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MC1R variants increased the risk of sporadic cutaneous melanoma in darker-pigmented Caucasians: A pooled-analysis from the M-SKIP project

Authors :
Pasquali, E. García-Borrón, J.C. Fargnoli, M.C. Gandini, S. Maisonneuve, P. Bagnardi, V. Specchia, C. Liu, F. Kayser, M. Nijsten, T. Nagore, E. Kumar, R. Hansson, J. Kanetsky, P.A. Ghiorzo, P. Debniak, T. Branicki, W. Gruis, N.A. Han, J. Dwyer, T. Blizzard, L. Landi, M.T. Palmieri, G. Ribas, G. Stratigos, A. Council, M.L. Autier, P. Little, J. Newton-Bishop, J. Sera, F. Raimondi, S. Caini, S. Hofman, A. Uitterlinden, A.G. Scherer, D. Hoiom, V. Pastorino, L. Cochrane, J. Fernandez-De-Misa, R. Morling, N. Johansen, P. Pfeiffer, R. Kypreou, K. Bowcock, A. Cornelius, L. Motokawa, T. Anno, S. Helsing, P. Andresen, P.A. Wong, T.H. M-SKIP Study Group
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

The MC1R gene is a key regulator of skin pigmentation. We aimed to evaluate the association between MC1R variants and the risk of sporadic cutaneous melanoma (CM) within the M-SKIP project, an international pooled-analysis on MC1R, skin cancer and phenotypic characteristics. Data included 5,160 cases and 12,119 controls from 17 studies. We calculated a summary odds ratio (SOR) for the association of each of the nine most studied MC1R variants and of variants combined with CM by using random-effects models. Stratified analysis by phenotypic characteristics were also performed. Melanoma risk increased with presence of any of the main MC1R variants: the SOR for each variant ranged from 1.47 (95%CI: 1.17-1.84) for V60L to 2.74 (1.53-4.89) for D84E. Carriers of any MC1R variant had a 66% higher risk of developing melanoma compared with wildtype subjects (SOR; 95%CI: 1.66; 1.41-1.96) and the risk attributable to MC1R variants was 28%. When taking into account phenotypic characteristics, we found that MC1R-associated melanoma risk increased only for darker-pigmented Caucasians: SOR (95%CI) was 3.14 (2.06-4.80) for subjects with no freckles, no red hair and skin Type III/IV. Our study documents the important role of all the main MC1R variants in sporadic CM and suggests that they have a direct effect on melanoma risk, independently on the phenotypic characteristics of carriers. This is of particular importance for assessing preventive strategies, which may be directed to darker-pigmented Caucasians with MC1R variants as well as to lightly pigmented, fairskinned subjects. © 2014 UICC.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......2127..356636693b2a326514eaf5f3698e32ba