| Literature DB >> 33385923 |
Batel Blechter1, Jason Y Y Wong2, Chao Agnes Hsiung3, H Dean Hosgood4, Zhihua Yin5, Xiao-Ou Shu6, Han Zhang2, Jianxin Shi2, Lei Song2, Minsun Song7, Wei Zheng6, Zhaoming Wang8, Neil Caporaso2, Laurie Burdette9, Meredith Yeager10, Sonja I Berndt2, Maria Teresa Landi2, Chien-Jen Chen11, Gee-Chen Chang12, Chin-Fu Hsiao3, Ying-Huang Tsai13, Kuan-Yu Chen14, Ming-Shyan Huang15, Wu-Chou Su16, Yuh-Min Chen17, Li-Hsin Chien3, Chung-Hsing Chen18, Tsung-Ying Yang19, Chih-Liang Wang20, Jen-Yu Hung21, Chien-Chung Lin16, Reury-Perng Perng22, Chih-Yi Chen23, Kun-Chieh Chen19, Yao-Jen Li11, Chong-Jen Yu14, Yi-Song Chen3, Ying-Hsiang Chen3, Fang-Yu Tsai18, Wei Jie Seow24, Bryan A Bassig2, Wei Hu2, Bu-Tian Ji2, Wei Wu5, Peng Guan5, Qincheng He5, Yu-Tang Gao25, Qiuyin Cai6, Wong-Ho Chow26, Yong-Bing Xiang25, Dongxin Lin27, Chen Wu27, Yi-Long Wu28, Min-Ho Shin29, Yun-Chul Hong30, Keitaro Matsuo31, Kexin Chen32, Maria Pik Wong33, Daru Lu34, Li Jin34, Jiu-Cun Wang34, Adeline Seow35, Tangchun Wu36, Hongbing Shen37, Joseph F Fraumeni2, Pan-Chyr Yang14, I-Shou Chang18, Baosen Zhou5, Stephen J Chanock2, Nathaniel Rothman2, Nilanjan Chatterjee38, Qing Lan2.
Abstract
We previously identified 10 lung adenocarcinoma susceptibility loci in a genome-wide association study (GWAS) conducted in the Female Lung Cancer Consortium in Asia (FLCCA), the largest genomic study of lung cancer among never-smoking women to date. Furthermore, household coal use for cooking and heating has been linked to lung cancer in Asia, especially in Xuanwei, China. We investigated the potential interaction between genetic susceptibility and coal use in FLCCA. We analyzed GWAS-data from Taiwan, Shanghai, and Shenyang (1472 cases; 1497 controls), as well as a separate study conducted in Xuanwei (152 cases; 522 controls) for additional analyses. We summarized genetic susceptibility using a polygenic risk score (PRS), which was the weighted sum of the risk-alleles from the 10 previously identified loci. We estimated associations between a PRS, coal use (ever/never), and lung adenocarcinoma with multivariable logistic regression models, and evaluated potential gene-environment interactions using likelihood ratio tests. There was a strong association between continuous PRS and lung adenocarcinoma among never coal users (Odds Ratio (OR) = 1.69 (95% Confidence Interval (CI) = 1.53, 1.87), p=1 × 10-26). This effect was attenuated among ever coal users (OR = 1.24 (95% CI: 1.03, 1.50), p = 0.02, p-interaction = 6 × 10-3). We observed similar attenuation among coal users from Xuanwei. Our study provides evidence that genetic susceptibility to lung adenocarcinoma among never-smoking Asian women is weaker among coal users. These results suggest that lung cancer pathogenesis may differ, at least partially, depending on exposure to coal combustion products. Notably, these novel findings are among the few instances of sub-multiplicative gene-environment interactions in the cancer literature.Entities:
Keywords: Gene-environment interaction; Household coal use; Lung adenocarcinoma; Never-smoking women in Asia; Polygenic risk score
Year: 2020 PMID: 33385923 DOI: 10.1016/j.envint.2020.105975
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Int ISSN: 0160-4120 Impact factor: 9.621