| Literature DB >> 27565901 |
Verena Zuber1, Crystal N Marconett1, Jianxin Shi1, Xing Hua1, William Wheeler1, Chenchen Yang1, Lei Song1, Anders M Dale1, Marina Laplana1, Angela Risch1, Aree Witoelar1, Wesley K Thompson1, Andrew J Schork1, Francesco Bettella1, Yunpeng Wang1, Srdjan Djurovic1, Beiyun Zhou1, Zea Borok1, Henricus F M van der Heijden1, Jacqueline de Graaf1, Dorine Swinkels1, Katja K Aben1, James McKay1, Rayjean J Hung1, Heike Bikeböller1, Victoria L Stevens1, Demetrius Albanes1, Neil E Caporaso1, Younghun Han1, Yongyue Wei1, Maria Angeles Panadero1, Jose I Mayordomo1, David C Christiani1, Lambertus Kiemeney1, Ole A Andreassen1, Richard Houlston1, Christopher I Amos1, Nilanjan Chatterjee1, Ite A Laird-Offringa1, Ian G Mills1, Maria Teresa Landi1.
Abstract
Epidemiologically related traits may share genetic risk factors, and pleiotropic analysis could identify individual loci associated with these traits. Because of their shared epidemiological associations, we conducted pleiotropic analysis of genome-wide association studies of lung cancer (12 160 lung cancer case patients and 16 838 control subjects) and cardiovascular disease risk factors (blood lipids from 188 577 subjects, type 2 diabetes from 148 821 subjects, body mass index from 123 865 subjects, and smoking phenotypes from 74 053 subjects). We found that 6p22.1 (rs6904596, ZNF184) was associated with both lung cancer (P = 5.50x10(-6)) and blood triglycerides (P = 1.39x10(-5)). We replicated the association in 6097 lung cancer case patients and 204 657 control subjects (P = 2.40 × 10(-4)) and in 71 113 subjects with triglycerides data (P = .01). rs6904596 reached genome-wide significance in lung cancer meta-analysis (odds ratio = 1.15, 95% confidence interval = 1.10 to 1.21 ,: Pcombined = 5.20x10(-9)). The large sample size provided by the lipid GWAS data and the shared genetic risk factors between the two traits contributed to the uncovering of a hitherto unidentified genetic locus for lung cancer. Published by Oxford University Press 2016. This work is written by US Government employees and is in the public domain in the United States.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27565901 PMCID: PMC5241892 DOI: 10.1093/jnci/djw167
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Natl Cancer Inst ISSN: 0027-8874 Impact factor: 13.506