changes in log of Breslow thickness and odds ratios for presence of ulceration, mitoses, and tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs). We also used Cox proportional hazards regression modeling to estimate the per allele hazard ratios for melanoma-specific survival. Passing the false discovery threshold (p = 0.0026) were associations of IRF4 rs12203592 and CCND1 rs1485993 with log of Breslow thickness, and association of TERT rs2242652 with presence of mitoses. IRF4 rs12203592 also had nominal associations (p < 0.05) with presence of mitoses and melanoma-specific survival, as well as a borderline association (p = 0.07) with ulceration. CCND1 rs1485993 also had a borderline association with presence of mitoses (p = 0.06). MX2 rs45430 had nominal associations with log of Breslow thickness, presence of mitoses, and melanoma-specific survival. Our study indicates that further research investigating the associations of these genetic variants with underlying biologic pathways related to tumor progression is warranted.
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- 2021
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27. Sun Exposure, Tanning Behaviors, and Sunburn: Examining Activities Associated With Harmful Ultraviolet Radiation Exposures in College Students
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Bowers, Jennifer M., Hamilton, Jada G., Lobel, Marci, Kanetsky, Peter A., and Hay, Jennifer L.
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- 2021
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28. Identification of 22 susceptibility loci associated with testicular germ cell tumors
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John Pluta, Louise C. Pyle, Kevin T. Nead, Rona Wilf, Mingyao Li, Nandita Mitra, Benita Weathers, Kurt D’Andrea, Kristian Almstrup, Lynn Anson-Cartwright, Javier Benitez, Christopher D. Brown, Stephen Chanock, Chu Chen, Victoria K. Cortessis, Alberto Ferlin, Carlo Foresta, Marija Gamulin, Jourik A. Gietema, Chiara Grasso, Mark H. Greene, Tom Grotmol, Robert J. Hamilton, Trine B. Haugen, Russ Hauser, Michelle A. T. Hildebrandt, Matthew E. Johnson, Robert Karlsson, Lambertus A. Kiemeney, Davor Lessel, Ragnhild A. Lothe, Jennifer T. Loud, Chey Loveday, Paloma Martin-Gimeno, Coby Meijer, Jérémie Nsengimana, David I. Quinn, Thorunn Rafnar, Shweta Ramdas, Lorenzo Richiardi, Rolf I. Skotheim, Kari Stefansson, Clare Turnbull, David J. Vaughn, Fredrik Wiklund, Xifeng Wu, Daphne Yang, Tongzhang Zheng, Andrew D. Wells, Struan F. A. Grant, Ewa Rajpert-De Meyts, Stephen M. Schwartz, D. Timothy Bishop, Katherine A. McGlynn, Peter A. Kanetsky, Katherine L. Nathanson, and The Testicular Cancer Consortium
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Science - Abstract
Testicular germ cell tumors are highly heritable, and the authors present the largest genome association study, identifying 22 novel loci, which account for a third of those identified to date. Implicated pathways include male germ cell development and differentiation, and chromosomal segregation.
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- 2021
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29. Morphologic and molecular correlates of EZH2 as a predictor of platinum resistance in high-grade ovarian serous carcinoma
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Brett M. Reid, Shraddha Vyas, Zhihua Chen, Ann Chen, Peter A. Kanetsky, Jennifer B. Permuth, Thomas A. Sellers, and Ozlen Saglam
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High-grade ovarian serous carcinoma ,EZH2 ,Chemotherapy response ,Survival ,TIL ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background Enhancer of zesta homologue 2 (EZH2) is an essential component of polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2) that contributes to tumor progression and chemo-resistance. The aim of this study was to comprehensively assess the prognostic value of EZH2 across the morphologic and molecular spectra of high-grade serous ovarian carcinoma (HGSOC) by utilizing both immunohistochemistry (IHC) and proteogenomic technologies. Methods IHC of EZH2 was performed using a tissue microarray of 79 HGSOC scored (+/−) for lymphovascular invasion (LVI), tumor-infiltrating lymphocytic aggregates ≥1 mm (TIL) and architectural growth patterns. The association of EZH2 H-score with response to therapy and overall survival was evaluated by tumor features. We also evaluated EZH2 transcriptional (RNA sequencing) and protein (mass spectrometry) expression from bulk tumor samples from 336 HGSOC from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA). EZH2 expression and co-expression networks were compared by clinical outcomes. Results For HGSOC without TIL (58%), EZH2 expression was almost 2-fold higher in platinum resistant tumors (P = 0.01). Conversely, EZH2 was not associated with platinum resistance among TIL+ HGSOC (P = 0.41). EZH2 expression was associated with reduced survival for tumors with LVI (P = 0.04). Analysis of TCGA found higher EZH2 expression in immunoreactive and proliferative tumors (P = 6.7 × 10− 5) although protein levels were similar across molecular subtypes (P = 0.52). Both mRNA and protein levels of EZH2 were lower in platinum resistant tumors although they were not associated with survival. Co-expression analysis revealed EZH2 networks totaling 1049 mRNA and 448 proteins that were exclusive to platinum sensitive or resistant tumors. The EZH2 network in resistant HGSOC included CARM1 which was positively correlated with EZH2 at both mRNA (r = 0.33, p = 0.003) and protein (r = 0.14, P = 0.01) levels. Further, EZH2 co-expression with CARM1 corresponded to a decreased prognostic significance of EZH2 expression in resistant tumors. Conclusions Our findings demonstrate that EZH2 expression varies based on its interactions with immunologic pathways and tumor microenvironment, impacting the prognostic interpretation. The association between high EZH2 expression and platinum resistance in TIL- HGSOC warrants further study of the implications for therapeutic strategies.
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- 2021
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30. Association of Incident Amelanotic Melanoma With Phenotypic Characteristics, MC1R Status, and Prior Amelanotic Melanoma
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Vernali, Steven, Waxweiler, Weston T, Dillon, Patrick M, Kanetsky, Peter A, Orlow, Irene, Luo, Li, Busam, Klaus J, Kricker, Anne, Armstrong, Bruce K, Anton-Culver, Hoda, Gruber, Stephen B, Gallagher, Richard P, Zanetti, Roberto, Rosso, Stefano, Sacchetto, Lidia, Dwyer, Terence, Cust, Anne E, Ollila, David W, Begg, Colin B, Berwick, Marianne, and Thomas, Nancy E
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Genetics ,Clinical Research ,Climate-Related Exposures and Conditions ,Cancer ,Adult ,Aged ,Cohort Studies ,Female ,Humans ,Logistic Models ,Male ,Melanoma ,Amelanotic ,Middle Aged ,Phenotype ,Pigmentation ,Receptor ,Melanocortin ,Type 1 ,Skin Neoplasms ,GEM Study Group ,Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis - Abstract
ImportanceWe previously reported that survival is poorer from histopathologically amelanotic than pigmented melanoma because of more advanced stage at diagnosis. Identifying patients at risk of amelanotic melanoma might enable earlier diagnosis and improved survival; however, the phenotypic characteristics and underlying genetics associated with amelanotic melanoma are unknown.ObjectiveTo determine whether phenotypic characteristics, carriage of MC1R variants, and history of amelanotic melanoma are associated with histopathologically amelanotic melanoma.Design, setting, and participantsThe Genes, Environment, and Melanoma (GEM) study is an international cohort study that enrolled patients with incident primary cutaneous melanomas from population-based and hospital-based cancer registries (1998 to 2003). The GEM participants included here were 2387 patients with data for phenotypes, MC1R genotype, and primary melanomas scored for histopathologic pigmentation. Of these 2387 patients with incident melanomas scored for pigmentation, 527 had prior primary melanomas also scored for pigmentation.Main outcomes and measuresAssociations of phenotypic characteristics (freckles, nevi, phenotypic index) and MC1R status with incident amelanotic melanomas were evaluated using logistic regression models adjusted for age, sex, study center, and primary status (single or multiple primary melanoma); odds ratios (ORs) and 95% CIs are reported. Association of histopathologic pigmentation between incident and prior melanomas was analyzed using an exact logistic regression model.ResultsThis study included 2387 patients (1065 women, 1322 men; mean [SD] age at diagnosis, 58.3 [16.1] years) and 2917 primary melanomas. In a multivariable model including phenotypic characteristics, absence of back nevi, presence of many freckles, and a sun-sensitive phenotypic index were independently associated with amelanotic melanoma. Carriage of MC1R variants was associated with amelanotic melanoma but lost statistical significance in a model with phenotype. Further, patients with incident primary amelanotic melanomas were more likely to have had a prior primary amelanotic melanoma (OR, 4.62; 95% CI, 1.25-14.13) than those with incident primary pigmented melanomas.Conclusions and relevanceAbsence of back nevi, presence of many freckles, a sun-sensitive phenotypic index, and prior amelanotic melanoma increase odds for development of amelanotic melanoma. An increased index of suspicion for melanoma in presenting nonpigmented lesions and more careful examination for signs of amelanotic melanoma during periodic skin examination in patients at increased odds of amelanotic melanoma might lead to earlier diagnosis and improved survival.
