Florey Department of Neuroscience and Mental Health - Research Publications

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    Fine-scale mapping of 8q24 locus identifies multiple independent risk variants for breast cancer
    Shi, J ; Zhang, Y ; Zheng, W ; Michailidou, K ; Ghoussaini, M ; Bolla, MK ; Wang, Q ; Dennis, J ; Lush, M ; Milne, RL ; Shu, X-O ; Beesley, J ; Kar, S ; Andrulis, IL ; Anton-Culver, H ; Arndt, V ; Beckmann, MW ; Zhao, Z ; Guo, X ; Benitez, J ; Beeghly-Fadiel, A ; Blot, W ; Bogdanova, NV ; Bojesen, SE ; Brauch, H ; Brenner, H ; Brinton, L ; Broeks, A ; Bruening, T ; Burwinkel, B ; Cai, H ; Canisius, S ; Chang-Claude, J ; Choi, J-Y ; Couch, FJ ; Cox, A ; Cross, SS ; Czene, K ; Darabi, H ; Devilee, P ; Droit, A ; Dork, T ; Fasching, PA ; Fletcher, O ; Flyger, H ; Fostira, F ; Gaborieau, V ; Garcia-Closas, M ; Giles, GG ; Grip, M ; Guenel, P ; Haiman, CA ; Hamann, U ; Hartman, M ; Miao, H ; Hollestelle, A ; Hopper, JL ; Hsiung, C-N ; Investigators, K ; Ito, H ; Jakubowska, A ; Johnson, N ; Torres, D ; Kabisch, M ; Kang, D ; Khan, S ; Knight, JA ; Kosma, V-M ; Lambrechts, D ; Li, J ; Lindblom, A ; Lophatananon, A ; Lubinski, J ; Mannermaa, A ; Manoukian, S ; Le Marchand, L ; Margolin, S ; Marme, F ; Matsuo, K ; McLean, C ; Meindl, A ; Muir, K ; Neuhausen, SL ; Nevanlinna, H ; Nord, S ; Borresen-Dale, A-L ; Olson, JE ; Orr, N ; van den Ouweland, AMW ; Peterlongo, P ; Putti, TC ; Rudolph, A ; Sangrajrang, S ; Sawyer, EJ ; Schmidt, MK ; Schmutzler, RK ; Shen, C-Y ; Hou, M-F ; Shrubsole, MJ ; Southey, MC ; Swerdlow, A ; Teo, SH ; Thienpont, B ; Toland, AE ; Tollenaar, RAEM ; Tomlinson, I ; Truong, T ; Tseng, C-C ; Wen, W ; Winqvist, R ; Wu, AH ; Yip, CH ; Zamora, PM ; Zheng, Y ; Floris, G ; Cheng, C-Y ; Hooning, MJ ; Martens, JWM ; Seynaeve, C ; Kristensen, VN ; Hall, P ; Pharoah, PDP ; Simard, J ; Chenevix-Trench, G ; Dunning, AM ; Antoniou, AC ; Easton, DF ; Cai, Q ; Long, J (WILEY, 2016-09-15)
    Previous genome-wide association studies among women of European ancestry identified two independent breast cancer susceptibility loci represented by single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) rs13281615 and rs11780156 at 8q24. A fine-mapping study across 2.06 Mb (chr8:127,561,724-129,624,067, hg19) in 55,540 breast cancer cases and 51,168 controls within the Breast Cancer Association Consortium was conducted. Three additional independent association signals in women of European ancestry, represented by rs35961416 (OR = 0.95, 95% CI = 0.93-0.97, conditional p = 5.8 × 10(-6) ), rs7815245 (OR = 0.94, 95% CI = 0.91-0.96, conditional p = 1.1 × 10(-6) ) and rs2033101 (OR = 1.05, 95% CI = 1.02-1.07, conditional p = 1.1 × 10(-4) ) were found. Integrative analysis using functional genomic data from the Roadmap Epigenomics, the Encyclopedia of DNA Elements project, the Cancer Genome Atlas and other public resources implied that SNPs rs7815245 in Signal 3, and rs1121948 in Signal 5 (in linkage disequilibrium with rs11780156, r(2)  = 0.77), were putatively functional variants for two of the five independent association signals. The results highlighted multiple 8q24 variants associated with breast cancer susceptibility in women of European ancestry.
