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Genome-wide association study of prostate-specific antigen levels in 392,522 men identifies new loci and improves cross-ancestry prediction.

Authors :
Hoffmann TJ
Graff RE
Madduri RK
Rodriguez AA
Cario CL
Feng K
Jiang Y
Wang A
Klein RJ
Pierce BL
Eggener S
Tong L
Blot W
Long J
Goss LB
Darst BF
Rebbeck T
Lachance J
Andrews C
Adebiyi AO
Adusei B
Aisuodionoe-Shadrach OI
Fernandez PW
Jalloh M
Janivara R
Chen WC
Mensah JE
Agalliu I
Berndt SI
Shelley JP
Schaffer K
Machiela MJ
Freedman ND
Huang WY
Li SA
Goodman PJ
Till C
Thompson I
Lilja H
Ranatunga DK
Presti J
Van Den Eeden SK
Chanock SJ
Mosley JD
Conti DV
Haiman CA
Justice AC
Kachuri L
Witte JS
Source :
MedRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences [medRxiv] 2024 Aug 20. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Aug 20.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

We conducted a multi-ancestry genome-wide association study of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels in 296,754 men (211,342 European ancestry; 58,236 African ancestry; 23,546 Hispanic/Latino; 3,630 Asian ancestry; 96.5% of participants were from the Million Veteran Program). We identified 318 independent genome-wide significant (p≤5e-8) variants, 184 of which were novel. Most demonstrated evidence of replication in an independent cohort (n=95,768). Meta-analyzing discovery and replication (n=392,522) identified 447 variants, of which a further 111 were novel. Out-of-sample variance in PSA explained by our genome-wide polygenic risk scores ranged from 11.6%-16.6% in European ancestry, 5.5%-9.5% in African ancestry, 13.5%-18.2% in Hispanic/Latino, and 8.6%-15.3% in Asian ancestry, and decreased with increasing age. Mid-life genetically-adjusted PSA levels were more strongly associated with overall and aggressive prostate cancer than unadjusted PSA. Our study highlights how including proportionally more participants from underrepresented populations improves genetic prediction of PSA levels, offering potential to personalize prostate cancer screening.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
MedRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37961155
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.10.27.23297676