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Identification of novel genetic markers of breast cancer survival.

Authors :
Guo Q
Schmidt MK
Kraft P
Canisius S
Chen C
Khan S
Tyrer J
Bolla MK
Wang Q
Dennis J
Michailidou K
Lush M
Kar S
Beesley J
Dunning AM
Shah M
Czene K
Darabi H
Eriksson M
Lambrechts D
Weltens C
Leunen K
Bojesen SE
Nordestgaard BG
Nielsen SF
Flyger H
Chang-Claude J
Rudolph A
Seibold P
Flesch-Janys D
Blomqvist C
Aittomäki K
Fagerholm R
Muranen TA
Couch FJ
Olson JE
Vachon C
Andrulis IL
Knight JA
Glendon G
Mulligan AM
Broeks A
Hogervorst FB
Haiman CA
Henderson BE
Schumacher F
Le Marchand L
Hopper JL
Tsimiklis H
Apicella C
Southey MC
Cox A
Cross SS
Reed MW
Giles GG
Milne RL
McLean C
Winqvist R
Pylkäs K
Jukkola-Vuorinen A
Grip M
Hooning MJ
Hollestelle A
Martens JW
van den Ouweland AM
Marme F
Schneeweiss A
Yang R
Burwinkel B
Figueroa J
Chanock SJ
Lissowska J
Sawyer EJ
Tomlinson I
Kerin MJ
Miller N
Brenner H
Dieffenbach AK
Arndt V
Holleczek B
Mannermaa A
Kataja V
Kosma VM
Hartikainen JM
Li J
Brand JS
Humphreys K
Devilee P
Tollenaar RA
Seynaeve C
Radice P
Peterlongo P
Bonanni B
Mariani P
Fasching PA
Beckmann MW
Hein A
Ekici AB
Chenevix-Trench G
Balleine R
Phillips KA
Benitez J
Zamora MP
Arias Perez JI
Menéndez P
Jakubowska A
Lubinski J
Jaworska-Bieniek K
Durda K
Hamann U
Kabisch M
Ulmer HU
Rüdiger T
Margolin S
Kristensen V
Nord S
Evans DG
Abraham JE
Earl HM
Hiller L
Dunn JA
Bowden S
Berg C
Campa D
Diver WR
Gapstur SM
Gaudet MM
Hankinson SE
Hoover RN
Hüsing A
Kaaks R
Machiela MJ
Willett W
Barrdahl M
Canzian F
Chin SF
Caldas C
Hunter DJ
Lindstrom S
García-Closas M
Hall P
Easton DF
Eccles DM
Rahman N
Nevanlinna H
Pharoah PD
Source :
Journal of the National Cancer Institute [J Natl Cancer Inst] 2015 Apr 18; Vol. 107 (5). Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 Apr 18 (Print Publication: 2015).
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Background: Survival after a diagnosis of breast cancer varies considerably between patients, and some of this variation may be because of germline genetic variation. We aimed to identify genetic markers associated with breast cancer-specific survival.<br />Methods: We conducted a large meta-analysis of studies in populations of European ancestry, including 37954 patients with 2900 deaths from breast cancer. Each study had been genotyped for between 200000 and 900000 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) across the genome; genotypes for nine million common variants were imputed using a common reference panel from the 1000 Genomes Project. We also carried out subtype-specific analyses based on 6881 estrogen receptor (ER)-negative patients (920 events) and 23059 ER-positive patients (1333 events). All statistical tests were two-sided.<br />Results: We identified one new locus (rs2059614 at 11q24.2) associated with survival in ER-negative breast cancer cases (hazard ratio [HR] = 1.95, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.55 to 2.47, P = 1.91 x 10(-8)). Genotyping a subset of 2113 case patients, of which 300 were ER negative, provided supporting evidence for the quality of the imputation. The association in this set of case patients was stronger for the observed genotypes than for the imputed genotypes. A second locus (rs148760487 at 2q24.2) was associated at genome-wide statistical significance in initial analyses; the association was similar in ER-positive and ER-negative case patients. Here the results of genotyping suggested that the finding was less robust.<br />Conclusions: This is currently the largest study investigating genetic variation associated with breast cancer survival. Our results have potential clinical implications, as they confirm that germline genotype can provide prognostic information in addition to standard tumor prognostic factors.<br /> (© The Author 2015. Published by Oxford University Press.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1460-2105
Volume :
107
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of the National Cancer Institute
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
25890600
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/jnci/djv081