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    Body mass index and breast cancer survival: a Mendelian randomization analysis
    Guo, Q ; Burgess, S ; Turman, C ; Bolla, MK ; Wang, Q ; Lush, M ; Abraham, J ; Aittomaki, K ; Andrulis, IL ; Apicella, C ; Arndt, V ; Barrdahl, M ; Benitez, J ; Berg, CD ; Blomqvist, C ; Bojesen, SE ; Bonanni, B ; Brand, JS ; Brenner, H ; Broeks, A ; Burwinkel, B ; Caldas, C ; Campa, D ; Canzian, F ; Chang-Claude, J ; Chanock, SJ ; Chin, S-F ; Couch, FJ ; Cox, A ; Cross, SS ; Cybulski, C ; Czene, K ; Darabi, H ; Devilee, P ; Diver, WR ; Dunning, AM ; Earl, HM ; Eccles, DM ; Ekici, AB ; Eriksson, M ; Evans, DG ; Fasching, PA ; Figueroa, J ; Flesch-Janys, D ; Flyger, H ; Gapstur, SM ; Gaudet, MM ; Giles, GG ; Glendon, G ; Grip, M ; Gronwald, J ; Haeberle, L ; Haiman, CA ; Hall, P ; Hamann, U ; Hankinson, S ; Hartikainen, JM ; Hein, A ; Hiller, L ; Hogervorst, FB ; Holleczek, B ; Hooning, MJ ; Hoover, RN ; Humphreys, K ; Hunter, DJ ; Husing, A ; Jakubowska, A ; Jukkola-Vuorinen, A ; Kaaks, R ; Kabisch, M ; Kataja, V ; Knight, JA ; Koppert, LB ; Kosma, V-M ; Kristensen, VN ; Lambrechts, D ; Le Marchand, L ; Li, J ; Lindblom, A ; Lindstrom, S ; Lissowska, J ; Lubinski, J ; Machiela, MJ ; Mannermaa, A ; Manoukian, S ; Margolin, S ; Marme, F ; Martens, JWM ; McLean, C ; Menendez, P ; Milne, RL ; Mulligan, AM ; Muranen, TA ; Nevanlinna, H ; Neven, P ; Nielsen, SF ; Nordestgaard, BG ; Olson, JE ; Perez, JIA ; Peterlongo, P ; Phillips, K-A ; Poole, CJ ; Pylkas, K ; Radice, P ; Rahman, N ; Rudiger, T ; Rudolph, A ; Sawyer, EJ ; Schumacher, F ; Seibold, P ; Seynaeve, C ; Shah, M ; Smeets, A ; Southey, MC ; Tollenaar, RAEM ; Tomlinson, I ; Tsimiklis, H ; Ulmer, H-U ; Vachon, C ; van den Ouweland, AMW ; Van't Veer, LJ ; Wildiers, H ; Willett, W ; Winqvist, R ; Zamora, MP ; Chenevix-Trench, G ; Dork, T ; Easton, DF ; Garcia-Closas, M ; Kraft, P ; Hopper, JL ; Zheng, W ; Schmidt, MK ; Pharoah, PDP (OXFORD UNIV PRESS, 2017-12)
    BACKGROUND: There is increasing evidence that elevated body mass index (BMI) is associated with reduced survival for women with breast cancer. However, the underlying reasons remain unclear. We conducted a Mendelian randomization analysis to investigate a possible causal role of BMI in survival from breast cancer. METHODS: We used individual-level data from six large breast cancer case-cohorts including a total of 36 210 individuals (2475 events) of European ancestry. We created a BMI genetic risk score (GRS) based on genotypes at 94 known BMI-associated genetic variants. Association between the BMI genetic score and breast cancer survival was analysed by Cox regression for each study separately. Study-specific hazard ratios were pooled using fixed-effect meta-analysis. RESULTS: BMI genetic score was found to be associated with reduced breast cancer-specific survival for estrogen receptor (ER)-positive cases [hazard ratio (HR) = 1.11, per one-unit increment of GRS, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.01-1.22, P = 0.03). We observed no association for ER-negative cases (HR = 1.00, per one-unit increment of GRS, 95% CI 0.89-1.13, P = 0.95). CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest a causal effect of increased BMI on reduced breast cancer survival for ER-positive breast cancer. There is no evidence of a causal effect of higher BMI on survival for ER-negative breast cancer cases.
