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Gene–Environment Interaction Involving Recently Identified Colorectal Cancer Susceptibility Loci
Authors
Andrew T. Chan
Anja Rudolph
+44 more
Bethann M. Pflugeisen
Bette J. Caan
Brent W. Zanke
Brian E. Henderson
Carolyn M. Hutter
Charles S. Fuchs
Christopher S. Carlson
Cornelia M. Ulrich
Daniela Seminara
David Duggan
Deanna L. Stelling
Edward L. Giovannucci
Elizabeth D. Kantor
Emily White
Fridtjof Thomas
Graham Casey
Greg S. Warnick
Heather M. Ochs-Balcom
Hermann Brenner
Jenny Chang-Claude
Jessica Minnier
Jian Gong
Jing Ma
John D. Potter
John L. Hopper
Laurence N. Kolonel
Li Hsu
Loic Le Marchand
Mark A. Jenkins
Mark Thornquist
Martha L. Slattery
Mathieu Lemire
Mengmeng Du
Michael Hoffmeister
Michelle Cotterchio
Peter T. Campbell
Polly A. Newcomb
Richard B. Hayes
Robert E. Schoen
Shuo Jiao
Sonja I. Berndt
Stephen J. Chanock
Tabitha A. Harrison
Ulrike Peters
Publication date
1 September 2014
Publisher
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)
Doi
Cite
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on
PubMed
Abstract
Abstract Background: Genome-wide association studies have identified several single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that are associated with risk of colorectal cancer. Prior research has evaluated the presence of gene–environment interaction involving the first 10 identified susceptibility loci, but little work has been conducted on interaction involving SNPs at recently identified susceptibility loci, including: rs10911251, rs6691170, rs6687758, rs11903757, rs10936599, rs647161, rs1321311, rs719725, rs1665650, rs3824999, rs7136702, rs11169552, rs59336, rs3217810, rs4925386, and rs2423279. Methods: Data on 9,160 cases and 9,280 controls from the Genetics and Epidemiology of Colorectal Cancer Consortium (GECCO) and Colon Cancer Family Registry (CCFR) were used to evaluate the presence of interaction involving the above-listed SNPs and sex, body mass index (BMI), alcohol consumption, smoking, aspirin use, postmenopausal hormone (PMH) use, as well as intake of dietary calcium, dietary fiber, dietary folate, red meat, processed meat, fruit, and vegetables. Interaction was evaluated using a fixed effects meta-analysis of an efficient Empirical Bayes estimator, and permutation was used to account for multiple comparisons. Results: None of the permutation-adjusted P values reached statistical significance. Conclusions: The associations between recently identified genetic susceptibility loci and colorectal cancer are not strongly modified by sex, BMI, alcohol, smoking, aspirin, PMH use, and various dietary factors. Impact: Results suggest no evidence of strong gene–environment interactions involving the recently identified 16 susceptibility loci for colorectal cancer taken one at a time. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev; 23(9); 1824–33. ©2014 AACR.</jats:p
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info:doi/10.1158%2F1055-9965.e...
Last time updated on 18/03/2019