Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1530/ERC-15-0386
Title: CYP19A1 fine-mapping and Mendelian randomization: Estradiol is causal for endometrial cancer
Authors: Thompson, D.J
O'Mara, T.A
Glubb, D.M
Keywords: aromatase
estradiol
aromatase
CYP19A1 protein, human
estradiol
Article
cancer risk
case control study
controlled study
endometrium cancer
female
gene mapping
genetic association
genetic variability
genotype environment interaction
hormone determination
human
information retrieval
major clinical study
Mendelian randomization analysis
phenotype
postmenopause
risk assessment
single nucleotide polymorphism
age
allele
blood
body mass
Endometrial Neoplasms
genetic association study
genetic predisposition
genetics
genotype
genotype environment interaction
pathology
single nucleotide polymorphism
Age Factors
Alleles
Aromatase
Body Mass Index
Case-Control Studies
Endometrial Neoplasms
Estradiol
Female
Gene-Environment Interaction
Genetic Association Studies
Genetic Predisposition to Disease
Genotype
Humans
Phenotype
Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide
Issue Date: 2016
Publisher: BioScientifica Ltd.
Citation: Thompson, D.J, O'Mara, T.A, Glubb, D.M (2016). CYP19A1 fine-mapping and Mendelian randomization: Estradiol is causal for endometrial cancer. Endocrine-Related Cancer 23 (2) : 77-91. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1530/ERC-15-0386
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
Abstract: Candidate gene studies have reported CYP19A1 variants to be associated with endometrial cancerandwith estradiol (E2) concentrations.We analyzed2937singlenucleotidepolymorphisms (SNPs) in 6608 endometrial cancer cases and 37 925 controls and report the first genome widesignificant association between endometrial cancer and a CYP19A1 SNP (rs727479 in intron 2, P=4.8×10-11). SNP rs727479 was also among those most strongly associated with circulating E2 concentrations in 2767 post-menopausal controls (P=7.4×10-8). The observed endometrial cancer odds ratio per rs727479 A-allele (1.15, CI=1.11-1.21) is compatible with that predicted by theobservedeffectonE2 concentrations (1.09, CI=1.03-1.21), consistentwith the hypothesis that endometrial cancer risk is driven by E2. From 28 candidate-causal SNPs, 12 co-located with three putative gene-regulatory elements and their risk alleles associated with higher CYP19A1 expression in bioinformatical analyses. For both phenotypes, the associationswith rs727479 were stronger amongwomen with a higher BMI (PinteractionZ0.034 and 0.066 respectively), suggesting a biologically plausible gene-environment interaction. © 2016 The authors.
Source Title: Endocrine-Related Cancer
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/179602
ISSN: 1351-0088
DOI: 10.1530/ERC-15-0386
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
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