| Literature DB >> 18271972 |
Kristjana Einarsdóttir1, Hatef Darabi, Yi Li, Yen Ling Low, Yu Qing Li, Carine Bonnard, Arvid Sjölander, Kamila Czene, Sara Wedrén, Edison T Liu, Per Hall, Keith Humphreys, Jianjun Liu.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Oestrogen exposure is a central factor in the development of breast cancer. Oestrogen receptor alpha (ESR1) is the main mediator of oestrogen effect in breast epithelia and has also been shown to be activated by epidermal growth factor (EGF). We sought to determine if common genetic variation in the ESR1 and EGF genes affects breast cancer risk, tumour characteristics or breast cancer survival.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18271972 PMCID: PMC2374971 DOI: 10.1186/bcr1861
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Breast Cancer Res ISSN: 1465-5411 Impact factor: 6.466
Selected characteristics of the cases and controls participating in the present and parent breast cancer study
| Present | Parent | |||
| Characteristic | No. of cases/controls | Cases/controls | No. of cases/controls | Cases/controls |
| Mean: | Mean: | |||
| Age (years) | 1,590/1,518 | 63.4/63.1 | 2,817/3,111 | 63.4/64.3 |
| Age at menopause (years) | 1,580/1,505 | 50.4/50.0 | 2,802/3,093 | 50.4/50.0 |
| Recent BMI (kg/m2)a | 1,581/1,497 | 25.8/25.5 | 2,802/3,065 | 25.8/25.5 |
| Age at first birth (years) | 1,352/1,370 | 25.4/24.7 | 2,373/2,753 | 25.3/24.6 |
| Parity | 1,590/1,518 | 1.8/2.2 | 2,817/3,110 | 1.8/2.1 |
| Duration of menopausal hormone use (years) | Percentage: | Percentage: | ||
| 0 | 1,058/1,086 | 67.2/72.7 | 1,978/2,467 | 71.4/80.8 |
| < 4 | 206/190 | 13.1/12.7 | 405/330 | 14.6/10.8 |
| ≥ 4 | 311b/217b | 19.8b/14.5b | 389/256 | 14.0/8.4 |
| Self-reported diabetes mellitus (yes/no) | 1,588/1,402 | 9.0b/7.8b | 2,810/2,652 | 6/6.1 |
| Family history (yes/no)c | 1,551/1,380 | 16.1/9.3 | 2,744/2,607 | 16.0/9.2 |
| High NPI (≤ 4/> 4) | 975/- | 55.7/- | -/- | |
BMI, body mass index; NPI, Nottingham Prognostic Index. a At 1 year prior to diagnosis. b Long-term users of menopausal hormones and women with diabetes mellitus were oversampled. c Family history is defined as having at least one first degree relative with breast cancer.
Summary statistics on genotyping results and SNP coverage in ESR1 and EGF for 92 Swedish controls
| Summary statistics | ||
| Number of successfully genotyped SNPs | 228a | 104b |
| Number of polymorphic SNPs | 184 | 66 |
| Number of common SNPsc | 165 | 55 |
| Number of SNPs deviating from HWEd | 8 | 1 |
| Number of SNPs included in study | 157 | 54 |
| Gene size (kb) | 295.7 | 99.4 |
| Sequence coverage of included SNPs (kb) | 335.1 | 145.5 |
| Mean spacing between included SNPs (kb) | 2.1 | 2.7 |
| Median spacing between included SNPs (kb) | 1.8 | 2.3 |
| Number of tagSNPs selected | 52 | 15 |
| Average tagSNP prediction of common SNPs included in study ( | 0.998 | 0.987 |
| Coverage evaluatione | ||
| Average prediction of dropped SNPs ( | 0.997 | 0.948 |
| Percentage of | 100 | 96.3 |
HWE, Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium; SNP, single nucleotide polymorphism. a See Supplementary Table 1. b See Supplementary Table 2. c Common was defined as minor allele frequency ≥ 0.03. d p < 0.01. e SNP dropping method by Weale et al. [14].
Figure 1Association of 52 tagging single nucleotide polymorphisms (tagSNPs) in ESR1 with breast cancer risk, Nottingham Prognostic Index (NPI) and breast cancer survival. Left column: breast cancer risk. Middle column: NPI (case-only analysis). Right column: breast cancer survival. Squares and horizontal lines represent odds and hazard (survival analysis) ratios (change in risk with each addition of the rare allele) and their confidence intervals. Sizes of the squares reflect the minor allele frequencies. NPI was categorised into ≤ 4 or > 4.
Association between haplotypes reconstructed from ESR1 TAGs 26–30 and breast cancer risk
| Haplotype proportions | ||||
| TAGs 26–30 | Haplotypes | Cases ( | Controls ( | OR (95% CI) |
| Haplotype 1 | ACAAC | 0.57 | 0.56 | 1.00 (Reference) |
| Haplotype 2 | GTGGT | 0.09 | 0.10 | 0.91 (0.76–1.09) |
| Haplotype 3 | ACAGC | 0.06 | 0.06 | 1.05 (0.84–1.31) |
| Haplotype 4 | ATGGT | 0.06 | 0.06 | 0.89 (0.70–1.13) |
| Haplotype 5 | ATGGC | 0.06 | 0.05 | 1.05 (0.82–1.35) |
| Haplotype 6 | GTGGC | 0.05 | 0.03 | 1.46 (1.08–1.98) |
| Haplotype 7 | GTAAC | 0.03 | 0.04 | 0.72 (0.55–0.96) |
| Rareb | 0.08 | 0.08 | 0.94 (0.76–1.15) | |
| Global p valuec | 0.0493 | |||
CI, confidence interval; SNP, single nucleotide polymorphism. a Information on at least one of the five tagSNPs. b Total of 18 rare haplotypes combined. Each haplotype has frequency below 3% among the controls. c Likelihood ratio test.
Association of three haplotypes (TAGs 18–27) in ESR1 with breast cancer risk, as implicated by the variable-sized sliding-window analysis
| tagSNPs | Haplotype | Frequency in cases | Frequency in controls | OR (95% CI) | p Valuea |
| TAG18–21 | ACAC | 0.0798 | 0.0595 | 1.39 (1.13–1.69) | 0.0014 |
| TAG18–24 | ACAGCGC | 0.0456 | 0.0562 | 0.70 (0.56–0.88) | 0.0019 |
| TAG18–27 | GCAGCGCGGT | 0.0697 | 0.0813 | 0.85 (0.70–1.03) | 0.0933 |
CI, confidence interval; SNP, single nucleotide polymorphism. a One vs the others Chi-squared test.