Melbourne School of Population and Global Health - Research Publications

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    Deciphering colorectal cancer genetics through multi-omic analysis of 100,204 cases and 154,587 controls of European and east Asian ancestries
    Fernandez-Rozadilla, C ; Timofeeva, M ; Chen, Z ; Law, P ; Thomas, M ; Bien, S ; Diez-Obrero, V ; Li, L ; Fernandez-Tajes, J ; Palles, C ; Sherwood, K ; Harris, S ; Svinti, V ; McDonnell, K ; Farrington, S ; Studd, J ; Vaughan-Shaw, P ; Shu, X-O ; Long, J ; Cai, Q ; Guo, X ; Lu, Y ; Scacheri, P ; Studd, J ; Huyghe, J ; Harrison, T ; Shibata, D ; Haiman, C ; Devall, M ; Schumacher, F ; Melas, M ; Rennert, G ; Obon-Santacana, M ; Martin-Sanchez, V ; Moratalla-Navarro, F ; Oh, JH ; Kim, J ; Jee, SH ; Jung, KJ ; Kweon, S-S ; Shin, M-H ; Shin, A ; Ahn, Y-O ; Kim, D-H ; Oze, I ; Wen, W ; Matsuo, K ; Matsuda, K ; Tanikawa, C ; Ren, Z ; Gao, Y-T ; Jia, W-H ; Potter, J ; Jenkins, M ; Win, AK ; Pai, R ; Figueiredo, J ; Haile, R ; Gallinger, S ; Woods, M ; Newcomb, P ; Shibata, D ; Cheadle, J ; Kaplan, R ; Maughan, T ; Kerr, R ; Kerr, D ; Kirac, I ; Boehm, J ; Mecklin, L-P ; Jousilahti, P ; Knekt, P ; Aaltonen, L ; Rissanen, H ; Pukkala, E ; Eriksson, J ; Cajuso, T ; Hanninen, U ; Kondelin, J ; Palin, K ; Tanskanen, T ; Renkonen-Sinisalo, L ; Zanke, B ; Mannisto, S ; Albanes, D ; Weinstein, S ; Ruiz-Narvaez, E ; Palmer, J ; Buchanan, D ; Platz, E ; Visvanathan, K ; Ulrich, C ; Siegel, E ; Brezina, S ; Gsur, A ; Campbell, P ; Chang-Claude, J ; Hoffmeister, M ; Brenner, H ; Slattery, M ; Potter, J ; Tsilidis, K ; Schulze, M ; Gunter, M ; Murphy, N ; Castells, A ; Castellvi-Bel, S ; Moreira, L ; Arndt, V ; Shcherbina, A ; Stern, M ; Pardamean, B ; Bishop, T ; Giles, G ; Southey, M ; Idos, G ; McDonnell, K ; Abu-Ful, Z ; Greenson, J ; Shulman, K ; Lejbkowicz, F ; Offit, K ; Su, Y-R ; Steinfelder, R ; Keku, T ; van Guelpen, B ; Hudson, T ; Hampel, H ; Pearlman, R ; Berndt, S ; Hayes, R ; Martinez, ME ; Thomas, S ; Corley, D ; Pharoah, P ; Larsson, S ; Yen, Y ; Lenz, H-J ; White, E ; Li, L ; Doheny, K ; Pugh, E ; Shelford, T ; Chan, A ; Cruz-Correa, M ; Lindblom, A ; Shibata, D ; Joshi, A ; Schafmayer, C ; Scacheri, P ; Kundaje, A ; Nickerson, D ; Schoen, R ; Hampe, J ; Stadler, Z ; Vodicka, P ; Vodickova, L ; Vymetalkova, V ; Papadopoulos, N ; Edlund, C ; Gauderman, W ; Thomas, D ; Shibata, D ; Toland, A ; Markowitz, S ; Kim, A ; Gruber, S ; van Duijnhoven, F ; Feskens, E ; Sakoda, L ; Gago-Dominguez, M ; Wolk, A ; Naccarati, A ; Pardini, B ; FitzGerald, L ; Lee, SC ; Ogino, S ; Bien, S ; Kooperberg, C ; Li, C ; Lin, Y ; Prentice, R ; Qu, C ; Bezieau, S ; Tangen, C ; Mardis, E ; Yamaji, T ; Sawada, N ; Iwasaki, M ; Haiman, C ; Le Marchand, L ; Wu, A ; Qu, C ; McNeil, C ; Coetzee, G ; Hayward, C ; Deary, I ; Harris, S ; Theodoratou, E ; Reid, S ; Walker, M ; Ooi, LY ; Moreno, V ; Casey, G ; Gruber, S ; Tomlinson, I ; Zheng, W ; Dunlop, M ; Houlston, R ; Peters, U (NATURE PORTFOLIO, 2023-01)
    Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a leading cause of mortality worldwide. We conducted a genome-wide association study meta-analysis of 100,204 CRC cases and 154,587 controls of European and east Asian ancestry, identifying 205 independent risk associations, of which 50 were unreported. We performed integrative genomic, transcriptomic and methylomic analyses across large bowel mucosa and other tissues. Transcriptome- and methylome-wide association studies revealed an additional 53 risk associations. We identified 155 high-confidence effector genes functionally linked to CRC risk, many of which had no previously established role in CRC. These have multiple different functions and specifically indicate that variation in normal colorectal homeostasis, proliferation, cell adhesion, migration, immunity and microbial interactions determines CRC risk. Crosstissue analyses indicated that over a third of effector genes most probably act outside the colonic mucosa. Our findings provide insights into colorectal oncogenesis and highlight potential targets across tissues for new CRC treatment and chemoprevention strategies.
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    Causal relationships between breast cancer risk factors based on mammographic features
    Ye, Z ; Nguyen, TL ; Dite, GS ; Macinnis, RJ ; Schmidt, DF ; Makalic, E ; Al-Qershi, OM ; Bui, M ; Esser, VFC ; Dowty, JG ; Trinh, HN ; Evans, CF ; Tan, M ; Sung, J ; Jenkins, MA ; Giles, GG ; Southey, MC ; Hopper, JL ; Li, S (BMC, 2023-10-25)
    BACKGROUND: Mammogram risk scores based on texture and density defined by different brightness thresholds are associated with breast cancer risk differently and could reveal distinct information about breast cancer risk. We aimed to investigate causal relationships between these intercorrelated mammogram risk scores to determine their relevance to breast cancer aetiology. METHODS: We used digitised mammograms for 371 monozygotic twin pairs, aged 40-70 years without a prior diagnosis of breast cancer at the time of mammography, from the Australian Mammographic Density Twins and Sisters Study. We generated normalised, age-adjusted, and standardised risk scores based on textures using the Cirrus algorithm and on three spatially independent dense areas defined by increasing brightness threshold: light areas, bright areas, and brightest areas. Causal inference was made using the Inference about Causation from Examination of FAmilial CONfounding (ICE FALCON) method. RESULTS: The mammogram risk scores were correlated within twin pairs and with each other (r = 0.22-0.81; all P < 0.005). We estimated that 28-92% of the associations between the risk scores could be attributed to causal relationships between the scores, with the rest attributed to familial confounders shared by the scores. There was consistent evidence for positive causal effects: of Cirrus, light areas, and bright areas on the brightest areas (accounting for 34%, 55%, and 85% of the associations, respectively); and of light areas and bright areas on Cirrus (accounting for 37% and 28%, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: In a mammogram, the lighter (less dense) areas have a causal effect on the brightest (highly dense) areas, including through a causal pathway via textural features. These causal relationships help us gain insight into the relative aetiological importance of different mammographic features in breast cancer. For example our findings are consistent with the brightest areas being more aetiologically important than lighter areas for screen-detected breast cancer; conversely, light areas being more aetiologically important for interval breast cancer. Additionally, specific textural features capture aetiologically independent breast cancer risk information from dense areas. These findings highlight the utility of ICE FALCON and family data in decomposing the associations between intercorrelated disease biomarkers into distinct biological pathways.
