Literature DB >> 23903690

Joint effects between five identified risk variants, allergy, and autoimmune conditions on glioma risk.

Mahboobeh Safaeian1, Preetha Rajaraman, Patricia Hartge, Meredith Yeager, Martha Linet, Mary Ann Butler, Avima M Ruder, Mark P Purdue, Ann Hsing, Laura Beane-Freeman, Jane A Hoppin, Demetrius Albanes, Stephanie J Weinstein, Peter D Inskip, Alina Brenner, Nathaniel Rothman, Nilanjan Chatterjee, Elizabeth M Gillanders, Stephen J Chanock, Sophia S Wang.   

Abstract

Common variants in two of the five genetic regions recently identified from genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of risk of glioma were reported to interact with a history of allergic symptoms. In a pooled analysis of five epidemiologic studies, we evaluated the association between the five GWAS implicated gene variants and allergies and autoimmune conditions (AIC) on glioma risk (851 adult glioma cases and 3,977 controls). We further evaluated the joint effects between allergies and AIC and these gene variants on glioma risk. Risk estimates were calculated as odds ratios (OR) and 95 % confidence intervals (95 % CI), adjusted for age, gender, and study. Joint effects were evaluated by conducting stratified analyses whereby the risk associations (OR and 95 % CI) with the allergy or autoimmune conditions for glioma were evaluated by the presence or absence of the 'at-risk' variant, and estimated p interaction by fitting models with the main effects of allergy or autoimmune conditions and genotype and an interaction (product) term between them. Four of the five SNPs previously reported by others were statistically significantly associated with increased risk of glioma in our study (rs2736100, rs4295627, rs4977756, and rs6010620); rs498872 was not associated with glioma in our study. Reporting any allergies or AIC was associated with reduced risks of glioma (allergy: adjusted OR = 0.71, 95 % CI 0.55-0.91; AIC: adjusted OR = 0.65, 95 % CI 0.47-0.90). We did not observe differential association between allergic or autoimmune conditions and glioma by genotype, and there were no statistically significant p interactions. Stratified analysis by glioma grade (low and high grade) did not suggest risk differences by disease grade. Our results do not provide evidence that allergies or AIC modulate the association between the four GWAS-identified SNPs examined and risk of glioma.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23903690      PMCID: PMC4074857          DOI: 10.1007/s10552-013-0244-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Causes Control        ISSN: 0957-5243            Impact factor:   2.506


  25 in total

1.  Asthma cases attributable to atopy: results from the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey.

Authors:  Samuel J Arbes; Peter J Gergen; Ben Vaughn; Darryl C Zeldin
Journal:  J Allergy Clin Immunol       Date:  2007-09-24       Impact factor: 10.793

Review 2.  Brain tumor epidemiology: consensus from the Brain Tumor Epidemiology Consortium.

Authors:  Melissa L Bondy; Michael E Scheurer; Beatrice Malmer; Jill S Barnholtz-Sloan; Faith G Davis; Dora Il'yasova; Carol Kruchko; Bridget J McCarthy; Preetha Rajaraman; Judith A Schwartzbaum; Siegal Sadetzki; Brigitte Schlehofer; Tarik Tihan; Joseph L Wiemels; Margaret Wrensch; Patricia A Buffler
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  2008-10-01       Impact factor: 6.860

3.  Rheumatoid arthritis among women in the Agricultural Health Study: risk associated with farming activities and exposures.

Authors:  Anneclaire J De Roos; Glinda S Cooper; Michael C Alavanja; Dale P Sandler
Journal:  Ann Epidemiol       Date:  2005-11       Impact factor: 3.797

4.  The Upper Midwest Health Study: a case-control study of primary intracranial gliomas in farm and rural residents.

Authors:  A M Ruder; M A Waters; T Carreón; M A Butler; K E Davis-King; G M Calvert; P A Schulte; E M Ward; L B Connally; J Lu; D Wall; Z Zivkovich; E F Heineman; J S Mandel; R F Morton; D J Reding; K D Rosenman
Journal:  J Agric Saf Health       Date:  2006-11

5.  IgE, allergy, and risk of glioma: update from the San Francisco Bay Area Adult Glioma Study in the temozolomide era.

Authors:  Joseph L Wiemels; David Wilson; Chirag Patil; Joseph Patoka; Lucie McCoy; Terri Rice; Judith Schwartzbaum; Amy Heimberger; John H Sampson; Susan Chang; Michael Prados; John K Wiencke; Margaret Wrensch
Journal:  Int J Cancer       Date:  2009-08-01       Impact factor: 7.396

6.  Atopy and risk of brain tumors: a meta-analysis.

Authors:  Eleni Linos; Tim Raine; Alvaro Alonso; Dominique Michaud
Journal:  J Natl Cancer Inst       Date:  2007-10-09       Impact factor: 13.506

7.  Aggregation of cancer in first-degree relatives of patients with glioma.

Authors:  Michael E Scheurer; Carol J Etzel; Mei Liu; Randa El-Zein; Gladstone E Airewele; Beatrice Malmer; Kenneth D Aldape; Jeffrey S Weinberg; W K Alfred Yung; Melissa L Bondy
Journal:  Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev       Date:  2007-11       Impact factor: 4.254

8.  Allergic conditions and brain tumor risk.

Authors:  Annette Wigertz; Stefan Lönn; Judith Schwartzbaum; Per Hall; Anssi Auvinen; Helle Collatz Christensen; Christoffer Johansen; Lars Klaeboe; Tiina Salminen; Minouk J Schoemaker; Anthony J Swerdlow; Tore Tynes; Maria Feychting
Journal:  Am J Epidemiol       Date:  2007-07-23       Impact factor: 4.897