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    Genome-wide association analysis identifies three new breast cancer susceptibility loci
    Ghoussaini, M ; Fletcher, O ; Michailidou, K ; Turnbull, C ; Schmidt, MK ; Dicks, E ; Dennis, J ; Wang, Q ; Humphreys, MK ; Luccarini, C ; Baynes, C ; Conroy, D ; Maranian, M ; Ahmed, S ; Driver, K ; Johnson, N ; Orr, N ; Silva, IDS ; Waisfisz, Q ; Meijers-Heijboer, H ; Uitterlinden, AG ; Rivadeneira, F ; Hall, P ; Czene, K ; Irwanto, A ; Liu, J ; Nevanlinna, H ; Aittomaki, K ; Blomqvist, C ; Meindl, A ; Schmutzler, RK ; Mueller-Myhsok, B ; Lichtner, P ; Chang-Claude, J ; Hein, R ; Nickels, S ; Flesch-Janys, D ; Tsimiklis, H ; Makalic, E ; Schmidt, D ; Bui, M ; Hopper, JL ; Apicella, C ; Park, DJ ; Southey, M ; Hunter, DJ ; Chanock, SJ ; Broeks, A ; Verhoef, S ; Hogervorst, FBL ; Fasching, PA ; Lux, MP ; Beckmann, MW ; Ekici, AB ; Sawyer, E ; Tomlinson, I ; Kerin, M ; Marme, F ; Schneeweiss, A ; Sohn, C ; Burwinkel, B ; Guenel, P ; Truong, T ; Cordina-Duverger, E ; Menegaux, F ; Bojesen, SE ; Nordestgaard, BG ; Nielsen, SF ; Flyger, H ; Milne, RL ; Rosario Alonso, M ; Gonzalez-Neira, A ; Benitez, J ; Anton-Culver, H ; Ziogas, A ; Bernstein, L ; Dur, CC ; Brenner, H ; Mueller, H ; Arndt, V ; Stegmaier, C ; Justenhoven, C ; Brauch, H ; Bruening, T ; Wang-Gohrke, S ; Eilber, U ; Doerk, T ; Schuermann, P ; Bremer, M ; Hillemanns, P ; Bogdanova, NV ; Antonenkova, NN ; Rogov, YI ; Karstens, JH ; Bermisheva, M ; Prokofieva, D ; Khusnutdinova, E ; Lindblom, A ; Margolin, S ; Mannermaa, A ; Kataja, V ; Kosma, V-M ; Hartikainen, JM ; Lambrechts, D ; Yesilyurt, BT ; Floris, G ; Leunen, K ; Manoukian, S ; Bonanni, B ; Fortuzzi, S ; Peterlongo, P ; Couch, FJ ; Wang, X ; Stevens, K ; Lee, A ; Giles, GG ; Baglietto, L ; Severi, G ; McLean, C ; Alnaes, GG ; Kristensen, V ; Borrensen-Dale, A-L ; John, EM ; Miron, A ; Winqvist, R ; Pylkas, K ; Jukkola-Vuorinen, A ; Kauppila, S ; Andrulis, IL ; Glendon, G ; Mulligan, AM ; Devilee, P ; van Asperen, CJ ; Tollenaar, RAEM ; Seynaeve, C ; Figueroa, JD ; Garcia-Closas, M ; Brinton, L ; Lissowska, J ; Hooning, MJ ; Hollestelle, A ; Oldenburg, RA ; van den Ouweland, AMW ; Cox, A ; Reed, MWR ; Shah, M ; Jakubowska, A ; Lubinski, J ; Jaworska, K ; Durda, K ; Jones, M ; Schoemaker, M ; Ashworth, A ; Swerdlow, A ; Beesley, J ; Chen, X ; Muir, KR ; Lophatananon, A ; Rattanamongkongul, S ; Chaiwerawattana, A ; Kang, D ; Yoo, K-Y ; Noh, D-Y ; Shen, C-Y ; Yu, J-C ; Wu, P-E ; Hsiung, C-N ; Perkins, A ; Swann, R ; Velentzis, L ; Eccles, DM ; Tapper, WJ ; Gerty, SM ; Graham, NJ ; Ponder, BAJ ; Chenevix-Trench, G ; Pharoah, PDP ; Lathrop, M ; Dunning, AM ; Rahman, N ; Peto, J ; Easton, DF (NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP, 2012-03)
    Breast cancer is the most common cancer among women. To date, 22 common breast cancer susceptibility loci have been identified accounting for ∼8% of the heritability of the disease. We attempted to replicate 72 promising associations from two independent genome-wide association studies (GWAS) in ∼70,000 cases and ∼68,000 controls from 41 case-control studies and 9 breast cancer GWAS. We identified three new breast cancer risk loci at 12p11 (rs10771399; P = 2.7 × 10(-35)), 12q24 (rs1292011; P = 4.3 × 10(-19)) and 21q21 (rs2823093; P = 1.1 × 10(-12)). rs10771399 was associated with similar relative risks for both estrogen receptor (ER)-negative and ER-positive breast cancer, whereas the other two loci were associated only with ER-positive disease. Two of the loci lie in regions that contain strong plausible candidate genes: PTHLH (12p11) has a crucial role in mammary gland development and the establishment of bone metastasis in breast cancer, and NRIP1 (21q21) encodes an ER cofactor and has a role in the regulation of breast cancer cell growth.
