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Adiposity, metabolites, and colorectal cancer risk : Mendelian randomization study

Authors :
Barbara L. Banbury
Christopher I. Li
Joshua A. Bell
Elizabeth A. Platz
Kenneth Offit
Stephen B. Gruber
Gad Rennert
Tabitha A. Harrison
Li Hsu
Emily White
Conghui Qu
Peter T. Campbell
Li Li
Nicholas J. Timpson
Sonja I. Berndt
Roger L. Milne
Jeroen R. Huyghe
Steven Gallinger
Pavel Vodicka
Anne M. May
Loic Le Marchand
Annika Lindblom
Graham Casey
Lori C. Sakoda
Wei Zheng
Fränzel J.B. van Duijnhoven
Corinne E. Joshu
Martha L. Slattery
Amanda I. Phipps
Bethany Van Guelpen
Marc J. Gunter
Hermann Brenner
John D. Potter
Vicente Martín
Andrew T. Chan
Temitope O. Keku
Ludmila Vodickova
D. Timothy Bishop
Graham G. Giles
Susan M. Gapstur
Daniel D. Buchanan
Hansong Wang
Catherine M. Tangen
Alicja Wolk
Michael O. Woods
Sun-Seog Kweon
Jane C. Figueiredo
Stéphane Bézieau
Caroline J. Bull
Wen-Yi Huang
Michael Hoffmeister
Cornelia M. Ulrich
Robert E. Schoen
Eleanor Sanderson
Demetrius Albanes
Victor Moreno
Jenny Chang-Claude
Tilman Kühn
Clemens Schafmayer
J. Ramón Quirós
Shuji Ogino
Polly A. Newcomb
Ulrike Peters
Elio Riboli
Jochen Hampe
Heather Hampel
Kala Visvanathan
Sergi Castellví-Bel
Anna H. Wu
Neil Murphy
Mark A. Jenkins
Kostas Tsilidis
Andrea Gsur
Andrea N. Burnett-Hartman
George Davey Smith
Albert de la Chapelle
Emma E. Vincent
Amanda J. Cross
Source :
BMC Medicine 18 (2020) 1, Dipòsit Digital de la UB, Universidad de Barcelona, BMC Medicine, Bull, C J, Bell, J A, Sanderson, E, Davey Smith, G, Timpson, N J, Gunter, M J & al., E 2020, ' Adiposity, metabolites, and colorectal cancer risk : Mendelian randomization study ', BMC Medicine, vol. 18, 396 (2020) . https://doi.org/10.1186/s12916-020-01855-9, BMC Medicine, Vol 18, Iss 1, Pp 1-16 (2020), BMC Medicine, 18(1)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background Higher adiposity increases the risk of colorectal cancer (CRC), but whether this relationship varies by anatomical sub-site or by sex is unclear. Further, the metabolic alterations mediating the effects of adiposity on CRC are not fully understood. Methods We examined sex- and site-specific associations of adiposity with CRC risk and whether adiposity-associated metabolites explain the associations of adiposity with CRC. Genetic variants from genome-wide association studies of body mass index (BMI) and waist-to-hip ratio (WHR, unadjusted for BMI; N = 806,810), and 123 metabolites from targeted nuclear magnetic resonance metabolomics (N = 24,925), were used as instruments. Sex-combined and sex-specific Mendelian randomization (MR) was conducted for BMI and WHR with CRC risk (58,221 cases and 67,694 controls in the Genetics and Epidemiology of Colorectal Cancer Consortium, Colorectal Cancer Transdisciplinary Study, and Colon Cancer Family Registry). Sex-combined MR was conducted for BMI and WHR with metabolites, for metabolites with CRC, and for BMI and WHR with CRC adjusted for metabolite classes in multivariable models. Results In sex-specific MR analyses, higher BMI (per 4.2 kg/m2) was associated with 1.23 (95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.08, 1.38) times higher CRC odds among men (inverse-variance-weighted (IVW) model); among women, higher BMI (per 5.2 kg/m2) was associated with 1.09 (95% CI = 0.97, 1.22) times higher CRC odds. WHR (per 0.07 higher) was more strongly associated with CRC risk among women (IVW OR = 1.25, 95% CI = 1.08, 1.43) than men (IVW OR = 1.05, 95% CI = 0.81, 1.36). BMI or WHR was associated with 104/123 metabolites at false discovery rate-corrected P ≤ 0.05; several metabolites were associated with CRC, but not in directions that were consistent with the mediation of positive adiposity-CRC relations. In multivariable MR analyses, associations of BMI and WHR with CRC were not attenuated following adjustment for representative metabolite classes, e.g., the univariable IVW OR for BMI with CRC was 1.12 (95% CI = 1.00, 1.26), and this became 1.11 (95% CI = 0.99, 1.26) when adjusting for cholesterol in low-density lipoprotein particles. Conclusions Our results suggest that higher BMI more greatly raises CRC risk among men, whereas higher WHR more greatly raises CRC risk among women. Adiposity was associated with numerous metabolic alterations, but none of these explained associations between adiposity and CRC. More detailed metabolomic measures are likely needed to clarify the mechanistic pathways.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17417015
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMC Medicine 18 (2020) 1, Dipòsit Digital de la UB, Universidad de Barcelona, BMC Medicine, Bull, C J, Bell, J A, Sanderson, E, Davey Smith, G, Timpson, N J, Gunter, M J & al., E 2020, ' Adiposity, metabolites, and colorectal cancer risk : Mendelian randomization study ', BMC Medicine, vol. 18, 396 (2020) . https://doi.org/10.1186/s12916-020-01855-9, BMC Medicine, Vol 18, Iss 1, Pp 1-16 (2020), BMC Medicine, 18(1)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....57ac1dc5327f394332b4f3e350bf0ac0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12916-020-01855-9