9.  Multiple loci identified in a genome-wide association study of prostate cancer.

Authors:  Gilles Thomas; Kevin B Jacobs; Meredith Yeager; Peter Kraft; Sholom Wacholder; Nick Orr; Kai Yu; Nilanjan Chatterjee; Robert Welch; Amy Hutchinson; Andrew Crenshaw; Geraldine Cancel-Tassin; Brian J Staats; Zhaoming Wang; Jesus Gonzalez-Bosquet; Jun Fang; Xiang Deng; Sonja I Berndt; Eugenia E Calle; Heather Spencer Feigelson; Michael J Thun; Carmen Rodriguez; Demetrius Albanes; Jarmo Virtamo; Stephanie Weinstein; Fredrick R Schumacher; Edward Giovannucci; Walter C Willett; Olivier Cussenot; Antoine Valeri; Gerald L Andriole; E David Crawford; Margaret Tucker; Daniela S Gerhard; Joseph F Fraumeni; Robert Hoover; Richard B Hayes; David J Hunter; Stephen J Chanock
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2008-02-10       Impact factor: 38.330

10.  Variants in the CDKN2B and RTEL1 regions are associated with high-grade glioma susceptibility.

Authors:  Margaret Wrensch; Robert B Jenkins; Jeffrey S Chang; Ru-Fang Yeh; Yuanyuan Xiao; Paul A Decker; Karla V Ballman; Mitchel Berger; Jan C Buckner; Susan Chang; Caterina Giannini; Chandralekha Halder; Thomas M Kollmeyer; Matthew L Kosel; Daniel H LaChance; Lucie McCoy; Brian P O'Neill; Joe Patoka; Alexander R Pico; Michael Prados; Charles Quesenberry; Terri Rice; Amanda L Rynearson; Ivan Smirnov; Tarik Tihan; Joe Wiemels; Ping Yang; John K Wiencke
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2009-07-05       Impact factor: 38.330

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  15 in total

1.  Effect of CDKN2A/B rs4977756 polymorphism on glioma risk: a meta-analysis of 16 studies including 24077 participants.

Authors:  Xuchen Qi; Yingfeng Wan; Qitao Zhan; Shuxu Yang; Yirong Wang; Xiujun Cai
Journal:  Mamm Genome       Date:  2015-11-17       Impact factor: 2.957

2.  The CDKN2A-CDKN2B rs4977756 polymorphism and glioma risk: a meta-analysis.

Authors:  Hongwei Lu; Yuantao Yang; Jihui Wang; Yang Liu; Ming Huang; Xinlin Sun; Yiquan Ke
Journal:  Int J Clin Exp Med       Date:  2015-10-15

3.  Allergic conditions reduce the risk of glioma: a meta-analysis based on 128,936 subjects.

Authors:  Hongyu Zhao; Weisong Cai; Shitao Su; Debao Zhi; Jie Lu; Shuo Liu
Journal:  Tumour Biol       Date:  2013-12-18

Review 4.  The role of the RTEL1 rs2297440 polymorphism in the risk of glioma development: a meta-analysis.

Authors:  Cuiping Zhang; Yu Lu; Xiaolian Zhang; Dongmei Yang; Shuxin Shang; Denghe Liu; Kongmei Jiang; Weiqiang Huang
Journal:  Neurol Sci       Date:  2016-03-03       Impact factor: 3.307

5.  Telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) rs2736100 polymorphism contributes to increased risk of glioma: evidence from a meta-analysis.

Authors:  Zesheng Peng; Daofeng Tian; Qianxue Chen; Shenqi Zhang; Baohui Liu; Baowei Ji
Journal:  Int J Clin Exp Med       Date:  2015-01-15

6.  Association of the CCDC26 rs4295627 polymorphism with the risk of glioma: Evidence from 7,290 cases and 11,630 controls.

Authors:  Xiangsheng Wang; Tong Luo; Mingjun Ruan; Pan Liu; Shiying Wang; Wenhao Zhu
Journal:  Mol Clin Oncol       Date:  2016-03-09

Review 7.  Genome-Wide Association Studies in Glioma.

Authors:  Ben Kinnersley; Richard S Houlston; Melissa L Bondy
Journal:  Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev       Date:  2018-01-30       Impact factor: 4.254

8.  An Updated and Comprehensive Meta-Analysis of Association Between Seven Hot Loci Polymorphisms from Eight GWAS and Glioma Risk.

Authors:  Qiang Wu; Yanyan Peng; Xiaotao Zhao
Journal:  Mol Neurobiol       Date:  2015-08-05       Impact factor: 5.590

9.  Partitioned glioma heritability shows subtype-specific enrichment in immune cells.

Authors:  Quinn T Ostrom; Jacob Edelson; Jinyoung Byun; Younghun Han; Ben Kinnersley; Beatrice Melin; Richard S Houlston; Michelle Monje; Kyle M Walsh; Christopher I Amos; Melissa L Bondy
Journal:  Neuro Oncol       Date:  2021-08-02       Impact factor: 12.300

Review 10.  Evidence from a large-scale meta-analysis indicates eczema reduces the incidence of glioma.

Authors:  Guannan Wang; Suling Xu; Chao Cao; Jing Dong; Yudong Chu; Guijuan He; Zhiwei Xu
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2016-09-20
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