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    Evaluation of variation in the phosphoinositide-3-kinase catalytic subunit alpha oncogene and breast cancer risk
    Stevens, KN ; Garcia-Closas, M ; Fredericksen, Z ; Kosel, M ; Pankratz, VS ; Hopper, JL ; Dite, GS ; Apicella, C ; Southey, MC ; Schmidt, MK ; Broeks, A ; Van 't Veer, LJ ; Tollenaar, RAEM ; Fasching, PA ; Beckmann, MW ; Hein, A ; Ekici, AB ; Johnson, N ; Peto, J ; Silva, IDS ; Gibson, L ; Sawyer, E ; Tomlinson, I ; Kerin, MJ ; Chanock, S ; Lissowska, J ; Hunter, DJ ; Hoover, RN ; Thomas, GD ; Milne, RL ; Perez, JIA ; Gonzalez-Neira, A ; Benitez, J ; Burwinkel, B ; Meindl, A ; Schmutzler, RK ; Bartrar, CR ; Hamann, U ; Ko, YD ; Bruening, T ; Chang-Claude, J ; Hein, R ; Wang-Gohrke, S ; Doerk, T ; Schuermann, P ; Bremer, M ; Hillemanns, P ; Bogdanova, N ; Zalutsky, JV ; Rogov, YI ; Antonenkova, N ; Lindblom, A ; Margolin, S ; Mannermaa, A ; Kataja, V ; Kosma, V-M ; Hartikainen, J ; Chenevix-Trench, G ; Chen, X ; Peterlongo, P ; Bonanni, B ; Bernard, L ; Manoukian, S ; Wang, X ; Cerhan, J ; Vachon, CM ; Olson, J ; Giles, GG ; Baglietto, L ; McLean, CA ; Severi, G ; John, EM ; Miron, A ; Winqvist, R ; Pylkaes, K ; Jukkola-Vuorinen, A ; Grip, M ; Andrulis, I ; Knight, JA ; Glendon, G ; Mulligan, AM ; Cox, A ; Brock, IW ; Elliott, G ; Cross, SS ; Pharoah, PP ; Dunning, AM ; Pooley, KA ; Humphreys, MK ; Wang, J ; Kang, D ; Yoo, K-Y ; Noh, D-Y ; Sangrajrang, S ; Gabrieau, V ; Brennan, P ; Mckay, J ; Anton-Culver, H ; Ziogas, A ; Couch, FJ ; Easton, DF (NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP, 2011-12-06)
    BACKGROUND: Somatic mutations in phosphoinositide-3-kinase catalytic subunit alpha (PIK3CA) are frequent in breast tumours and have been associated with oestrogen receptor (ER) expression, human epidermal growth factor receptor-2 overexpression, lymph node metastasis and poor survival. The goal of this study was to evaluate the association between inherited variation in this oncogene and risk of breast cancer. METHODS: A single-nucleotide polymorphism from the PIK3CA locus that was associated with breast cancer in a study of Caucasian breast cancer cases and controls from the Mayo Clinic (MCBCS) was genotyped in 5436 cases and 5280 controls from the Cancer Genetic Markers of Susceptibility (CGEMS) study and in 30 949 cases and 29 788 controls from the Breast Cancer Association Consortium (BCAC). RESULTS: Rs1607237 was significantly associated with a decreased risk of breast cancer in MCBCS, CGEMS and all studies of white Europeans combined (odds ratio (OR)=0.97, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.95-0.99, P=4.6 × 10(-3)), but did not reach significance in the BCAC replication study alone (OR=0.98, 95% CI 0.96-1.01, P=0.139). CONCLUSION: Common germline variation in PIK3CA does not have a strong influence on the risk of breast cancer.