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- 2017
31. Birth cohort-specific trends of sun-related behaviors among individuals from an international consortium of melanoma-prone families
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John Charles A. Lacson, Shawn A. Zamani, Luis Alberto Ribeiro Froes, Nandita Mitra, Lu Qian, Scarlet H. Doyle, Esther Azizi, Claudia Balestrini, D. Timothy Bishop, William Bruno, Blanca Carlos-Ortega, Francisco Cuellar, Anne E. Cust, David E. Elder, Anne-Marie Gerdes, Paola Ghiorzo, Thais C. Grazziotin, Nelleke A. Gruis, Johan Hansson, Marko Hočevar, Veronica Höiom, Elizabeth A. Holland, Christian Ingvar, Gilles Landman, Alejandra Larre-Borges, Graham J. Mann, Montserrat Molgo, Luciana Facure Moredo, Håkan Olsson, Jacoba J. Out-Luiting, Barbara Perić, Dace Pjanova, Susana Puig, Julio Salas-Alanis, Helen Schmid, Karin A. W. Wadt, Julia A. Newton-Bishop, Peter A. Kanetsky, and on behalf of the GenoMEL Study Group
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Trends ,Sun-related behaviors ,Sunscreen use ,Sun exposure ,Sunburn ,Sunbed ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Individuals from melanoma-prone families have similar or reduced sun-protective behaviors compared to the general population. Studies on trends in sun-related behaviors have been temporally and geographically limited. Methods Individuals from an international consortium of melanoma-prone families (GenoMEL) were retrospectively asked about sunscreen use, sun exposure (time spent outside), sunburns, and sunbed use at several timepoints over their lifetime. Generalized linear mixed models were used to examine the association between these outcomes and birth cohort defined by decade spans, after adjusting for covariates. Results A total of 2407 participants from 547 families across 17 centers were analyzed. Sunscreen use increased across subsequent birth cohorts, and although the likelihood of sunburns increased until the 1950s birth cohort, it decreased thereafter. Average sun exposure did not change across the birth cohorts, and the likelihood of sunbed use increased in more recent birth cohorts. We generally did not find any differences in sun-related behavior when comparing melanoma cases to non-cases. Melanoma cases had increased sunscreen use, decreased sun exposure, and decreased odds of sunburn and sunbed use after melanoma diagnosis compared to before diagnosis. Conclusions Although sunscreen use has increased and the likelihood of sunburns has decreased in more recent birth cohorts, individuals in melanoma-prone families have not reduced their overall sun exposure and had an increased likelihood of sunbed use in more recent birth cohorts. These observations demonstrate partial improvements in melanoma prevention and suggest that additional intervention strategies may be needed to achieve optimal sun-protective behavior in melanoma-prone families.
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- 2021
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32. Variants in autophagy‐related genes and clinical characteristics in melanoma: a population‐based study
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White, Kirsten AM, Luo, Li, Thompson, Todd A, Torres, Salina, Hu, Chien‐An Andy, Thomas, Nancy E, Lilyquist, Jenna, Anton‐Culver, Hoda, Gruber, Stephen B, From, Lynn, Busam, Klaus J, Orlow, Irene, Kanetsky, Peter A, Marrett, Loraine D, Gallagher, Richard P, Sacchetto, Lidia, Rosso, Stefano, Dwyer, Terence, Cust, Anne E, Begg, Colin B, Berwick, Marianne, Mujumdar, Urvi, Roy, Pampa, Armstrong, Bruce, Kricker, Anne, Litchfield, Melisa, Tucker, Paul, Venn, Alison, Stephens, Nicola, Switzer, Teresa, Marrett, Loraine, Theis, Elizabeth, Chowdhury, Noori, Vanasse, Louise, Zanetti, Roberto, Sacerdote, Carlotta, Leighton, Nancy, Jeter, Joanne, Klotz, Judith, Wilcox, Homer, Weiss, Helen, Mattingly, Dianne, Player, Jon, Rebbeck, Timothy, Walker, Amy, Panossian, Saarene, Taylor, Julia Lee, and Madronich, Sasha
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Cancer ,Genetics ,Clinical Research ,Aetiology ,4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Adult ,Aged ,Alleles ,Autophagy ,Autophagy-Related Proteins ,Female ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Genetic Variation ,Genotype ,Humans ,Male ,Melanoma ,Middle Aged ,Models ,Biological ,Neoplasm Staging ,Odds Ratio ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Population Surveillance ,ATG16L1 ,autophagy ,melanoma ,polymorphism ,SNP ,GEM Study Group ,ATG16L1 ,SNP ,Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,Oncology and carcinogenesis - Abstract
Autophagy has been linked with melanoma risk and survival, but no polymorphisms in autophagy-related (ATG) genes have been investigated in relation to melanoma progression. We examined five single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in three ATG genes (ATG5; ATG10; and ATG16L) with known or suspected impact on autophagic flux in an international population-based case-control study of melanoma. DNA from 911 melanoma patients was genotyped. An association was identified between (GG) (rs2241880) and earlier stage at diagnosis (OR 0.47; 95% Confidence Intervals (CI) = 0.27-0.81, P = 0.02) and a decrease in Breslow thickness (P = 0.03). The ATG16L heterozygous genotype (AG) (rs2241880) was associated with younger age at diagnosis (P = 0.02). Two SNPs in ATG5 were found to be associated with increased stage (rs2245214 CG, OR 1.47; 95% CI = 1.11-1.94, P = 0.03; rs510432 CC, OR 1.84; 95% CI = 1.12-3.02, P = 0.05). Finally, we identified inverse associations between ATG5 (GG rs2245214) and melanomas on the scalp or neck (OR 0.20, 95% CI = 0.05-0.86, P = 0.03); ATG10 (CC) (rs1864182) and brisk tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) (OR 0.42; 95% CI = 0.21-0.88, P = 0.02), and ATG5 (CC) (rs510432) with nonbrisk TILs (OR 0.55; 95% CI = 0.34-0.87, P = 0.01). Our data suggest that ATG SNPs might be differentially associated with specific host and tumor characteristics including age at diagnosis, TILs, and stage. These associations may be critical to understanding the role of autophagy in cancer, and further investigation will help characterize the contribution of these variants to melanoma progression.
