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A comprehensive gene-environment interaction analysis in Ovarian Cancer using genome-wide significant common variants.

Authors :
Kim S
Wang M
Tyrer JP
Jensen A
Wiensch A
Liu G
Lee AW
Ness RB
Salvatore M
Tworoger SS
Whittemore AS
Anton-Culver H
Sieh W
Olson SH
Berchuck A
Goode EL
Goodman MT
Doherty JA
Chenevix-Trench G
Rossing MA
Webb PM
Giles GG
Terry KL
Ziogas A
Fortner RT
Menon U
Gayther SA
Wu AH
Song H
Brooks-Wilson A
Bandera EV
Cook LS
Cramer DW
Milne RL
Winham SJ
Kjaer SK
Modugno F
Thompson PJ
Chang-Claude J
Harris HR
Schildkraut JM
Le ND
Wentzensen N
Trabert B
Høgdall E
Huntsman D
Pike MC
Pharoah PDP
Pearce CL
Mukherjee B
Source :
International journal of cancer [Int J Cancer] 2019 May 01; Vol. 144 (9), pp. 2192-2205. Date of Electronic Publication: 2019 Jan 20.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

As a follow-up to genome-wide association analysis of common variants associated with ovarian carcinoma (cancer), our study considers seven well-known ovarian cancer risk factors and their interactions with 28 genome-wide significant common genetic variants. The interaction analyses were based on data from 9971 ovarian cancer cases and 15,566 controls from 17 case-control studies. Likelihood ratio and Wald tests for multiplicative interaction and for relative excess risk due to additive interaction were used. The top multiplicative interaction was noted between oral contraceptive pill (OCP) use (ever vs. never) and rs13255292 (p value = 3.48 × 10 <superscript>-4</superscript> ). Among women with the TT genotype for this variant, the odds ratio for OCP use was 0.53 (95% CI = 0.46-0.60) compared to 0.71 (95%CI = 0.66-0.77) for women with the CC genotype. When stratified by duration of OCP use, women with 1-5 years of OCP use exhibited differential protective benefit across genotypes. However, no interaction on either the multiplicative or additive scale was found to be statistically significant after multiple testing correction. The results suggest that OCP use may offer increased benefit for women who are carriers of the T allele in rs13255292. On the other hand, for women carrying the C allele in this variant, longer (5+ years) use of OCP may reduce the impact of carrying the risk allele of this SNP. Replication of this finding is needed. The study presents a comprehensive analytic framework for conducting gene-environment analysis in ovarian cancer.<br /> (© 2018 UICC.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1097-0215
Volume :
144
Issue :
9
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
International journal of cancer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
30499236
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.32029