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    Dietary patterns and risk of breast cancer
    Baglietto, L ; Krishnan, K ; Severi, G ; Hodge, A ; Brinkman, M ; English, DR ; McLean, C ; Hopper, JL ; Giles, GG (SPRINGERNATURE, 2011-02-01)
    BACKGROUND: Evidence is emerging that prudent/healthy dietary patterns might be associated with a reduced risk of breast cancer. METHODS: Using data from the prospective Melbourne Collaborative Cohort Study, we applied principal factor analysis to 124 foods and beverages to identify dietary patterns and estimated their association with breast cancer risk overall and by tumour characteristics using Cox regression. RESULTS: During an average of 14.1 years of follow-up of 20 967 women participants, 815 invasive breast cancers were diagnosed. Among the four dietary factors that we identified, only that characterised by high consumption of fruit and salad was associated with a reduced risk, with stronger associations observed for tumours not expressing oestrogen (ER) and progesterone receptors (PR). Compared with women in the lowest quintile of the factor score, the hazard ratio for women in the highest quintile was 0.92 (95% confidence interval (CI)=0.70-1.21; test for trend, P=0.5) for ER-positive or PR-positive tumours and 0.48 (95% CI=0.26-0.86; test for trend, P=0.002) for ER-negative and PR-negative tumours (test for homogeneity, P=0.01). CONCLUSION: Our study provides additional support for the hypothesis that a dietary pattern rich in fruit and salad might protect against invasive breast cancer and that the effect might be stronger for ER- and PR-negative tumours.
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    BCL2 in breast cancer: a favourable prognostic marker across molecular subtypes and independent of adjuvant therapy received
    Dawson, S-J ; Makretsov, N ; Blows, FM ; Driver, KE ; Provenzano, E ; Le Quesne, J ; Baglietto, L ; Severi, G ; Giles, GG ; McLean, CA ; Callagy, G ; Green, AR ; Ellis, I ; Gelmon, K ; Turashvili, G ; Leung, S ; Aparicio, S ; Huntsman, D ; Caldas, C ; Pharoah, P (NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP, 2010-08-24)
    BACKGROUND: Breast cancer is heterogeneous and the existing prognostic classifiers are limited in accuracy, leading to unnecessary treatment of numerous women. B-cell lymphoma 2 (BCL2), an antiapoptotic protein, has been proposed as a prognostic marker, but this effect is considered to relate to oestrogen receptor (ER) status. This study aimed to test the clinical validity of BCL2 as an independent prognostic marker. METHODS: Five studies of 11 212 women with early-stage breast cancer were analysed. Individual patient data included tumour size, grade, lymph node status, endocrine therapy, chemotherapy and mortality. BCL2, ER, progesterone receptor (PR) and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) levels were determined in all tumours. A Cox model incorporating the time-dependent effects of each variable was used to explore the prognostic significance of BCL2. RESULTS: In univariate analysis, ER, PR and BCL2 positivity was associated with improved survival and HER2 positivity with inferior survival. For ER and PR this effect was time dependent, whereas for BCL2 and HER2 the effect persisted over time. In multivariate analysis, BCL2 positivity retained independent prognostic significance (hazard ratio (HR) 0.76, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.66-0.88, P<0.001). BCL2 was a powerful prognostic marker in ER- (HR 0.63, 95% CI 0.54-0.74, P<0.001) and ER+ disease (HR 0.56, 95% CI 0.48-0.65, P<0.001), and in HER2- (HR 0.55, 95% CI 0.49-0.61, P<0.001) and HER2+ disease (HR 0.70, 95% CI 0.57-0.85, P<0.001), irrespective of the type of adjuvant therapy received. Addition of BCL2 to the Adjuvant! Online prognostic model, for a subset of cases with a 10-year follow-up, improved the survival prediction (P=0.0039). CONCLUSIONS: BCL2 is an independent indicator of favourable prognosis for all types of early-stage breast cancer. This study establishes the rationale for introduction of BCL2 immunohistochemistry to improve prognostic stratification. Further work is now needed to ascertain the exact way to apply BCL2 testing for risk stratification and to standardise BCL2 immunohistochemistry for this application.