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- 2016
33. Nevus count associations with pigmentary phenotype, histopathological melanoma characteristics and survival from melanoma
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Taylor, Nicholas J, Thomas, Nancy E, Anton‐Culver, Hoda, Armstrong, Bruce K, Begg, Colin B, Busam, Klaus J, Cust, Anne E, Dwyer, Terence, From, Lynn, Gallagher, Richard P, Gruber, Stephen B, Nishri, Diane E, Orlow, Irene, Rosso, Stefano, Venn, Alison J, Zanetti, Roberto, Berwick, Marianne, Kanetsky, Peter A, and Group, on behalf of the GEM Study
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Cancer ,Clinical Research ,Climate-Related Exposures and Conditions ,Adult ,Aged ,Case-Control Studies ,Female ,Humans ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Male ,Melanoma ,Middle Aged ,Nevus ,Pigmented ,Odds Ratio ,Phenotype ,Population Surveillance ,Prognosis ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Risk Factors ,Skin Neoplasms ,melanoma ,disease-specific survival ,nevi ,phenotypic characteristics ,GEM Study Group ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis - Abstract
Although nevus count is an established risk factor for melanoma, relationships between nevus number and patient and tumor characteristics have not been well studied and the influence of nevus count on melanoma-specific survival is equivocal. Using data from the Genes, Environment and Melanoma (GEM) study, a large population-based study of primary cutaneous melanoma, we evaluated associations between number of nevi and patient features, including sun-sensitivity summarized in a phenotypic index, and tumor characteristics. We also assessed the association of nevus count with melanoma-specific survival. Higher nevus counts were independently and positively associated with male gender and younger age at diagnosis, and they were inversely associated with lentigo maligna histology. We observed a borderline significant trend of poorer melanoma-specific survival with increasing quartile of nevus count, but little or no association between number of nevi and pigmentary phenotypic characteristics or prognostic tumor features.
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- 2016
34. Association of Interferon Regulatory Factor-4 Polymorphism rs12203592 With Divergent Melanoma Pathways
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Gibbs, David C, Orlow, Irene, Bramson, Jennifer I, Kanetsky, Peter A, Luo, Li, Kricker, Anne, Armstrong, Bruce K, Anton-Culver, Hoda, Gruber, Stephen B, Marrett, Loraine D, Gallagher, Richard P, Zanetti, Roberto, Rosso, Stefano, Dwyer, Terence, Sharma, Ajay, La Pilla, Emily, From, Lynn, Busam, Klaus J, Cust, Anne E, Ollila, David W, Begg, Colin B, Berwick, Marianne, and Thomas, Nancy E
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Climate-Related Exposures and Conditions ,Cancer ,Genetics ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Adult ,Age of Onset ,Aged ,Female ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Genotype ,Humans ,Interferon Regulatory Factors ,Logistic Models ,Male ,Melanoma ,Middle Aged ,Odds Ratio ,Phenotype ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Principal Component Analysis ,Skin Neoplasms ,Sunlight ,Whites ,GEM Study Group ,White People ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis ,Oncology and carcinogenesis - Abstract
BackgroundSolar elastosis and neval remnants are histologic markers characteristic of divergent melanoma pathways linked to differences in age at onset, host phenotype, and sun exposure. However, the association between these pathway markers and newly identified low-penetrance melanoma susceptibility loci remains unknown.MethodsIn the Genes, Environment and Melanoma (GEM) Study, 2103 Caucasian participants had first primary melanomas that underwent centralized pathology review. For 47 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) previously identified as low-penetrant melanoma risk variants, we used multinomial logistic regression to compare melanoma with solar elastosis and melanoma with neval remnants simultaneously to melanoma with neither of these markers, excluding melanomas with both markers. All statistical tests were two-sided.ResultsIRF4 rs12203592 was the only SNP to pass the false discovery threshold in baseline models adjusted for age, sex, and study center. rs12203592*T was associated positively with melanoma with solar elastosis (odds ratio [OR] = 1.47, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.18 to 1.82) and inversely with melanoma with neval remnants (OR = 0.65, 95% CI = 0.48 to 0.87) compared with melanoma with neither marker (P global = 3.78 x 10(-08)). Adjusting for phenotypic characteristics and total sun exposure hours did not materially affect rs12203592's associations. Distinct early- and late-onset age distributions were observed in patients with IRF4 rs12203592 [CC] and [TT] genotypes, respectively.ConclusionsOur findings suggest a role of IRF4 rs12203592 in pathway-specific risk for melanoma development. We hypothesize that IRF4 rs12203592 could underlie in part the bimodal age distribution reported for melanoma and linked to the divergent pathways.
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- 2016
35. Vitamin D receptor polymorphisms and survival in patients with cutaneous melanoma: a population-based study
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Orlow, Irene, Reiner, Anne S, Thomas, Nancy E, Roy, Pampa, Kanetsky, Peter A, Luo, Li, Paine, Susan, Armstrong, Bruce K, Kricker, Anne, Marrett, Loraine D, Rosso, Stefano, Zanetti, Roberto, Gruber, Stephen B, Anton-Culver, Hoda, Gallagher, Richard P, Dwyer, Terence, Busam, Klaus, Begg, Colin B, and Berwick, Marianne
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Genetics ,Nutrition ,Cancer ,Genetic Testing ,Australia ,Canada ,Female ,Genotype ,Haplotypes ,Humans ,Italy ,Male ,Melanoma ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Receptors ,Calcitriol ,Skin Neoplasms ,United States ,GEM Study Group ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis - Abstract
Factors known to affect melanoma survival include age at presentation, sex and tumor characteristics. Polymorphisms also appear to modulate survival following diagnosis. Result from other studies suggest that vitamin D receptor (VDR) polymorphisms (SNPs) impact survival in patients with glioma, renal cell carcinoma, lung, breast, prostate and other cancers; however, a comprehensive study of VDR polymorphisms and melanoma-specific survival is lacking. We aimed to investigate whether VDR genetic variation influences survival in patients with cutaneous melanoma. The analysis involved 3566 incident single and multiple primary melanoma cases enrolled in the international population-based Genes, Environment, and Melanoma Study. Melanoma-specific survival outcomes were calculated for each of 38 VDR SNPs using a competing risk analysis after adjustment for covariates. There were 254 (7.1%) deaths due to melanoma during the median 7.6 years follow-up period. VDR SNPs rs7299460, rs3782905, rs2239182, rs12370156, rs2238140, rs7305032, rs1544410 (BsmI) and rs731236 (TaqI) each had a statistically significant (trend P values < 0.05) association with melanoma-specific survival in multivariate analysis. One functional SNP (rs2239182) remained significant after adjustment for multiple testing using the Monte Carlo method. None of the SNPs associated with survival were significantly associated with Breslow thickness, ulceration or mitosis. These results suggest that the VDR gene may influence survival from melanoma, although the mechanism by which VDR exerts its effect does not seem driven by tumor aggressiveness. Further investigations are needed to confirm our results and to understand the relationship between VDR and survival in the combined context of tumor and host characteristics.