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    A Genetic Locus within the FMN1/GREM1 Gene Region Interacts with Body Mass Index in Colorectal Cancer Risk
    Aglago, EK ; Kim, A ; Lin, Y ; Qu, C ; Evangelou, M ; Ren, Y ; Morrison, J ; Albanes, D ; Arndt, V ; Barry, EL ; Baurley, JW ; Berndt, S ; Bien, SA ; Bishop, DT ; Bouras, E ; Brenner, H ; Buchanan, DD ; Budiarto, A ; Carreras-Torres, R ; Casey, G ; Cenggoro, TW ; Chen, AT ; Chang-Claude, J ; Chen, X ; Conti, D ; Devall, M ; Diez-Obrero, V ; Dimou, N ; Drew, D ; Figueiredo, JC ; Gallinger, S ; Giles, GG ; Gruber, SB ; Gsur, A ; Gunter, MJ ; Hampel, H ; Harlid, S ; Hidaka, A ; Harrison, TA ; Hoffmeister, M ; Huyghe, JR ; Jenkins, MA ; Jordahl, K ; Joshi, AD ; Kawaguchi, ES ; Keku, TO ; Kundaje, A ; Larsson, SC ; Le Marchand, L ; Lewinger, JP ; Li, L ; Lynch, BM ; Mahesworo, B ; Mandic, M ; Obon-Santacana, M ; Morento, V ; Murphy, N ; Men, H ; Nassir, R ; Newcomb, PA ; Ogino, S ; Ose, J ; Pai, RK ; Palmer, JR ; Papadimitriou, N ; Pardamean, B ; Peoples, AR ; Platz, EA ; Potter, JD ; Prentice, RL ; Rennert, G ; Ruiz-Narvaez, E ; Sakoda, LC ; Scacheri, PC ; Schmit, SL ; Schoen, RE ; Shcherbina, A ; Slattery, ML ; Stern, MC ; Su, Y-R ; Tangen, CM ; Thibodeau, SN ; Thomas, DC ; Tian, Y ; Ulrich, CM ; van Duijnhoven, FJB ; Van Guelpen, B ; Visvanathan, K ; Vodicka, P ; Wang, J ; White, E ; Wolk, A ; Woods, MO ; Wu, AH ; Zemlianskaia, N ; Hsu, L ; Gauderman, WJ ; Peters, U ; Tsilidis, KK ; Campbell, PT (AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH, 2023-08-01)
    UNLABELLED: Colorectal cancer risk can be impacted by genetic, environmental, and lifestyle factors, including diet and obesity. Gene-environment interactions (G × E) can provide biological insights into the effects of obesity on colorectal cancer risk. Here, we assessed potential genome-wide G × E interactions between body mass index (BMI) and common SNPs for colorectal cancer risk using data from 36,415 colorectal cancer cases and 48,451 controls from three international colorectal cancer consortia (CCFR, CORECT, and GECCO). The G × E tests included the conventional logistic regression using multiplicative terms (one degree of freedom, 1DF test), the two-step EDGE method, and the joint 3DF test, each of which is powerful for detecting G × E interactions under specific conditions. BMI was associated with higher colorectal cancer risk. The two-step approach revealed a statistically significant G×BMI interaction located within the Formin 1/Gremlin 1 (FMN1/GREM1) gene region (rs58349661). This SNP was also identified by the 3DF test, with a suggestive statistical significance in the 1DF test. Among participants with the CC genotype of rs58349661, overweight and obesity categories were associated with higher colorectal cancer risk, whereas null associations were observed across BMI categories in those with the TT genotype. Using data from three large international consortia, this study discovered a locus in the FMN1/GREM1 gene region that interacts with BMI on the association with colorectal cancer risk. Further studies should examine the potential mechanisms through which this locus modifies the etiologic link between obesity and colorectal cancer. SIGNIFICANCE: This gene-environment interaction analysis revealed a genetic locus in FMN1/GREM1 that interacts with body mass index in colorectal cancer risk, suggesting potential implications for precision prevention strategies.
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    Elucidating the Risk of Colorectal Cancer for Variants in Hereditary Colorectal Cancer Genes
    Mahmood, K ; Thomas, M ; Qu, C ; Hsu, L ; Buchanan, DD ; Peters, U (W B SAUNDERS CO-ELSEVIER INC, 2023-10)
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    Probing the diabetes and colorectal cancer relationship using gene - environment interaction analyses
    Dimou, N ; Kim, AE ; Flanagan, O ; Murphy, N ; Diez-Obrero, V ; Shcherbina, A ; Aglago, EK ; Bouras, E ; Campbell, PT ; Casey, G ; Gallinger, S ; Gruber, SB ; Jenkins, MA ; Lin, Y ; Moreno, V ; Ruiz-Narvaez, E ; Stern, MC ; Tian, Y ; Tsilidis, KK ; Arndt, V ; Barry, EL ; Baurley, JW ; Berndt, SI ; Bezieau, S ; Bien, SA ; Bishop, DT ; Brenner, H ; Budiarto, A ; Carreras-Torres, R ; Cenggoro, TW ; Chan, AT ; Chang-Claude, J ; Chanock, SJ ; Chen, X ; Conti, DV ; Dampier, CH ; Devall, M ; Drew, DA ; Figueiredo, JC ; Giles, GG ; Gsur, A ; Harrison, TA ; Hidaka, A ; Hoffmeister, M ; Huyghe, JR ; Jordahl, K ; Kawaguchi, E ; Keku, TO ; Larsson, SC ; Le Marchand, L ; Lewinger, JP ; Li, L ; Mahesworo, B ; Morrison, J ; Newcomb, PA ; Newton, CC ; Obon-Santacana, M ; Ose, J ; Pai, RK ; Palmer, JR ; Papadimitriou, N ; Pardamean, B ; Peoples, AR ; Pharoah, PDP ; Platz, EA ; Potter, JD ; Rennert, G ; Scacheri, PC ; Schoen, RE ; Su, Y-R ; Tangen, CM ; Thibodeau, SN ; Thomas, DC ; Ulrich, CM ; Um, CY ; van Duijnhoven, FJB ; Visvanathan, K ; Vodicka, P ; Vodickova, L ; White, E ; Wolk, A ; Woods, MO ; Qu, C ; Kundaje, A ; Hsu, L ; Gauderman, WJ ; Gunter, MJ ; Peters, U (SPRINGERNATURE, 2023-08-24)
    BACKGROUND: Diabetes is an established risk factor for colorectal cancer. However, the mechanisms underlying this relationship still require investigation and it is not known if the association is modified by genetic variants. To address these questions, we undertook a genome-wide gene-environment interaction analysis. METHODS: We used data from 3 genetic consortia (CCFR, CORECT, GECCO; 31,318 colorectal cancer cases/41,499 controls) and undertook genome-wide gene-environment interaction analyses with colorectal cancer risk, including interaction tests of genetics(G)xdiabetes (1-degree of freedom; d.f.) and joint testing of Gxdiabetes, G-colorectal cancer association (2-d.f. joint test) and G-diabetes correlation (3-d.f. joint test). RESULTS: Based on the joint tests, we found that the association of diabetes with colorectal cancer risk is modified by loci on chromosomes 8q24.11 (rs3802177, SLC30A8 - ORAA: 1.62, 95% CI: 1.34-1.96; ORAG: 1.41, 95% CI: 1.30-1.54; ORGG: 1.22, 95% CI: 1.13-1.31; p-value3-d.f.: 5.46 × 10-11) and 13q14.13 (rs9526201, LRCH1 - ORGG: 2.11, 95% CI: 1.56-2.83; ORGA: 1.52, 95% CI: 1.38-1.68; ORAA: 1.13, 95% CI: 1.06-1.21; p-value2-d.f.: 7.84 × 10-09). DISCUSSION: These results suggest that variation in genes related to insulin signaling (SLC30A8) and immune function (LRCH1) may modify the association of diabetes with colorectal cancer risk and provide novel insights into the biology underlying the diabetes and colorectal cancer relationship.
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    Validation of a Genetic-Enhanced Risk Prediction Model for Colorectal Cancer in a Large Community-Based Cohort.
    Su, Y-R ; Sakoda, LC ; Jeon, J ; Thomas, M ; Lin, Y ; Schneider, JL ; Udaltsova, N ; Lee, JK ; Lansdorp-Vogelaar, I ; Peterse, EFP ; Zauber, AG ; Zheng, J ; Zheng, Y ; Hauser, E ; Baron, JA ; Barry, EL ; Bishop, DT ; Brenner, H ; Buchanan, DD ; Burnett-Hartman, A ; Campbell, PT ; Casey, G ; Castellví-Bel, S ; Chan, AT ; Chang-Claude, J ; Figueiredo, JC ; Gallinger, SJ ; Giles, GG ; Gruber, SB ; Gsur, A ; Gunter, MJ ; Hampe, J ; Hampel, H ; Harrison, TA ; Hoffmeister, M ; Hua, X ; Huyghe, JR ; Jenkins, MA ; Keku, TO ; Marchand, LL ; Li, L ; Lindblom, A ; Moreno, V ; Newcomb, PA ; Pharoah, PDP ; Platz, EA ; Potter, JD ; Qu, C ; Rennert, G ; Schoen, RE ; Slattery, ML ; Song, M ; van Duijnhoven, FJB ; Van Guelpen, B ; Vodicka, P ; Wolk, A ; Woods, MO ; Wu, AH ; Hayes, RB ; Peters, U ; Corley, DA ; Hsu, L (American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023-03-06)
    BACKGROUND: Polygenic risk scores (PRS) which summarize individuals' genetic risk profile may enhance targeted colorectal cancer screening. A critical step towards clinical implementation is rigorous external validations in large community-based cohorts. This study externally validated a PRS-enhanced colorectal cancer risk model comprising 140 known colorectal cancer loci to provide a comprehensive assessment on prediction performance. METHODS: The model was developed using 20,338 individuals and externally validated in a community-based cohort (n = 85,221). We validated predicted 5-year absolute colorectal cancer risk, including calibration using expected-to-observed case ratios (E/O) and calibration plots, and discriminatory accuracy using time-dependent AUC. The PRS-related improvement in AUC, sensitivity and specificity were assessed in individuals of age 45 to 74 years (screening-eligible age group) and 40 to 49 years with no endoscopy history (younger-age group). RESULTS: In European-ancestral individuals, the predicted 5-year risk calibrated well [E/O = 1.01; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.91-1.13] and had high discriminatory accuracy (AUC = 0.73; 95% CI, 0.71-0.76). Adding the PRS to a model with age, sex, family and endoscopy history improved the 5-year AUC by 0.06 (P < 0.001) and 0.14 (P = 0.05) in the screening-eligible age and younger-age groups, respectively. Using a risk-threshold of 5-year SEER colorectal cancer incidence rate at age 50 years, adding the PRS had a similar sensitivity but improved the specificity by 11% (P < 0.001) in the screening-eligible age group. In the younger-age group it improved the sensitivity by 27% (P = 0.04) with similar specificity. CONCLUSIONS: The proposed PRS-enhanced model provides a well-calibrated 5-year colorectal cancer risk prediction and improves discriminatory accuracy in the external cohort. IMPACT: The proposed model has potential utility in risk-stratified colorectal cancer prevention.
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    Variance of age-specific log incidence decomposition (VALID): a unifying model of measured and unmeasured genetic and non-genetic risks
    Hopper, JL ; Dowty, JG ; Nguyen, TL ; Li, S ; Dite, GS ; MacInnis, RJ ; Makalic, E ; Schmidt, DF ; Bui, M ; Stone, J ; Sung, J ; Jenkins, MA ; Giles, GG ; Southey, MC ; Mathews, JD (OXFORD UNIV PRESS, 2023-10-05)
    BACKGROUND: The extent to which known and unknown factors explain how much people of the same age differ in disease risk is fundamental to epidemiology. Risk factors can be correlated in relatives, so familial aspects of risk (genetic and non-genetic) must be considered. DEVELOPMENT: We present a unifying model (VALID) for variance in risk, with risk defined as log(incidence) or logit(cumulative incidence). Consider a normally distributed risk score with incidence increasing exponentially as the risk increases. VALID's building block is variance in risk, Δ2, where Δ = log(OPERA) is the difference in mean between cases and controls and OPERA is the odds ratio per standard deviation. A risk score correlated r between a pair of relatives generates a familial odds ratio of exp(rΔ2). Familial risk ratios, therefore, can be converted into variance components of risk, extending Fisher's classic decomposition of familial variation to binary traits. Under VALID, there is a natural upper limit to variance in risk caused by genetic factors, determined by the familial odds ratio for genetically identical twin pairs, but not to variation caused by non-genetic factors. APPLICATION: For female breast cancer, VALID quantified how much variance in risk is explained-at different ages-by known and unknown major genes and polygenes, non-genomic risk factors correlated in relatives, and known individual-specific factors. CONCLUSION: VALID has shown that, while substantial genetic risk factors have been discovered, much is unknown about genetic and familial aspects of breast cancer risk especially for young women, and little is known about individual-specific variance in risk.
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    Genome-wide Interaction Study with Smoking for Colorectal Cancer Risk Identifies Novel Genetic Loci Related to Tumor Suppression, Inflammation, and Immune Response
    Carreras-Torres, R ; Kim, AE ; Lin, Y ; Diez-Obrero, V ; Bien, SA ; Qu, C ; Wang, J ; Dimou, N ; Aglago, EK ; Albanes, D ; Arndt, V ; Baurley, JW ; Berndt, SI ; Bezieau, S ; Bishop, DT ; Bouras, E ; Brenner, H ; Budiarto, A ; Campbell, PT ; Casey, G ; Chan, AT ; Chang-Claude, J ; Chen, X ; Conti, D ; Dampier, CH ; Devall, MAM ; Drew, DA ; Figueiredo, JC ; Gallinger, S ; Giles, GG ; Gruber, SB ; Gsur, A ; Gunter, MJ ; Harrison, TA ; Hidaka, A ; Hoffmeister, M ; Huyghe, JR ; Jenkins, MA ; Jordahl, KM ; Kawaguchi, E ; Keku, TO ; Kundaje, A ; Le Marchand, L ; Lewinger, JP ; Li, L ; Mahesworo, B ; Morrison, JL ; Murphy, N ; Nan, H ; Nassir, R ; Newcomb, PA ; Obon-Santacana, M ; Ogino, S ; Ose, J ; Pai, RK ; Palmer, JR ; Papadimitriou, N ; Pardamean, B ; Peoples, AR ; Pharoah, PDP ; Platz, EA ; Rennert, G ; Ruiz-Narvaez, E ; Sakoda, LC ; Scacheri, PC ; Schmit, SL ; Schoen, RE ; Shcherbina, A ; Slattery, ML ; Stern, MC ; Su, Y-R ; Tangen, CM ; Thomas, DC ; Tian, Y ; Tsilidis, KK ; Ulrich, CM ; van Duijnhoven, FJB ; Van Guelpen, B ; Visvanathan, K ; Vodicka, P ; Cenggoro, TW ; Weinstein, SJ ; White, E ; Wolk, A ; Woods, MO ; Hsu, L ; Peters, U ; Moreno, V ; Gauderman, WJ (AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH, 2023-03)
    BACKGROUND: Tobacco smoking is an established risk factor for colorectal cancer. However, genetically defined population subgroups may have increased susceptibility to smoking-related effects on colorectal cancer. METHODS: A genome-wide interaction scan was performed including 33,756 colorectal cancer cases and 44,346 controls from three genetic consortia. RESULTS: Evidence of an interaction was observed between smoking status (ever vs. never smokers) and a locus on 3p12.1 (rs9880919, P = 4.58 × 10-8), with higher associated risk in subjects carrying the GG genotype [OR, 1.25; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.20-1.30] compared with the other genotypes (OR <1.17 for GA and AA). Among ever smokers, we observed interactions between smoking intensity (increase in 10 cigarettes smoked per day) and two loci on 6p21.33 (rs4151657, P = 1.72 × 10-8) and 8q24.23 (rs7005722, P = 2.88 × 10-8). Subjects carrying the rs4151657 TT genotype showed higher risk (OR, 1.12; 95% CI, 1.09-1.16) compared with the other genotypes (OR <1.06 for TC and CC). Similarly, higher risk was observed among subjects carrying the rs7005722 AA genotype (OR, 1.17; 95% CI, 1.07-1.28) compared with the other genotypes (OR <1.13 for AC and CC). Functional annotation revealed that SNPs in 3p12.1 and 6p21.33 loci were located in regulatory regions, and were associated with expression levels of nearby genes. Genetic models predicting gene expression revealed that smoking parameters were associated with lower colorectal cancer risk with higher expression levels of CADM2 (3p12.1) and ATF6B (6p21.33). CONCLUSIONS: Our study identified novel genetic loci that may modulate the risk for colorectal cancer of smoking status and intensity, linked to tumor suppression and immune response. IMPACT: These findings can guide potential prevention treatments.
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    Genome-Wide Interaction Analysis of Genetic Variants With Menopausal Hormone Therapy for Colorectal Cancer Risk
    Tian, Y ; Kim, AE ; Bien, SA ; Lin, Y ; Qu, C ; Harrison, TA ; Carreras-Torres, R ; Diez-Obrero, V ; Dimou, N ; Drew, DA ; Hidaka, A ; Huyghe, JR ; Jordahl, KM ; Morrison, J ; Murphy, N ; Obon-Santacana, M ; Ulrich, CM ; Ose, J ; Peoples, AR ; Ruiz-Narvaez, EA ; Shcherbina, A ; Stern, MC ; Su, Y-R ; van Duijnhoven, FJB ; Arndt, V ; Baurley, JW ; Berndt, S ; Bishop, DT ; Brenner, H ; Buchanan, DD ; Chan, AT ; Figueiredo, JC ; Gallinger, S ; Gruber, SB ; Harlid, S ; Hoffmeister, M ; Jenkins, MA ; Joshi, AD ; Keku, TO ; Larsson, SC ; Le Marchand, L ; Li, L ; Giles, GG ; Milne, RL ; Nan, H ; Nassir, R ; Ogino, S ; Budiarto, A ; Platz, EA ; Potter, JD ; Prentice, RL ; Rennert, G ; Sakoda, LC ; Schoen, RE ; Slattery, ML ; Thibodeau, SN ; Van Guelpen, B ; Visvanathan, K ; White, E ; Wolk, A ; Woods, MO ; Wu, AH ; Campbell, PT ; Casey, G ; Conti, D ; Gunter, MJ ; Kundaje, A ; Lewinger, JP ; Moreno, V ; Newcomb, PA ; Pardamean, B ; Thomas, DC ; Tsilidis, KK ; Peters, U ; Gauderman, WJ ; Hsu, L ; Chang-Claude, J (OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC, 2022-08-08)
    BACKGROUND: The use of menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) may interact with genetic variants to influence colorectal cancer (CRC) risk. METHODS: We conducted a genome-wide, gene-environment interaction between single nucleotide polymorphisms and the use of any MHT, estrogen only, and combined estrogen-progestogen therapy with CRC risk, among 28 486 postmenopausal women (11 519 CRC patients and 16 967 participants without CRC) from 38 studies, using logistic regression, 2-step method, and 2- or 3-degree-of-freedom joint test. A set-based score test was