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    Subtyping of Breast Cancer by Immunohistochemistry to Investigate a Relationship between Subtype and Short and Long Term Survival: A Collaborative Analysis of Data for 10,159 Cases from 12 Studies
    Blows, FM ; Driver, KE ; Schmidt, MK ; Broeks, A ; van Leeuwen, FE ; Wesseling, J ; Cheang, MC ; Gelmon, K ; Nielsen, TO ; Blomqvist, C ; Heikkila, P ; Heikkinen, T ; Nevanlinna, H ; Akslen, LA ; Begin, LR ; Foulkes, WD ; Couch, FJ ; Wang, X ; Cafourek, V ; Olson, JE ; Baglietto, L ; Giles, GG ; Severi, G ; McLean, CA ; Southey, MC ; Rakha, E ; Green, AR ; Ellis, IO ; Sherman, ME ; Lissowska, J ; Anderson, WF ; Cox, A ; Cross, SS ; Reed, MWR ; Provenzano, E ; Dawson, S-J ; Dunning, AM ; Humphreys, M ; Easton, DF ; Garcia-Closas, M ; Caldas, C ; Pharoah, PD ; Huntsman, D ; Marincola, FM (PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE, 2010-05)
    BACKGROUND: Immunohistochemical markers are often used to classify breast cancer into subtypes that are biologically distinct and behave differently. The aim of this study was to estimate mortality for patients with the major subtypes of breast cancer as classified using five immunohistochemical markers, to investigate patterns of mortality over time, and to test for heterogeneity by subtype. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We pooled data from more than 10,000 cases of invasive breast cancer from 12 studies that had collected information on hormone receptor status, human epidermal growth factor receptor-2 (HER2) status, and at least one basal marker (cytokeratin [CK]5/6 or epidermal growth factor receptor [EGFR]) together with survival time data. Tumours were classified as luminal and nonluminal tumours according to hormone receptor expression. These two groups were further subdivided according to expression of HER2, and finally, the luminal and nonluminal HER2-negative tumours were categorised according to expression of basal markers. Changes in mortality rates over time differed by subtype. In women with luminal HER2-negative subtypes, mortality rates were constant over time, whereas mortality rates associated with the luminal HER2-positive and nonluminal subtypes tended to peak within 5 y of diagnosis and then decline over time. In the first 5 y after diagnosis the nonluminal tumours were associated with a poorer prognosis, but over longer follow-up times the prognosis was poorer in the luminal subtypes, with the worst prognosis at 15 y being in the luminal HER2-positive tumours. Basal marker expression distinguished the HER2-negative luminal and nonluminal tumours into different subtypes. These patterns were independent of any systemic adjuvant therapy. CONCLUSIONS: The six subtypes of breast cancer defined by expression of five markers show distinct behaviours with important differences in short term and long term prognosis. Application of these markers in the clinical setting could have the potential to improve the targeting of adjuvant chemotherapy to those most likely to benefit. The different patterns of mortality over time also suggest important biological differences between the subtypes that may result in differences in response to specific therapies, and that stratification of breast cancers by clinically relevant subtypes in clinical trials is urgently required.
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    Second to fourth digit ratio (2D: 4D), breast cancer risk factors, and breast cancer risk: a prospective cohort study
    Muller, DC ; Baglietto, L ; Manning, JT ; McLean, C ; Hopper, JL ; English, DR ; Giles, GG ; Severi, G (NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP, 2012-10-23)
    BACKGROUND: We aimed to assess whether 2D:4D measures are associated with breast cancer risk. METHODS: We derived the ratio of the lengths of the index and ring fingers (2D:4D), and right minus left 2D:4D (Δ(r-l)) from digit lengths measured from photocopies of participants' hands collected during a recent follow-up of the Melbourne Collaborative Cohort Study, a prospective study including 24 469 women. Of the 9044 women with available data, we identified 573 incident breast cancer cases. Hazard ratios (HR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) for a one standard deviation difference in 2D:4D measures were obtained from Weibull survival models, and linear regression models were used to examine potential associations between 2D:4D measures and age at menarche and menopause. RESULTS: We found a direct association between left 2D:4D and breast cancer risk, an inverse association between Δ(r-l) and risk of breast cancer, but no association between right 2D:4D and breast cancer risk. Among breast cancer cases, both right 2D:4D and Δ(r-l) were inversely associated with age at diagnosis. We also observed associations between both right 2D:4D and Δ(r-l) and age at menopause, with increasing digit ratio measures related to earlier mean age at menopause. CONCLUSION: Digit ratio measures might be associated with breast cancer risk and age at onset of breast cancer. If confirmed in other studies, this suggests that lower exposure or sensitivity to prenatal testosterone might be associated with lower risk of breast cancer.