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- 2016
36. Assessment of polygenic architecture and risk prediction based on common variants across fourteen cancers
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Yan Dora Zhang, Amber N. Hurson, Haoyu Zhang, Parichoy Pal Choudhury, Douglas F. Easton, Roger L. Milne, Jacques Simard, Per Hall, Kyriaki Michailidou, Joe Dennis, Marjanka K. Schmidt, Jenny Chang-Claude, Puya Gharahkhani, David Whiteman, Peter T. Campbell, Michael Hoffmeister, Mark Jenkins, Ulrike Peters, Li Hsu, Stephen B. Gruber, Graham Casey, Stephanie L. Schmit, Tracy A. O’Mara, Amanda B. Spurdle, Deborah J. Thompson, Ian Tomlinson, Immaculata De Vivo, Maria Teresa Landi, Matthew H. Law, Mark M. Iles, Florence Demenais, Rajiv Kumar, Stuart MacGregor, D. Timothy Bishop, Sarah V. Ward, Melissa L. Bondy, Richard Houlston, John K. Wiencke, Beatrice Melin, Jill Barnholtz-Sloan, Ben Kinnersley, Margaret R. Wrensch, Christopher I. Amos, Rayjean J. Hung, Paul Brennan, James McKay, Neil E. Caporaso, Sonja I. Berndt, Brenda M. Birmann, Nicola J. Camp, Peter Kraft, Nathaniel Rothman, Susan L. Slager, Andrew Berchuck, Paul D. P. Pharoah, Thomas A. Sellers, Simon A. Gayther, Celeste L. Pearce, Ellen L. Goode, Joellen M. Schildkraut, Kirsten B. Moysich, Laufey T. Amundadottir, Eric J. Jacobs, Alison P. Klein, Gloria M. Petersen, Harvey A. Risch, Rachel Z. Stolzenberg-Solomon, Brian M. Wolpin, Donghui Li, Rosalind A. Eeles, Christopher A. Haiman, Zsofia Kote-Jarai, Fredrick R. Schumacher, Ali Amin Al Olama, Mark P. Purdue, Ghislaine Scelo, Marlene D. Dalgaard, Mark H. Greene, Tom Grotmol, Peter A. Kanetsky, Katherine A. McGlynn, Katherine L. Nathanson, Clare Turnbull, Fredrik Wiklund, Breast Cancer Association Consortium (BCAC), Barrett’s and Esophageal Adenocarcinoma Consortium (BEACON), Colon Cancer Family Registry (CCFR), Transdisciplinary Studies of Genetic Variation in Colorectal Cancer (CORECT), Endometrial Cancer Association Consortium (ECAC), Genetics and Epidemiology of Colorectal Cancer Consortium (GECCO), Melanoma Genetics Consortium (GenoMEL), Glioma International Case-Control Study (GICC), International Lung Cancer Consortium (ILCCO), Integrative Analysis of Lung Cancer Etiology and Risk (INTEGRAL) Consortium, International Consortium of Investigators Working on Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma Epidemiologic Studies (InterLymph), Ovarian Cancer Association Consortium (OCAC), Oral Cancer GWAS, Pancreatic Cancer Case-Control Consortium (PanC4), Pancreatic Cancer Cohort Consortium (PanScan), Prostate Cancer Association Group to Investigate Cancer Associated Alterations in the Genome (PRACTICAL), Renal Cancer GWAS, Testicular Cancer Consortium (TECAC), Stephen J. Chanock, Nilanjan Chatterjee, and Montserrat Garcia-Closas
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Science - Abstract
In cancer many gene variants may contribute to disease etiology, but the impact of a given gene variant may have varied effect size. Here, the authors analyse summary statistics of genome-wide association studies from fourteen cancers, and show the utility of polygenic risk scores may vary depending on cancer type.
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- 2020
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37. Identification of 22 susceptibility loci associated with testicular germ cell tumors
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Pluta, John, Pyle, Louise C., Nead, Kevin T., Wilf, Rona, Li, Mingyao, Mitra, Nandita, Weathers, Benita, D’Andrea, Kurt, Almstrup, Kristian, Anson-Cartwright, Lynn, Benitez, Javier, Brown, Christopher D., Chanock, Stephen, Chen, Chu, Cortessis, Victoria K., Ferlin, Alberto, Foresta, Carlo, Gamulin, Marija, Gietema, Jourik A., Grasso, Chiara, Greene, Mark H., Grotmol, Tom, Hamilton, Robert J., Haugen, Trine B., Hauser, Russ, Hildebrandt, Michelle A. T., Johnson, Matthew E., Karlsson, Robert, Kiemeney, Lambertus A., Lessel, Davor, Lothe, Ragnhild A., Loud, Jennifer T., Loveday, Chey, Martin-Gimeno, Paloma, Meijer, Coby, Nsengimana, Jérémie, Quinn, David I., Rafnar, Thorunn, Ramdas, Shweta, Richiardi, Lorenzo, Skotheim, Rolf I., Stefansson, Kari, Turnbull, Clare, Vaughn, David J., Wiklund, Fredrik, Wu, Xifeng, Yang, Daphne, Zheng, Tongzhang, Wells, Andrew D., Grant, Struan F. A., Rajpert-De Meyts, Ewa, Schwartz, Stephen M., Bishop, D. Timothy, McGlynn, Katherine A., Kanetsky, Peter A., and Nathanson, Katherine L.
