| Literature DB >> 32409115 |
Burcu F Darst1, Peggy Wan1, Xin Sheng1, Jeannette T Bensen2, Sue A Ingles3, Benjamin A Rybicki4, Barbara Nemesure5, Esther M John6, Jay H Fowke7, Victoria L Stevens8, Sonja I Berndt9, Chad D Huff10, Sara S Strom10, Jong Y Park11, Wei Zheng12, Elaine A Ostrander13, Patrick C Walsh14, Shiv Srivastava15, John Carpten16, Thomas A Sellers11, Kosj Yamoah17, Adam B Murphy18, Maureen Sanderson19, Dana C Crawford20, Susan M Gapstur8, William S Bush20, Melinda C Aldrich21, Olivier Cussenot22, Meredith Yeager9, Gyorgy Petrovics15, Jennifer Cullen15, Christine Neslund-Dudas4, Rick A Kittles23, Jianfeng Xu24, Mariana C Stern3, Zsofia Kote-Jarai25, Koveela Govindasami26, Anand P Chokkalingam27, Luc Multigner28, Marie-Elise Parent29, Florence Menegaux30, Geraldine Cancel-Tassin22, Adam S Kibel31, Eric A Klein32, Phyllis J Goodman33, Bettina F Drake34, Jennifer J Hu35, Peter E Clark36, Pascal Blanchet37, Graham Casey38, Anselm J M Hennis39, Alexander Lubwama40, Ian M Thompson41, Robin Leach41, Susan M Gundell1, Loreall Pooler1, Lucy Xia1, James L Mohler42, Elizabeth T H Fontham43, Gary J Smith44, Jack A Taylor45, Rosalind A Eeles46, Laurent Brureau37, Stephen J Chanock9, Stephen Watya47, Janet L Stanford48, Diptasri Mandal49, William B Isaacs14, Kathleen Cooney50, William J Blot12, David V Conti1, Christopher A Haiman51.
Abstract
Although men of African ancestry have a high risk of prostate cancer (PCa), no genes or mutations have been identified that contribute to familial clustering of PCa in this population. We investigated whether the African ancestry-specific PCa risk variant at 8q24, rs72725854, is enriched in men with a PCa family history in 9052 cases, 143 cases from high-risk families, and 8595 controls of African ancestry. We found the risk allele to be significantly associated with earlier age at diagnosis, more aggressive disease, and enriched in men with a PCa family history (32% of high-risk familial cases carried the variant vs 23% of cases without a family history and 12% of controls). For cases with two or more first-degree relatives with PCa who had at least one family member diagnosed at age <60 yr, the odds ratios for TA heterozygotes and TT homozygotes were 3.92 (95% confidence interval [CI] = 2.13-7.22) and 33.41 (95% CI = 10.86-102.84), respectively. Among men with a PCa family history, the absolute risk by age 60 yr reached 21% (95% CI = 17-25%) for TA heterozygotes and 38% (95% CI = 13-65%) for TT homozygotes. We estimate that in men of African ancestry, rs72725854 accounts for 32% of the total familial risk explained by all known PCa risk variants. PATIENTEntities:
Keywords: 8q24; African ancestry; Familial prostate cancer; Family history; Genetic variant; Genetics; Health disparities; Prostate cancer
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32409115 PMCID: PMC7805560 DOI: 10.1016/j.eururo.2020.04.060
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Urol ISSN: 0302-2838 Impact factor: 20.096