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    Refined histopathological predictors of BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutation status: a large-scale analysis of breast cancer characteristics from the BCAC, CIMBA, and ENIGMA consortia
    Spurdle, AB ; Couch, FJ ; Parsons, MT ; McGuffog, L ; Barrowdale, D ; Bolla, MK ; Wang, Q ; Healey, S ; Schmutzler, RK ; Wappenschmidt, B ; Rhiem, K ; Hahnen, E ; Engel, C ; Meindl, A ; Ditsch, N ; Arnold, N ; Plendl, H ; Niederacher, D ; Sutter, C ; Wang-Gohrke, S ; Steinemann, D ; Preisler-Adams, S ; Kast, K ; Varon-Mateeva, R ; Ellis, S ; Frost, D ; Platte, R ; Perkins, J ; Evans, DG ; Izatt, L ; Eeles, R ; Adlard, J ; Davidson, R ; Cole, T ; Scuvera, G ; Manoukian, S ; Bonanni, B ; Mariette, F ; Fortuzzi, S ; Viel, A ; Pasini, B ; Papi, L ; Varesco, L ; Balleine, R ; Nathanson, KL ; Domchek, SM ; Offitt, K ; Jakubowska, A ; Lindor, N ; Thomassen, M ; Jensen, UB ; Rantala, J ; Borg, A ; Andrulis, IL ; Miron, A ; Hansen, TVO ; Caldes, T ; Neuhausen, SL ; Toland, AE ; Nevanlinna, H ; Montagna, M ; Garber, J ; Godwin, AK ; Osorio, A ; Factor, RE ; Terry, MB ; Rebbeck, TR ; Karlan, BY ; Southey, M ; Rashid, MU ; Tung, N ; Pharoah, PDP ; Blows, FM ; Dunning, AM ; Provenzano, E ; Hall, P ; Czene, K ; Schmidt, MK ; Broeks, A ; Cornelissen, S ; Verhoef, S ; Fasching, PA ; Beckmann, MW ; Ekici, AB ; Slamon, DJ ; Bojesen, SE ; Nordestgaard, BG ; Nielsen, SF ; Flyger, H ; Chang-Claude, J ; Flesch-Janys, D ; Rudolph, A ; Seibold, P ; Aittomaki, K ; Muranen, TA ; Heikkila, P ; Blomqvist, C ; Figueroa, J ; Chanock, SJ ; Brinton, L ; Lissowska, J ; Olson, JE ; Pankratz, VS ; John, EM ; Whittemore, AS ; West, DW ; Hamann, U ; Torres, D ; Ulmer, HU ; Rudiger, T ; Devilee, P ; Tollenaar, RAEM ; Seynaeve, C ; Van Asperen, CJ ; Eccles, DM ; Tapper, WJ ; Durcan, L ; Jones, L ; Peto, J ; dos-Santos-Silva, I ; Fletcher, O ; Johnson, N ; Dwek, M ; Swann, R ; Bane, AL ; Glendon, G ; Mulligan, AM ; Giles, GG ; Milne, RL ; Baglietto, L ; McLean, C ; Carpenter, J ; Clarke, C ; Scott, R ; Brauch, H ; Bruning, T ; Ko, Y-D ; Cox, A ; Cross, SS ; Reed, MWR ; Lubinski, J ; Jaworska-Bieniek, K ; Durda, K ; Gronwald, J ; Dork, T ; Bogdanova, N ; Park-Simon, T-W ; Hillemanns, P ; Haiman, CA ; Henderson, BE ; Schumacher, F ; Le Marchand, L ; Burwinkel, B ; Marme, F ; Surovy, H ; Yang, R ; Anton-Culver, H ; Ziogas, A ; Hooning, MJ ; Collee, JM ; Martens, JWM ; Tilanus-Linthorst, MMA ; Brenner, H ; Dieffenbach, AK ; Arndt, V ; Stegmaier, C ; Winqvist, R ; Pylkas, K ; Jukkola-Vuorinen, A ; Grip, M ; Lindblom, A ; Margolin, S ; Joseph, V ; Robson, M ; Rau-Murthy, R ; Gonzalez-Neira, A ; Arias, JI ; Zamora, P ; Benitez, J ; Mannermaa, A ; Kataja, V ; Kosma, V-M ; Hartikainen, JM ; Peterlongo, P ; Zaffaroni, D ; Barile, M ; Capra, F ; Radice, P ; Teo, SH ; Easton, DF ; Antoniou, AC ; Chenevix-Trench, G ; Goldgar, DE (BMC, 2014)
    INTRODUCTION: The distribution of histopathological features of invasive breast tumors in BRCA1 or BRCA2 germline mutation carriers differs from that of individuals with no known mutation. Histopathological features thus have utility for mutation prediction, including statistical modeling to assess pathogenicity of BRCA1 or BRCA2 variants of uncertain clinical significance. We analyzed large pathology datasets accrued by the Consortium of Investigators of Modifiers of BRCA1/2 (CIMBA) and the Breast Cancer Association Consortium (BCAC) to reassess histopathological predictors of BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutation status, and provide robust likelihood ratio (LR) estimates for statistical modeling. METHODS: Selection criteria for study/center inclusion were estrogen receptor (ER) status or grade data available for invasive breast cancer diagnosed younger than 70 years. The dataset included 4,477 BRCA1 mutation carriers, 2,565 BRCA2 mutation carriers, and 47,565 BCAC breast cancer cases. Country-stratified estimates of the likelihood of mutation status by histopathological markers were derived using a Mantel-Haenszel approach. RESULTS: ER-positive phenotype negatively predicted BRCA1 mutation status, irrespective of grade (LRs from 0.08 to 0.90). ER-negative grade 3 histopathology was more predictive of positive BRCA1 mutation status in women 50 years or older (LR = 4.13 (3.70 to 4.62)) versus younger than 50 years (LR = 3.16 (2.96 to 3.37)). For BRCA2, ER-positive grade 3 phenotype modestly predicted positive mutation status irrespective of age (LR = 1.7-fold), whereas ER-negative grade 3 features modestly predicted positive mutation status at 50 years or older (LR = 1.54 (1.27 to 1.88)). Triple-negative tumor status was highly predictive of BRCA1 mutation status for women younger than 50 years (LR = 3.73 (3.43 to 4.05)) and 50 years or older (LR = 4.41 (3.86 to 5.04)), and modestly predictive of positive BRCA2 mutation status in women 50 years or older (LR = 1.79 (1.42 to 2.24)). CONCLUSIONS: These results refine likelihood-ratio estimates for predicting BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutation status by using commonly measured histopathological features. Age at diagnosis is an important variable for most analyses, and grade is more informative than ER status for BRCA2 mutation carrier prediction. The estimates will improve BRCA1 and BRCA2 variant classification and inform patient mutation testing and clinical management.
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    SNP-SNP interaction analysis of NF-κB signaling pathway on breast cancer survival
    Jamshidi, M ; Fagerholm, R ; Khan, S ; Aittomaki, K ; Czene, K ; Darabi, H ; Li, J ; Andrulis, IL ; Chang-Claude, J ; Devilee, P ; Fasching, PA ; Michailidou, K ; Bolla, MK ; Dennis, J ; Wang, Q ; Guo, Q ; Rhenius, V ; Cornelissen, S ; Rudolph, A ; Knight, JA ; Loehberg, CR ; Burwinkel, B ; Marme, F ; Hopper, JL ; Southey, MC ; Bojesen, SE ; Flyger, H ; Brenner, H ; Holleczek, B ; Margolin, S ; Mannermaa, A ; Kosma, V-M ; Van Dyck, L ; Nevelsteen, I ; Couch, FJ ; Olson, JE ; Giles, GG ; McLean, C ; Haiman, CA ; Henderson, BE ; Winqvist, R ; Pylkas, K ; Tollenaar, RAEM ; Garcia-Closas, M ; Figueroa, J ; Hooning, MJ ; Martens, JWM ; Cox, A ; Cross, SS ; Simard, J ; Dunning, AM ; Easton, DF ; Pharoah, PDP ; Hall, P ; Blomqvist, C ; Schmidt, MK ; Nevanlinna, H (IMPACT JOURNALS LLC, 2015-11-10)
    In breast cancer, constitutive activation of NF-κB has been reported, however, the impact of genetic variation of the pathway on patient prognosis has been little studied. Furthermore, a combination of genetic variants, rather than single polymorphisms, may affect disease prognosis. Here, in an extensive dataset (n = 30,431) from the Breast Cancer Association Consortium, we investigated the association of 917 SNPs in 75 genes in the NF-κB pathway with breast cancer prognosis. We explored SNP-SNP interactions on survival using the likelihood-ratio test comparing multivariate Cox' regression models of SNP pairs without and with an interaction term. We found two interacting pairs associating with prognosis: patients simultaneously homozygous for the rare alleles of rs5996080 and rs7973914 had worse survival (HRinteraction 6.98, 95% CI=3.3-14.4, P=1.42E-07), and patients carrying at least one rare allele for rs17243893 and rs57890595 had better survival (HRinteraction 0.51, 95% CI=0.3-0.6, P = 2.19E-05). Based on in silico functional analyses and literature, we speculate that the rs5996080 and rs7973914 loci may affect the BAFFR and TNFR1/TNFR3 receptors and breast cancer survival, possibly by disturbing both the canonical and non-canonical NF-κB pathways or their dynamics, whereas, rs17243893-rs57890595 interaction on survival may be mediated through TRAF2-TRAIL-R4 interplay. These results warrant further validation and functional analyses.