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- 2021
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38. Morphologic and molecular correlates of EZH2 as a predictor of platinum resistance in high-grade ovarian serous carcinoma
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Reid, Brett M., Vyas, Shraddha, Chen, Zhihua, Chen, Ann, Kanetsky, Peter A., Permuth, Jennifer B., Sellers, Thomas A., and Saglam, Ozlen
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- 2021
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39. Genome-wide association meta-analyses combining multiple risk phenotypes provide insights into the genetic architecture of cutaneous melanoma susceptibility
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Landi, Maria Teresa, Bishop, D. Timothy, MacGregor, Stuart, Machiela, Mitchell J., Stratigos, Alexander J., Ghiorzo, Paola, Brossard, Myriam, Calista, Donato, Choi, Jiyeon, Fargnoli, Maria Concetta, Zhang, Tongwu, Rodolfo, Monica, Trower, Adam J., Menin, Chiara, Martinez, Jacobo, Hadjisavvas, Andreas, Song, Lei, Stefanaki, Irene, Scolyer, Richard, Yang, Rose, Goldstein, Alisa M., Potrony, Miriam, Kypreou, Katerina P., Pastorino, Lorenza, Queirolo, Paola, Pellegrini, Cristina, Cattaneo, Laura, Zawistowski, Matthew, Gimenez-Xavier, Pol, Rodriguez, Arantxa, Elefanti, Lisa, Manoukian, Siranoush, Rivoltini, Licia, Smith, Blair H., Loizidou, Maria A., Del Regno, Laura, Massi, Daniela, Mandala, Mario, Khosrotehrani, Kiarash, Akslen, Lars A., Amos, Christopher I., Andresen, Per A., Avril, Marie-Françoise, Azizi, Esther, Soyer, H. Peter, Bataille, Veronique, Dalmasso, Bruna, Bowdler, Lisa M., Burdon, Kathryn P., Chen, Wei V., Codd, Veryan, Craig, Jamie E., Dębniak, Tadeusz, Falchi, Mario, Fang, Shenying, Friedman, Eitan, Simi, Sarah, Galan, Pilar, Garcia-Casado, Zaida, Gillanders, Elizabeth M., Gordon, Scott, Green, Adele, Gruis, Nelleke A., Hansson, Johan, Harland, Mark, Harris, Jessica, Helsing, Per, Henders, Anjali, Hočevar, Marko, Höiom, Veronica, Hunter, David, Ingvar, Christian, Kumar, Rajiv, Lang, Julie, Lathrop, G. Mark, Lee, Jeffrey E., Li, Xin, Lubiński, Jan, Mackie, Rona M., Malt, Maryrose, Malvehy, Josep, McAloney, Kerrie, Mohamdi, Hamida, Molven, Anders, Moses, Eric K., Neale, Rachel E., Novaković, Srdjan, Nyholt, Dale R., Olsson, Håkan, Orr, Nicholas, Fritsche, Lars G., Puig-Butille, Joan Anton, Qureshi, Abrar A., Radford-Smith, Graham L., Randerson-Moor, Juliette, Requena, Celia, Rowe, Casey, Samani, Nilesh J., Sanna, Marianna, Schadendorf, Dirk, Schulze, Hans-Joachim, Simms, Lisa A., Smithers, Mark, Song, Fengju, Swerdlow, Anthony J., van der Stoep, Nienke, Kukutsch, Nicole A., Visconti, Alessia, Wallace, Leanne, Ward, Sarah V., Wheeler, Lawrie, Sturm, Richard A., Hutchinson, Amy, Jones, Kristine, Malasky, Michael, Vogt, Aurelie, Zhou, Weiyin, Pooley, Karen A., Elder, David E., Han, Jiali, Hicks, Belynda, Hayward, Nicholas K., Kanetsky, Peter A., Brummett, Chad, Montgomery, Grant W., Olsen, Catherine M., Hayward, Caroline, Dunning, Alison M., Martin, Nicholas G., Evangelou, Evangelos, Mann, Graham J., Long, Georgina, Pharoah, Paul D. P., Easton, Douglas F., Barrett, Jennifer H., Cust, Anne E., Abecasis, Goncalo, Duffy, David L., Whiteman, David C., Gogas, Helen, De Nicolo, Arcangela, Tucker, Margaret A., Newton-Bishop, Julia A., Peris, Ketty, Chanock, Stephen J., Demenais, Florence, Brown, Kevin M., Puig, Susana, Nagore, Eduardo, Shi, Jianxin, Iles, Mark M., and Law, Matthew H.
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- 2020
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40. Inherited Genetic Variants Associated with Occurrence of Multiple Primary Melanoma
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Gibbs, David C, Orlow, Irene, Kanetsky, Peter A, Luo, Li, Kricker, Anne, Armstrong, Bruce K, Anton-Culver, Hoda, Gruber, Stephen B, Marrett, Loraine D, Gallagher, Richard P, Zanetti, Roberto, Rosso, Stefano, Dwyer, Terence, Sharma, Ajay, La Pilla, Emily, From, Lynn, Busam, Klaus J, Cust, Anne E, Ollila, David W, Begg, Colin B, Berwick, Marianne, and Thomas, Nancy E
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Genetics ,Clinical Research ,Cancer ,Australia ,Biomarkers ,Tumor ,Canada ,Case-Control Studies ,Europe ,Follow-Up Studies ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Haplotypes ,Humans ,International Agencies ,Melanoma ,Neoplasm Invasiveness ,Neoplasm Staging ,Phenotype ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Prognosis ,Skin Neoplasms ,United States ,GEM Study Group ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Epidemiology - Abstract
Recent studies, including genome-wide association studies, have identified several putative low-penetrance susceptibility loci for melanoma. We sought to determine their generalizability to genetic predisposition for multiple primary melanoma in the international population-based Genes, Environment, and Melanoma (GEM) Study. GEM is a case-control study of 1,206 incident cases of multiple primary melanoma and 2,469 incident first primary melanoma participants as the control group. We investigated the odds of developing multiple primary melanoma for 47 SNPs from 21 distinct genetic regions previously reported to be associated with melanoma. ORs and 95% confidence intervals were determined using logistic regression models adjusted for baseline features (age, sex, age by sex interaction, and study center). We investigated univariable models and built multivariable models to assess independent effects of SNPs. Eleven SNPs in 6 gene neighborhoods (TERT/CLPTM1L, TYRP1, MTAP, TYR, NCOA6, and MX2) and a PARP1 haplotype were associated with multiple primary melanoma. In a multivariable model that included only the most statistically significant findings from univariable modeling and adjusted for pigmentary phenotype, back nevi, and baseline features, we found TERT/CLPTM1L rs401681 (P = 0.004), TYRP1 rs2733832 (P = 0.006), MTAP rs1335510 (P = 0.0005), TYR rs10830253 (P = 0.003), and MX2 rs45430 (P = 0.008) to be significantly associated with multiple primary melanoma, while NCOA6 rs4911442 approached significance (P = 0.06). The GEM Study provides additional evidence for the relevance of these genetic regions to melanoma risk and estimates the magnitude of the observed genetic effect on development of subsequent primary melanoma.
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- 2015
41. Association Between NRAS and BRAF Mutational Status and Melanoma-Specific Survival Among Patients With Higher-Risk Primary Melanoma
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Thomas, Nancy E, Edmiston, Sharon N, Alexander, Audrey, Groben, Pamela A, Parrish, Eloise, Kricker, Anne, Armstrong, Bruce K, Anton-Culver, Hoda, Gruber, Stephen B, From, Lynn, Busam, Klaus J, Hao, Honglin, Orlow, Irene, Kanetsky, Peter A, Luo, Li, Reiner, Anne S, Paine, Susan, Frank, Jill S, Bramson, Jennifer I, Marrett, Lorraine D, Gallagher, Richard P, Zanetti, Roberto, Rosso, Stefano, Dwyer, Terence, Cust, Anne E, Ollila, David W, Begg, Colin B, Berwick, Marianne, and Conway, Kathleen
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Clinical Research ,Cancer ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Biomarkers ,Tumor ,DNA Mutational Analysis ,Female ,GTP Phosphohydrolases ,Gene Frequency ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Humans ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Lymphocytes ,Tumor-Infiltrating ,Male ,Melanoma ,Membrane Proteins ,Middle Aged ,Multivariate Analysis ,Mutation ,Neoplasm Grading ,Neoplasm Staging ,New South Wales ,Odds Ratio ,Phenotype ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins B-raf ,Risk Assessment ,Risk Factors ,Skin Neoplasms ,Time Factors ,Tumor Microenvironment ,United States ,GEM Study Group ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Public Health and Health Services - Abstract
ImportanceNRAS and BRAF mutations in melanoma inform current treatment paradigms, but their role in survival from primary melanoma has not been established. Identification of patients at high risk of melanoma-related death based on their primary melanoma characteristics before evidence of recurrence could inform recommendations for patient follow-up and eligibility for adjuvant trials.ObjectiveTo determine tumor characteristics and survival from primary melanoma by somatic NRAS and BRAF status.Design, setting, and participantsA population-based study with a median follow-up of 7.6 years (through 2007), including 912 patients from the United States and Australia in the Genes, Environment, and Melanoma (GEM) Study, with first primary cutaneous melanoma diagnosed in the year 2000 and analyzed for NRAS and BRAF mutations.Main outcomes and measuresTumor characteristics and melanoma-specific survival of primary melanoma by NRAS and BRAF mutational status.ResultsThe melanomas were 13% NRAS+, 30% BRAF+, and 57% with neither NRAS nor BRAF mutation (wildtype [WT]). In a multivariable model including clinicopathologic characteristics, relative to WT melanoma (with results reported as odds ratios [95% CIs]), NRAS+ melanoma was associated with presence of mitoses (1.8 [1.0-3.3]), lower tumor-infiltrating lymphocyte (TIL) grade (nonbrisk, 0.5 [0.3-0.8]; and brisk, 0.3 [0.5-0.7] [vs absent TILs]), and anatomic site other than scalp/neck (0.1 [0.01-0.6] for scalp/neck vs trunk/pelvis), and BRAF+ melanoma was associated with younger age (ages 50-69 years, 0.7 [0.5-1.0]; and ages >70 years, 0.5 [0.3-0.8] [vs
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- 2015
42. Inherited variation at MC1R and ASIP and association with melanoma‐specific survival
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Taylor, Nicholas J, Reiner, Anne S, Begg, Colin B, Cust, Anne E, Busam, Klaus J, Anton‐Culver, Hoda, Dwyer, Terence, From, Lynn, Gallagher, Richard P, Gruber, Stephen B, Rosso, Stefano, White, Kirsten A, Zanetti, Roberto, Orlow, Irene, Thomas, Nancy E, Rebbeck, Timothy R, Berwick, Marianne, Kanetsky, Peter A, and Group, on behalf of the GEM Study
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Human Genome ,Cancer ,Genetics ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Agouti Signaling Protein ,Female ,Genetic Association Studies ,Genetic Variation ,Genotype ,Heredity ,Humans ,Male ,Melanoma ,Middle Aged ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Receptor ,Melanocortin ,Type 1 ,Young Adult ,MC1R ,melanoma ,survival ,ASIP ,GEM study ,GEM Study Group ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis - Abstract
Melanocortin-1 receptor (MC1R) is a marker of melanoma risk in populations of European ancestry. However, MC1R effects on survival are much less studied. We investigated associations between variation at MC1R and survival in an international, population-based series of single primary melanoma patients enrolled into the Genes, Environment, and Melanoma study. MC1R genotype data was available for 2,200 participants with a first incident primary melanoma diagnosis. We estimated the association of MC1R genotypes with melanoma-specific survival (i.e., death caused by melanoma) and overall survival using COX proportional hazards modeling, adjusting for established prognostic factors for melanoma. We also conducted stratified analyses by Breslow thickness, tumor site, phenotypic index, and age. In addition, we evaluated haplotypes involving polymorphisms near the Agouti signaling protein gene (ASIP) locus for their impacts on survival. Melanoma-specific survival was inversely associated with carriage of MC1R variants in the absence of consensus alleles compared to carriage of at least one consensus allele (hazard ratio (HR) = 0.60; 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.40, 0.90). MC1R results for overall survival were consistent with no association. We did not observe any statistical evidence of heterogeneity of effect estimates in stratified analyses. We observed increased hazard of melanoma-specific death among carriers of the risk haplotype TG near the ASIP locus (HR = 1.37; 95% CI: 0.91, 2.04) when compared to carriers of the most common GG haplotype. Similar results were noted for overall survival. Upon examining the ASIP TG/TG diplotype, we observed considerably increased hazard of melanoma-specific death (HR = 5.11; 95% CI: 1.88, 13.88) compared to carriers of the most common GG/GG diplotype. Our data suggest improved melanoma-specific survival among carriers of two inherited MC1R variants.
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- 2015
43. Inherited variation at MC1R and histological characteristics of primary melanoma.
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Taylor, Nicholas J, Busam, Klaus J, From, Lynn, Groben, Pamela A, Anton-Culver, Hoda, Cust, Anne E, Begg, Colin B, Dwyer, Terence, Gallagher, Richard P, Gruber, Stephen B, Orlow, Irene, Rosso, Stefano, Thomas, Nancy E, Zanetti, Roberto, Rebbeck, Timothy R, Berwick, Marianne, and Kanetsky, Peter A
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Humans ,Melanoma ,Skin Neoplasms ,Receptor ,Melanocortin ,Type 1 ,Skin Pigmentation ,Risk Factors ,Genotype ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Genetic Association Studies ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Variation in the melanocortin-1receptor (MC1R) gene is associated with pigmentary phenotypes and risk of malignant melanoma. Few studies have reported on MC1R variation with respect to tumor characteristics, especially clinically important prognostic features. We examined associations between MC1R variants and histopathological melanoma characteristics. Study participants were enrolled from nine geographic regions in Australia, Canada, Italy and the United States and were genotyped for MC1R variants classified as high-risk [R] (D84E, R142H, R151C, R160W, and D294H, all nonsense and insertion/deletion) or low-risk [r] (all other nonsynonymous) variants. Tissue was available for 2,160 white participants of the Genes, Environment and Melanoma (GEM) Study with a first incident primary melanoma diagnosis, and underwent centralized pathologic review. No statistically significant associations were observed between MC1R variants and AJCC established prognostic tumor characteristics: Breslow thickness, presence of mitoses or presence of ulceration. However, MC1R was significantly associated with anatomic site of melanoma (p = 0.002) and a positive association was observed between carriage of more than one [R] variant and melanomas arising on the arms (OR = 2.39; 95% CI: 1.40, 4.09). We also observed statistically significant differences between sun-sensitive and sun-resistant individuals with respect to associations between MC1R genotype and AJCC prognostic tumor characteristics. Our results suggest inherited variation in MC1R may play an influential role in anatomic site presentation of melanomas and may differ with respect to skin pigmentation phenotype.
