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Clonal hematopoiesis and risk of prostate cancer in large samples of European ancestry men

Authors :
Anqi Wang
Yili Xu
Yao Yu
Kevin T Nead
TaeBeom Kim
Keren Xu
Tokhir Dadaev
Ed Saunders
Xin Sheng
Peggy Wan
Loreall Pooler
Lucy Y Xia
Stephen Chanock
Sonja I Berndt
Susan M Gapstur
Victoria Stevens
Demetrius Albanes
Stephanie J Weinstein
Vincent Gnanapragasam
Graham G Giles
Tu Nguyen-Dumont
Roger L Milne
Mark M Pomerantz
Julie A Schmidt
Konrad H Stopsack
Lorelei A Mucci
William J Catalona
Kurt N Hetrick
Kimberly F Doheny
Robert J MacInnis
Melissa C Southey
Rosalind A Eeles
Fredrik Wiklund
Zsofia Kote-Jarai
Adam J de Smith
David V Conti
Chad Huff
Christopher A Haiman
Burcu F Darst
Source :
Wang, A, Xu, Y, Yu, Y, Nead, K T, Kim, T B, Xu, K, Dadaev, T, Saunders, E, Sheng, X, Wan, P, Pooler, L, Xia, L Y, Chanock, S, Berndt, S I, Gapstur, S M, Stevens, V, Albanes, D, Weinstein, S J, Gnanapragasam, V, Giles, G G, Nguyen-Dumont, T, Milne, R L, Pomerantz, M M, Schmidt, J A, Stopsack, K H, Mucci, L A, Catalona, W J, Hetrick, K N, Doheny, K F, MacInnis, R J, Southey, M C, Eeles, R A, Wiklund, F, Kote-Jarai, Z, de Smith, A J, Conti, D V, Huff, C, Haiman, C A & Darst, B F 2023, ' Clonal hematopoiesis and risk of prostate cancer in large samples of European ancestry men ', Human Molecular Genetics, vol. 32, no. 3, pp. 489-495 . https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddac214
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Little is known regarding the potential relationship between clonal hematopoiesis (CH) of indeterminate potential (CHIP), which is the expansion of hematopoietic stem cells with somatic mutations, and risk of prostate cancer, the fifth leading cause of cancer death of men worldwide. We evaluated the association of age-related CHIP with overall and aggressive prostate cancer risk in two large whole-exome sequencing studies of 75 047 European ancestry men, including 7663 prostate cancer cases, 2770 of which had aggressive disease, and 3266 men carrying CHIP variants. We found that CHIP, defined by over 50 CHIP genes individually and in aggregate, was not significantly associated with overall (aggregate HR = 0.93, 95% CI = 0.76–1.13, P = 0.46) or aggressive (aggregate OR = 1.14, 95% CI = 0.92–1.41, P = 0.22) prostate cancer risk. CHIP was weakly associated with genetic risk of overall prostate cancer, measured using a polygenic risk score (OR = 1.05 per unit increase, 95% CI = 1.01–1.10, P = 0.01). CHIP was not significantly associated with carrying pathogenic/likely pathogenic/deleterious variants in DNA repair genes, which have previously been found to be associated with aggressive prostate cancer. While findings from this study suggest that CHIP is likely not a risk factor for prostate cancer, it will be important to investigate other types of CH in association with prostate cancer risk.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Wang, A, Xu, Y, Yu, Y, Nead, K T, Kim, T B, Xu, K, Dadaev, T, Saunders, E, Sheng, X, Wan, P, Pooler, L, Xia, L Y, Chanock, S, Berndt, S I, Gapstur, S M, Stevens, V, Albanes, D, Weinstein, S J, Gnanapragasam, V, Giles, G G, Nguyen-Dumont, T, Milne, R L, Pomerantz, M M, Schmidt, J A, Stopsack, K H, Mucci, L A, Catalona, W J, Hetrick, K N, Doheny, K F, MacInnis, R J, Southey, M C, Eeles, R A, Wiklund, F, Kote-Jarai, Z, de Smith, A J, Conti, D V, Huff, C, Haiman, C A & Darst, B F 2023, ' Clonal hematopoiesis and risk of prostate cancer in large samples of European ancestry men ', Human Molecular Genetics, vol. 32, no. 3, pp. 489-495 . https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddac214
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4741fc3a448342e6e513e658f66c2b0f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddac214