A Large Multiethnic Genome-Wide Association Study of Prostate Cancer Identifies Novel Risk Variants and Substantial Ethnic Differences

Thomas J. Hoffmann(University of California, San Francisco), Stephen K. Van Den Eeden(Kaiser Permanente), Lori C. Sakoda(Kaiser Permanente), Eric Jorgenson(Kaiser Permanente), Laurel A. Habel(Kaiser Permanente), Rebecca E. Graff(University of California, San Francisco), Michael N. Passarelli(University of California, San Francisco), Clinton L. Cario(University of California, San Francisco), Nima C. Emami(University of California, San Francisco), Chun Chao(Kaiser Permanente), Nirupa R. Ghai(Kaiser Permanente), Jun Shan(Kaiser Permanente), Dilrini K. Ranatunga(Kaiser Permanente), Charles P. Quesenberry(Kaiser Permanente), David S. Aaronson(Kaiser Permanente Oakland Medical Center), Joseph C. Presti(Kaiser Permanente Oakland Medical Center), Zhaoming Wang(Department of Health and Human Services), Sonja I. Berndt(Department of Health and Human Services), Stephen J. Chanock(Department of Health and Human Services), Shannon K. McDonnell(Mayo Clinic), Amy J. French(Mayo Clinic), Daniel J. Schaid(Mayo Clinic), Stephen N. Thibodeau(Mayo Clinic), Qiyuan Li(Xiamen University), Matthew L. Freedman(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Kathryn L. Penney(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Lorelei A. Mucci(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Christopher A. Haiman(University of Southern California), Brian E. Henderson(University of Southern California), Daniela Seminara(National Cancer Institute), Mark Kvale(University of California, San Francisco), Pui–Yan Kwok(University of California, San Francisco), Catherine Schaefer(Kaiser Permanente), Neil Risch(Kaiser Permanente), John S. Witte(University of California, San Francisco)
Cancer Discovery
June 2, 2015
Cited by 133Open Access
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Abstract

UNLABELLED: A genome-wide association study (GWAS) of prostate cancer in Kaiser Permanente health plan members (7,783 cases, 38,595 controls; 80.3% non-Hispanic white, 4.9% African-American, 7.0% East Asian, and 7.8% Latino) revealed a new independent risk indel rs4646284 at the previously identified locus 6q25.3 that replicated in PEGASUS (N = 7,539) and the Multiethnic Cohort (N = 4,679) with an overall P = 1.0 × 10(-19) (OR, 1.18). Across the 6q25.3 locus, rs4646284 exhibited the strongest association with expression of SLC22A1 (P = 1.3 × 10(-23)) and SLC22A3 (P = 3.2 × 10(-52)). At the known 19q13.33 locus, rs2659124 (P = 1.3 × 10(-13); OR, 1.18) nominally replicated in PEGASUS. A risk score of 105 known risk SNPs was strongly associated with prostate cancer (P < 1.0 × 10(-8)). Comparing the highest to lowest risk score deciles, the OR was 6.22 for non-Hispanic whites, 5.82 for Latinos, 3.77 for African-Americans, and 3.38 for East Asians. In non-Hispanic whites, the 105 risk SNPs explained approximately 7.6% of disease heritability. The entire GWAS array explained approximately 33.4% of heritability, with a 4.3-fold enrichment within DNaseI hypersensitivity sites (P = 0.004). SIGNIFICANCE: Taken together, our findings of independent risk variants, ethnic variation in existing SNP replication, and remaining unexplained heritability have important implications for further clarifying the genetic risk of prostate cancer. Our findings also suggest that there may be much promise in evaluating understudied variation, such as indels and ethnically diverse populations.


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