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- 2015
44. Comparison of Clinicopathologic Features and Survival of Histopathologically Amelanotic and Pigmented Melanomas: A Population-Based Study
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Thomas, Nancy E, Kricker, Anne, Waxweiler, Weston T, Dillon, Patrick M, Busam, Klaus J, From, Lynn, Groben, Pamela A, Armstrong, Bruce K, Anton-Culver, Hoda, Gruber, Stephen B, Marrett, Loraine D, Gallagher, Richard P, Zanetti, Roberto, Rosso, Stefano, Dwyer, Terence, Venn, Alison, Kanetsky, Peter A, Orlow, Irene, Paine, Susan, Ollila, David W, Reiner, Anne S, Luo, Li, Hao, Honglin, Frank, Jill S, Begg, Colin B, and Berwick, Marianne
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Cancer ,Clinical Research ,Adult ,Aged ,Australia ,Canada ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Humans ,Italy ,Male ,Melanoma ,Melanoma ,Amelanotic ,Middle Aged ,Mitotic Index ,Neoplasm Staging ,Registries ,Skin Neoplasms ,Survival Rate ,United States ,Genes ,Environment ,and Melanoma (GEM) Study Group ,Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis - Abstract
IMPORTANCE Previous studies have reported that histopathologically amelanotic melanoma is associated with poorer survival than pigmented melanoma; however, small numbers of amelanotic melanomas, selected populations, lack of centralized pathologic review, or no adjustment for stage limit the interpretation or generalization of results from prior studies.OBJECTIVE To compare melanoma-specific survival between patients with histopathologically amelanotic and those with pigmented melanoma in a large international population-based study.DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Survival analysis with a median follow-up of 7.6 years.The study population comprised 2995 patients with 3486 invasive primary melanomas centrally scored for histologic pigmentation from the Genes, Environment, and Melanoma(GEM) Study, which enrolled incident cases of melanoma diagnosed in 1998 through 2003 from international population-based cancer registries.MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Clinicopathologic predictors and melanoma-specific survival of histologically amelanotic and pigmented melanoma were compared using generalized estimating equations and Cox regression models, respectively.RESULTS Of 3467 melanomas, 275 (8%) were histopathologically amelanotic. Female sex,nodular and unclassified or other histologic subtypes, increased Breslow thickness, presence of mitoses, severe solar elastosis, and lack of a coexisting nevus were independently associated with amelanotic melanoma (each P < .05). Amelanotic melanoma was generally ofa higher American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) tumor stage at diagnosis (odds ratios[ORs] [95%CIs] between 2.9 [1.8-4.6] and 11.1 [5.8-21.2] for tumor stages between T1b and T3b and ORs [95%CIs] of 24.6 [13.6-44.4] for T4a and 29.1 [15.5-54.9] for T4b relative to T1a;P value for trend,
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- 2014
45. Sun Exposure and Melanoma Survival: A GEM Study
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Berwick, Marianne, Reiner, Anne S, Paine, Susan, Armstrong, Bruce K, Kricker, Anne, Goumas, Chris, Cust, Anne E, Thomas, Nancy E, Groben, Pamela A, From, Lynn, Busam, Klaus, Orlow, Irene, Marrett, Loraine D, Gallagher, Richard P, Gruber, Stephen B, Anton-Culver, Hoda, Rosso, Stefano, Zanetti, Roberto, Kanetsky, Peter A, Dwyer, Terry, Venn, Alison, Lee-Taylor, Julia, Begg, Colin B, and Group, for the GEM Study
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Climate-Related Exposures and Conditions ,Clinical Research ,Cancer ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Melanoma ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Skin Neoplasms ,Sunburn ,Sunlight ,GEM Study Group ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Epidemiology ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
BackgroundWe previously reported a significant association between higher UV radiation exposure before diagnosis and greater survival with melanoma in a population-based study in Connecticut. We sought to evaluate the hypothesis that sun exposure before diagnosis was associated with greater survival in a larger, international population-based study with more detailed exposure information.MethodsWe conducted a multicenter, international population-based study in four countries-Australia, Italy, Canada, and the United States-with 3,578 cases of melanoma with an average of 7.4 years of follow-up. Measures of sun exposure included sunburn, intermittent exposure, hours of holiday sun exposure, hours of water-related outdoor activities, ambient ultraviolet B (280-320 nm) dose, histologic solar elastosis, and season of diagnosis.ResultsResults were not strongly supportive of the earlier hypothesis. Having had any sunburn in 1 year within 10 years of diagnosis was inversely associated with survival; solar elastosis-a measure of lifetime cumulative exposure-was not. In addition, none of the intermittent exposure measures-water-related activities and sunny holidays-were associated with melanoma-specific survival. Estimated ambient UVB dose was not associated with survival.ConclusionAlthough there was an apparent protective effect of sunburns within 10 years of diagnosis, there was only weak evidence in this large, international, population-based study of melanoma that sun exposure before diagnosis is associated with greater melanoma-specific survival.ImpactThis study adds to the evidence that sun exposure before melanoma diagnosis has little effect on survival with melanoma.
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- 2014
46. Higher plasma CXCL12 levels predict incident myocardial infarction and death in chronic kidney disease: findings from the Chronic Renal Insufficiency Cohort study
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Mehta, NN, Matthews, GJ, Krishnamoorthy, P, Shah, R, McLaughlin, C, Patel, P, Budoff, M, Chen, J, Wolman, M, Go, A, He, J, Kanetsky, PA, Master, SR, Rader, DJ, Raj, D, Gadegbeku, CA, Schreiber, M, Fischer, MJ, Townsend, RR, Kusek, J, Feldman, HI, Foulkes, AS, Reilly, MP, Appel, LJ, Go, AS, Kusek, JW, Lash, JP, Ojo, A, and Rahman, M
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Kidney Disease ,Cardiovascular ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Prevention ,Aging ,Heart Disease ,Renal and urogenital ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Aged ,Biomarkers ,Chemokine CXCL12 ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Female ,Humans ,Incidental Findings ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Myocardial Infarction ,Prognosis ,Prospective Studies ,Renal Insufficiency ,Chronic ,Young Adult ,Chronic Renal Insufficiency Cohort (CRIC) Study Investigators ,Atherosclerosis ,CXCL12 ,Chemokines ,Myocardial infarction ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology - Abstract
AimsGenome-wide association studies revealed an association between a locus at 10q11, downstream from CXCL12, and myocardial infarction (MI). However, the relationship among plasma CXCL12, cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors, incident MI, and death is unknown.Methods and resultsWe analysed study-entry plasma CXCL12 levels in 3687 participants of the Chronic Renal Insufficiency Cohort (CRIC) Study, a prospective study of cardiovascular and kidney outcomes in chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients. Mean follow-up was 6 years for incident MI or death. Plasma CXCL12 levels were positively associated with several cardiovascular risk factors (age, hypertension, diabetes, hypercholesterolaemia), lower estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), and higher inflammatory cytokine levels (P < 0.05). In fully adjusted models, higher study-entry CXCL12 was associated with increased odds of prevalent CVD (OR 1.23; 95% confidence interval 1.14, 1.33, P < 0.001) for one standard deviation (SD) increase in CXCL12. Similarly, one SD higher CXCL12 increased the hazard of incident MI (1.26; 1.09,1.45, P < 0.001), death (1.20; 1.09,1.33, P < 0.001), and combined MI/death (1.23; 1.13-1.34, P < 0.001) adjusting for demographic factors, known CVD risk factors, and inflammatory markers and remained significant for MI (1.19; 1.03,1.39, P = 0.01) and the combined MI/death (1.13; 1.03,1.24, P = 0.01) after further controlling for eGFR and urinary albumin:creatinine ratio.ConclusionsIn CKD, higher plasma CXCL12 was associated with CVD risk factors and prevalent CVD as well as the hazard of incident MI and death. Further studies are required to establish if plasma CXCL12 reflect causal actions at the vessel wall and is a tool for genomic and therapeutic trials.
