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Evaluating the ovarian cancer gonadotropin hypothesis: a candidate gene study

Authors :
Linda E. Kelemen
Argyrios Ziogas
Celeste Leigh Pearce
Karen Lu
Agnieszka Dansonka-Mieszkowska
Melissa C. Southey
Elisa V. Bandera
Hoda Anton-Culver
Nadeem Siddiqui
Kristine G. Wicklund
Hannah P. Yang
Graham G. Giles
Georgia Chenevix-Trench
Anna Jakubowska
Paul D.P. Pharoah
Susanne K. Kjaer
Jonathan Tyrer
Catherine M. Phelan
Honglin Song
Lambertus A. Kiemeney
John R. McLaughlin
Arto Leminen
Jennifer A. Doherty
Irene Orlow
Natalia Bogdanova
Helga B. Salvesen
Lara E. Sucheston-Campbell
Liisa M. Pelttari
Alexander Hein
Jenny Lester
Lynne R. Wilkens
Alice W. Lee
Valerie McGuire
Yukie Bean
Julie M. Cunningham
Diana Eccles
Rosalind Glasspool
Patricia Harrington
Shelley S. Tworoger
Joseph H. Rothstein
Allan Jensen
Rachel Palmieri Weber
Ian G. Campbell
Nhu D. Le
Matthias W. Beckmann
Marc T. Goodman
Sandra Orsulic
Shan Wang-Gohrke
Elizabeth M. Poole
Usha Menon
Harvey A. Risch
Anja Rudolph
Tanja Pejovic
Lotte Nedergaard
Dong Liang
Jan Lubinski
Els Van Nieuwenhuysen
Arif B. Ekici
Camilla Krakstad
Ignace Vergote
Robert A. Vierkant
Ingvild L. Tangen
Ursula Eilber
Florian Heitz
Beth Y. Karlan
Diether Lambrechts
Brooke L. Fridley
Malcolm C. Pike
Anne M. van Altena
Alice S. Whittemore
Estrid Høgdall
Kunle Odunsi
Mary Anne Rossing
Thilo Dörk
Douglas A. Levine
Yurii B. Shvetsov
Joellen M. Schildkraut
Daniel O. Stram
Francesmary Modugno
Melissa Kellar
Christine Walsh
Roberta B. Ness
James Paul
Line Bjørge
Edwin S. Iversen
Robert P. Edwards
Louise A. Brinton
Joanna Plisiecka-Halasa
Anna H. Wu
Linda S. Cook
Joseph L. Kelley
Jolanta Kupryjanczyk
Nicolas Wentzensen
Matthias Dürst
Andreas du Bois
Aleksandra Gentry-Maharaj
Jenny Chang-Claude
Cezary Cybulski
Douglas A. Stram
Michelle A.T. Hildebrandt
Weiva Sieh
Kathryn L. Terry
Ira Schwaab
Sara H. Olson
Iain A. McNeish
Ellen L. Goode
Heli Nevanlinna
Maria Bisogna
Jolanta Lissowska
Katja K.H. Aben
Leon F.A.G. Massuger
Beata Spiewankiewicz
Peter A. Fasching
Fiona Bruinsma
Claus Høgdall
Kirsten B. Moysich
Philipp Harter
Jacek Gronwald
Xifeng Wu
Lene Lundvall
Andrew Berchuck
Peter Hillemanns
Pamela J. Thompson
Karen Carty
Susan J. Ramus
Emily Myers
Angela Brooks-Wilson
Ingo B. Runnebaum
Daniel W. Cramer
Source :
Gynecologic oncology, vol 136, iss 3, Gynecologic Oncology, 136, 3, pp. 542-8, Gynecologic Oncology, 136, 542-8
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2015.

Abstract

Contains fulltext : 155211.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access) OBJECTIVE: Ovarian cancer is a hormone-related disease with a strong genetic basis. However, none of its high-penetrance susceptibility genes and GWAS-identified variants to date are known to be involved in hormonal pathways. Given the hypothesized etiologic role of gonadotropins, an assessment of how variability in genes involved in the gonadotropin signaling pathway impacts disease risk is warranted. METHODS: Genetic data from 41 ovarian cancer study sites were pooled and unconditional logistic regression was used to evaluate whether any of the 2185 SNPs from 11 gonadotropin signaling pathway genes was associated with ovarian cancer risk. A burden test using the admixture likelihood (AML) method was also used to evaluate gene-level associations. RESULTS: We did not find any genome-wide significant associations between individual SNPs and ovarian cancer risk. However, there was some suggestion of gene-level associations for four gonadotropin signaling pathway genes: INHBB (p=0.045, mucinous), LHCGR (p=0.046, high-grade serous), GNRH (p=0.041, high-grade serous), and FSHB (p=0.036, overall invasive). There was also suggestive evidence for INHA (p=0.060, overall invasive). CONCLUSIONS: Ovarian cancer studies have limited sample numbers, thus fewer genome-wide susceptibility alleles, with only modest associations, have been identified relative to breast and prostate cancers. We have evaluated the majority of ovarian cancer studies with biological samples, to our knowledge, leaving no opportunity for replication. Using both our understanding of biology and powerful gene-level tests, we have identified four putative ovarian cancer loci near INHBB, LHCGR, GNRH, and FSHB that warrant a second look if larger sample sizes and denser genotype chips become available.

Details

ISSN :
00908258
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Gynecologic oncology, vol 136, iss 3, Gynecologic Oncology, 136, 3, pp. 542-8, Gynecologic Oncology, 136, 542-8
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8ee43be2a6090926cbc5601cdde6648a