applied for rare genetic variants. RESULTS: The use of any MHT, estrogen only and estrogen-progestogen were associated with a reduced CRC risk (odds ratio [OR] = 0.71, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.64 to 0.78; OR = 0.65, 95% CI = 0.53 to 0.79; and OR = 0.73, 95% CI = 0.59 to 0.90, respectively). The 2-step method identified a statistically significant interaction between a GRIN2B variant rs117868593 and MHT use, whereby MHT-associated CRC risk was statistically significantly reduced in women with the GG genotype (OR = 0.68, 95% CI = 0.64 to 0.72) but not within strata of GC or CC genotypes. A statistically significant interaction between a DCBLD1 intronic variant at 6q22.1 (rs10782186) and MHT use was identified by the 2-degree-of-freedom joint test. The MHT-associated CRC risk was reduced with increasing number of rs10782186-C alleles, showing odds ratios of 0.78 (95% CI = 0.70 to 0.87) for TT, 0.68 (95% CI = 0.63 to 0.73) for TC, and 0.66 (95% CI = 0.60 to 0.74) for CC genotypes. In addition, 5 genes in rare variant analysis showed suggestive interactions with MHT (2-sided P < 1.2 × 10-4). CONCLUSION: Genetic variants that modify the association between MHT and CRC risk were identified, offering new insights into pathways of CRC carcinogenesis and potential mechanisms involved.
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    Genetic variants associated with circulating C-reactive protein levels and colorectal cancer survival: Sex-specific and lifestyle factors specific associations
    Huang, Y ; Hua, X ; Labadie, JD ; Harrison, TA ; Dai, JY ; Lindstrom, S ; Lin, Y ; Berndt, S ; Buchanan, DD ; Campbell, PT ; Casey, G ; Gallinger, SJ ; Gunter, MJ ; Hoffmeister, M ; Jenkins, MA ; Sakoda, LC ; Schoen, RE ; Diergaarde, B ; Slattery, ML ; White, E ; Giles, G ; Brenner, H ; Chang-Claude, J ; Joshi, A ; Ma, W ; Pai, RK ; Chan, AT ; Peters, U ; Newcomb, PA (WILEY, 2022-05-01)
    Elevated blood levels of C-reactive protein (CRP) have been linked to colorectal cancer (CRC) survival. We evaluated genetic variants associated with CRP levels and their interactions with sex and lifestyle factors in association with CRC-specific mortality. Our study included 16 142 CRC cases from the International Survival Analysis in Colorectal Cancer Consortium. We identified 618 common single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with CRP levels from the NHGRI-EBI GWAS Catalog. Cox proportional hazards regression was used to estimate hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for associations between SNPs and CRC-specific mortality adjusting for age, sex, genotyping platform/study and principal components. We investigated their interactions with sex and lifestyle factors using likelihood ratio tests. Of 5472 (33.9%) deaths accrued over up to 10 years of follow-up, 3547 (64.8%) were due to CRC. No variants were associated with CRC-specific mortality after multiple comparison correction. We observed strong evidence of interaction between variant rs1933736 at FRK gene and sex in relation to CRC-specific mortality (corrected Pinteraction  = .0004); women had higher CRC-specific mortality associated with the minor allele (HR = 1.11, 95% CI = 1.04-1.19) whereas an inverse association was observed for men (HR = 0.88, 95% CI = 0.82-0.94). There was no evidence of interactions between CRP-associated SNPs and alcohol, obesity or smoking. Our study observed a significant interaction between sex and a CRP-associated variant in relation to CRC-specific mortality. Future replication of this association and functional annotation of the variant are needed.