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Runs of homozygosity and testicular cancer risk

Authors :
Loveday, C
Sud, A
Litchfield, K
Levy, M
Holroyd, A
Broderick, P
Kote-Jarai, Z
Dunning, AM
Muir, K
Peto, J
Eeles, R
Easton, DF
Dudakia, D
Orr, N
Pashayan, N
Rustin, Gordon
Srihari, Narayanan N
Cole, David
Askill, Colin
Bertelli, Gianfilippo
Barber, James
Gilby, Ed
White, Jeff
Baybrooke, Jeremy
Leahy, Michael
Welch, Richard
Chakraborti, Prabir
Joffe, Johnathan
Brown, Richard
Faust, Guy
Simmonds, Peter
Mazhar, Danish
Stockdale, Andrew
Hrounda, David
Humber, Caroline
Appel, Wiebke
Hong, Anne
Howard, Grahame
Douglas, Fiona
Bloomfield, David
Butt, Mohammad
Kelly, Kay
Mehra, Rakesh
Rogers, Paul
Hatton, Matthew
Hennig, Ivo
McAteer, John
Savage, Philip
Seckl, Michael
Gale, Joanna
Clark, Peter
Woby, Steve
Rathmell, Adrian
Lamont, Alan
Sarwar, Naveed
Stuart, Nick
Chowdhury, Simon
Beesley, Sharon
Winkler, Mathius
Hamid, Abdel
Pathak, Sanjeev
Madhavan, Krishnaswamy
Highley, Martin
Money-Kryle, Julian
Brock, Cathryn
Sreenivasan, Thiagarajan
Henderson, Brian E
Haiman, Christopher A
Schumacher, Fredrick R
Al Olama, Ali Amin
Benlloch, Sara
Berndt, Sonja I
Conti, David V
Wiklund, Fredrik
Chanock, Stephen
Gapster, Susan
Stevens, Victoria L
Tangen, Catherine M
Batra, Jyotsna
Clements, Judith
Gronberg, Henrik
Schleutker, Johanna
Albanes, Demetrius
Wolk, Alicja
West, Catharine
Mucci, Lorelei
Cancel-Tassin, Geraldine
Koutros, Stella
Sorensen, Karina Dalsgaard
Maehle, Lovise
Neal, David E
Hamdy, Freddie C
Donovan, Jenny L
Travis, Ruth C
Hamilton, Robert J
Ingles, Sue Ann
Rosenstein, Barry S
Lu, Yong-Jie
Giles, Graham G
Kibel, Adam S
Vega, Ana
Kogevinas, Manolis
Penney, Kathryn L
Park, Jong Y
Stanford, Janet L
Cybulski, Cezary
Nordestgaard, Borge G
Brenner, Hermann
Maier, Christiane
Kim, Jeri
John, Esther M
Teixeira, Manuel R
Neuhausen, Susan L
De Ruyck, Kim
Razack, Azad
Newcomb, Lisa F
Lessel, Davor
Kaneva, Radka
Usmani, Nawaid
Claessens, Frank
Townsend, Paul A
Dominguez, Manuela Gago
Roobol, Monique J
Menegaux, Florence
Khaw, Kay-Tee
Cannon-Albrigh, Lisa
Pandha, Hardev
Thibodeau, Stephen N
Reid, A
Huddart, RA
Houlston, RS
Turnbull, C
Urology
Source :
Andrology, 7(4), 555-564. John Wiley & Sons Inc., Loveday, C, Sud, A, Litchfield, K, Levy, M, Holroyd, A, Broderick, P, Kote-Jarai, Z, Dunning, A M, Muir, K, Peto, J, Eeles, R, Easton, D F, Dudakia, D, Orr, N, Pashayan, N, UK Testicular Cancer Collaboration, The PRACTICAL Consortium, Reid, A, Huddart, R A, Houlston, R S & Turnbull, C 2019, ' Runs of homozygosity and testicular cancer risk ', Andrology, vol. 7, no. 4, pp. 555-564 . https://doi.org/10.1111/andr.12667
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
John Wiley & Sons Inc., 2019.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Testicular germ cell tumour (TGCT) is highly heritable but > 50% of the genetic risk remains unexplained. Epidemiological observation of greater relative risk to brothers of men with TGCT compared to sons has long alluded to recessively acting TGCT genetic susceptibility factors, but to date none have been reported. Runs of homozygosity (RoH) are a signature indicating underlying recessively acting alleles and have been associated with increased risk of other cancer types. OBJECTIVE: To examine whether RoH are associated with TGCT risk. METHODS: We performed a genome-wide RoH analysis using GWAS data from 3206 TGCT cases and 7422 controls uniformly genotyped using the OncoArray platform. RESULTS: Global measures of homozygosity were not significantly different between cases and controls, and the frequency of individual consensus RoH was not significantly different between cases and controls, after correction for multiple testing. RoH at three regions, 11p13-11p14.3, 5q14.1-5q22.3 and 13q14.11-13q.14.13, were, however, nominally statistically significant at p

Details

ISSN :
20472927 and 20472919
Volume :
7
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Andrology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....eca70b655a6199ad5ef677dd979d72f1