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Searching for causal relationships of glioma: a phenome-wide Mendelian randomisation study.

Authors :
Saunders, Charlie N.
Cornish, Alex J.
Kinnersley, Ben
Law, Philip J.
Houlston, Richard S.
Collaborators
Claus, Elizabeth B.
Il'yasova, Dora
Schildkraut, Joellen
Barnholtz-Sloan, Jill S.
Olson, Sara H.
Bernstein, Jonine L.
Lai, Rose K.
Chanock, Stephen
Rajaraman, Preetha
Johansen, Christoffer
Jenkins, Robert B.
Melin, Beatrice S.
Wrensch, Margaret R.
Sanson, Marc
Source :
British Journal of Cancer; 2021, Vol. 124 Issue 2, p447-454, 8p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

<bold>Background: </bold>The aetiology of glioma is poorly understood. Summary data from genome-wide association studies (GWAS) can be used in a Mendelian randomisation (MR) phenome-wide association study (PheWAS) to search for glioma risk factors.<bold>Methods: </bold>We performed an MR-PheWAS analysing 316 phenotypes, proxied by 8387 genetic variants, and summary genetic data from a GWAS of 12,488 glioma cases and 18,169 controls. Causal effects were estimated under a random-effects inverse-variance-weighted (IVW-RE) model, with robust adjusted profile score (MR-RAPS), weighted median and mode-based estimates computed to assess the robustness of findings. Odds ratios per one standard deviation increase in each phenotype were calculated for all glioma, glioblastoma (GBM) and non-GBM tumours.<bold>Results: </bold>No significant associations (P < 1.58 × 10-4) were observed between phenotypes and glioma under the IVW-RE model. Suggestive associations (1.58 × 10-4 < P < 0.05) were observed between leukocyte telomere length (LTL) with all glioma (ORSD = 3.91, P = 9.24 × 10-3) and GBM (ORSD = 4.86, P = 3.23 × 10-2), but the association was primarily driven by the TERT variant rs2736100. Serum low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and plasma HbA1C showed suggestive associations with glioma (ORSD = 1.11, P = 1.39 × 10-2 and ORSD = 1.28, P = 1.73 × 10-2, respectively), both associations being reliant on single genetic variants.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>Our study provides further insight into the aetiological basis of glioma for which published data have been mixed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00070920
Volume :
124
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
British Journal of Cancer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
148072535
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41416-020-01083-1