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- 2014
47. MITF E318K's effect on melanoma risk independent of, but modified by, other risk factors
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Berwick, Marianne, MacArthur, Jamie, Orlow, Irene, Kanetsky, Peter, Begg, Colin B, Luo, Li, Reiner, Anne, Sharma, Ajay, Armstrong, Bruce K, Kricker, Anne, Cust, Anne E, Marrett, Loraine D, Gruber, Stephen B, Anton‐Culver, Hoda, Zanetti, Roberto, Rosso, Stefano, Gallagher, Richard P, Dwyer, Terence, Venn, Alison, Busam, Klaus, From, Lynn, White, Kirsten, Thomas, Nancy E, and Group, the GEM Study
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Genetics ,Cancer ,Clinical Research ,Human Genome ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Alleles ,Amino Acid Substitution ,Consensus Sequence ,Gene Frequency ,Hair Color ,Humans ,Melanoma ,Microphthalmia-Associated Transcription Factor ,Mutation ,Missense ,Neoplasm Proteins ,Neoplasms ,Multiple Primary ,Nevus ,Pigmented ,Odds Ratio ,Phenotype ,Point Mutation ,Protein Processing ,Post-Translational ,Risk ,Risk Factors ,Skin Neoplasms ,Sumoylation ,Case-controlstudy ,melanoma ,MITF ,risk factors ,single nucleotide polymorphism ,GEM Study Group ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Dermatology & Venereal Diseases ,Biochemistry and cell biology ,Oncology and carcinogenesis - Abstract
A rare germline variant in the microphthalmia-associated transcription factor (MITF) gene, E318K, has been reported as associated with melanoma. We confirmed its independent association with melanoma [odds ratio (OR) 1.7, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.1, 2.7, P = 0.03]; adjusted for age, sex, center, age × sex interaction, pigmentation characteristics, family history of melanoma, and nevus density). In stratified analyses, carriage of MITF E318K was associated with melanoma more strongly in people with dark hair than fair hair (P for interaction, 0.03) and in those with no moles than some or many moles (P for interaction,
- Published
- 2014
48. Non-del(5q) myelodysplastic syndromes–associated loci detected by SNP-array genome-wide association meta-analysis
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Kathy L. McGraw, Chia-Ho Cheng, Y. Ann Chen, Hsin-An Hou, Björn Nilsson, Giulio Genovese, Thomas Cluzeau, Andrea Pellagatti, Bartlomiej P. Przychodzen, Mar Mallo, Leonor Arenillas, Azim Mohamedali, Lionel Adès, David A. Sallman, Eric Padron, Lubomir Sokol, Chimene Moreilhon, Sophie Raynaud, Hwei-Fang Tien, Jacqueline Boultwood, Benjamin L. Ebert, Francesc Sole, Pierre Fenaux, Ghulam J. Mufti, Jaroslaw P. Maciejewski, Peter A. Kanetsky, and Alan F. List
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Specialties of internal medicine ,RC581-951 - Abstract
Abstract: Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) are hematopoietic stem cell malignancies. Known predisposing factors to adult MDS include rare germline mutations, cytotoxic therapy, age-related clonal hematopoiesis, and autoimmune or chronic inflammatory disorders. To date, no published studies characterizing MDS-associated germline susceptibility polymorphisms exist. We performed a genome-wide association study of 2 sample sets (555 MDS cases vs 2964 control subjects; 352 MDS cases vs 2640 control subjects) in non-del(5q) MDS cases of European genomic ancestry. Meta-analysis identified 8 MDS-associated loci at 1q31.1 (PLA2G4A), 3p14.1 (FAM19A4), 5q21.3 (EFNA5), 6p21.33, 10q23.1 (GRID1), 12q24.32, 15q26.1, and 20q13.12 (EYA2) that approached genome-wide significance. Gene expression for 5 loci that mapped within or near genes was significantly upregulated in MDS bone marrow cells compared with those of control subjects (P < .01). Higher PLA2G4A expression and lower EYA2 expression were associated with poorer overall survival (P = .039 and P = .037, respectively). Higher PLA2G4A expression is associated with mutations in NRAS (P < .001), RUNX1 (P = .012), ASXL1 (P = .007), and EZH2 (P = .038), all of which are known to contribute to MDS development. EYA2 expression was an independently favorable risk factor irrespective of age, sex, and Revised International Scoring System score (relative risk, 0.67; P = .048). Notably, these genes have regulatory roles in innate immunity, a critical driver of MDS pathogenesis. EYA2 overexpression induced innate immune activation, whereas EYA2 inhibition restored colony-forming potential in primary MDS cells indicative of hematopoietic restoration and possible clinical relevance. In conclusion, among 8 suggestive MDS-associated loci, 5 map to genes upregulated in MDS with functional roles in innate immunity and potential biological relevance to MDS.
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- 2019
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49. Differences in Melanoma Between Canada and New South Wales, Australia: A Population-Based Genes, Environment, and Melanoma (GEM) Study
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Joseph Michael Yardman-Frank, Elyssa Glassheim, Anne Kricker, Bruce K. Armstrong, Loraine D. Marrett, Li Luo, Anne E. Cust, Klaus J. Busam, Irene Orlow, Richard P. Gallagher, Stephen B. Gruber, Hoda Anton-Culver, Stefano Rosso, Roberto Zanetti, Lidia Sacchetto, Peter A. Kanetsky, Terence Dwyer, Alison Venn, Julia Lee-Taylor, Colin B. Begg, Nancy E. Thomas, and Marianne Berwick
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Dermatology ,RL1-803 - Abstract
In an effort to understand the difference between melanomas diagnosed in Australia (New South Wales) and Canada, where the incidence in New South Wales is almost three times greater than in Canada, and mortality is twice as high although survival is slightly more favorable, we had one pathologist review 1,271 melanomas from British Columbia and Ontario, Canada, to compare these to melanomas in New South Wales, Australia. We hypothesized that histopathologic characteristics might provide insight into divergent pathways to melanoma development. We found a number of differences in risk factors and tumor characteristics between the two geographic areas. There were higher mole counts and darker phenotypes in the Canadian patients, while the Australian patients had greater solar elastosis, more lentigo maligna melanomas, and more tumor infiltrating lymphocytes. We hypothesize that the differences observed may illustrate different etiologies – the cumulative exposure pathway among Australian patients and the nevus pathway among Canadian patients. This is one of the largest studies investigating the divergent pathway hypothesis and is particularly robust due to the evaluation of all lesions by one dermatopathologist.
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- 2021
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50. Tumor-infiltrating lymphocyte grade in primary melanomas is independently associated with melanoma-specific survival in the population-based genes, environment and melanoma study.
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Thomas, Nancy, Busam, Klaus, From, Lynn, Kricker, Anne, Armstrong, Bruce, Gruber, Stephen, Gallagher, Richard, Zanetti, Roberto, Rosso, Stefano, Dwyer, Terence, Venn, Alison, Kanetsky, Peter, Groben, Pamela, Hao, Honglin, Orlow, Irene, Reiner, Anne, Luo, Li, Paine, Susan, Ollila, David, Wilcox, Homer, Begg, Colin, Berwick, Marianne, and Anton-Culver, Hoda
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Adult ,Aged ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Gene-Environment Interaction ,Humans ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Lymphocytes ,Tumor-Infiltrating ,Male ,Melanoma ,Middle Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,Population Surveillance ,Prognosis ,Skin Neoplasms ,Survival Rate ,Time Factors - Abstract
PURPOSE: Although most hospital-based studies suggest more favorable survival with tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) present in primary melanomas, it is uncertain whether TILs provide prognostic information beyond existing melanoma staging definitions. We addressed the issue in an international population-based study of patients with single and multiple primary melanomas. PATIENTS AND METHODS: On the basis of the Genes, Environment and Melanoma (GEM) study, we conducted follow-up of 2,845 patients diagnosed from 1998 to 2003 with 3,330 invasive primary melanomas centrally reviewed for TIL grade (absent, nonbrisk, or brisk). The odds of TIL grades associated with clinicopathologic features and survival by TIL grade were examined. RESULTS: Independent predictors (P < .05) for nonbrisk TIL grade were site, histologic subtype, and Breslow thickness, and for brisk TIL grade, they were age, site, Breslow thickness, and radial growth phase. Nonbrisk and brisk TIL grades were each associated with lower American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) tumor stage compared with TIL absence (P(trend) < .001). Death as a result of melanoma was 30% less with nonbrisk TIL grade (hazard ratio [HR], 0.7; 95% CI, 0.5 to 1.0) and 50% less with brisk TIL grade (HR, 0.5; 95% CI, 0.3 to 0.9) relative to TIL absence, adjusted for age, sex, site, and AJCC tumor stage. CONCLUSION: At the population level, higher TIL grade of primary melanoma is associated with a lower risk of death as a result of melanoma independently of tumor characteristics currently used for AJCC tumor stage. We conclude that TIL grade deserves further prospective investigation to determine whether it should be included in future AJCC staging revisions.
- Published
- 2013
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