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Quantifying the Genetic Correlation between Multiple Cancer Types.
Authors
Christopher I Amos
Laufey T Amundadottir
+30 more
Sonja Berndt
Brendan Bulik-Sullivan
Andrew Chan
Jenny Chang-Claude
David Conti
Douglas Easton
Rosalind Eeles
Hilary Finucane
Ellen L Goode
Stephen B Gruber
Christopher A Haiman
Li Hsu
Rayjean J Hung
David J Hunter
Jeroen R Huyghe
Alison Klein
Peter Kraft
Hui-Yi Lin
Sara Lindström
Benjamin Neale
GECCO and the GAME-ON Network: CORECT, DRIVE, ELLIPSE, FOCI, and TRICL-ILCCO PanScan
Jennifer B Permuth
Gloria Petersen
Alkes L Price
Kristin Rand
Harvey Risch
Fredrick R Schumacher
Thomas A Sellers
Rachael Stolzenberg-Solomon
Brian Wolpin
Publication date
22 June 2017
Publisher
Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev
Doi
Cite
Abstract
Background: Many cancers share specific genetic risk factors, including both rare high-penetrance mutations and common SNPs identified through genome-wide association studies (GWAS). However, little is known about the overall shared heritability across cancers. Quantifying the extent to which two distinct cancers share genetic origin will give insights to shared biological mechanisms underlying cancer and inform design for future genetic association studies.Methods: In this study, we estimated the pair-wise genetic correlation between six cancer types (breast, colorectal, lung, ovarian, pancreatic, and prostate) using cancer-specific GWAS summary statistics data based on 66,958 case and 70,665 control subjects of European ancestry. We also estimated genetic correlations between cancers and 14 noncancer diseases and traits.Results: After adjusting for 15 pair-wise genetic correlation tests between cancers, we found significant (P < 0.003) genetic correlations between pancreatic and colorectal cancer (rg = 0.55, P = 0.003), lung and colorectal cancer (rg = 0.31, P = 0.001). We also found suggestive genetic correlations between lung and breast cancer (rg = 0.27, P = 0.009), and colorectal and breast cancer (rg = 0.22, P = 0.01). In contrast, we found no evidence that prostate cancer shared an appreciable proportion of heritability with other cancers. After adjusting for 84 tests studying genetic correlations between cancer types and other traits (Bonferroni-corrected P value: 0.0006), only the genetic correlation between lung cancer and smoking remained significant (rg = 0.41, P = 1.03 × 10-6). We also observed nominally significant genetic correlations between body mass index and all cancers except ovarian cancer.Conclusions: Our results highlight novel genetic correlations and lend support to previous observational studies that have observed links between cancers and risk factors.Impact: This study demonstrates modest genetic correlations between cancers; in particular, breast, colorectal, and lung cancer share some degree of genetic basis. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev; 26(9); 1427-35. ©2017 AACR
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Last time updated on 05/12/2017