دورية أكاديمية

Genetic variants associated with longer telomere length are associated with increased lung cancer risk among never-smoking women in Asia: a report from the female lung cancer consortium in Asia

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Genetic variants associated with longer telomere length are associated with increased lung cancer risk among never-smoking women in Asia: a report from the female lung cancer consortium in Asia
المؤلفون: Machiela, Mitchell J., Hsiung, Chao Agnes, Shu, Xiao-Ou, Seow, Wei Jie, Wang, Zhaoming, Matsuo, Keitaro, Hong, Yun-Chul, Seow, Adeline, Wu, Chen, Hosgood, H. Dean, III, Chen, Kexin, Wang, Jiu-Cun, Wen, Wanqing, Cawthon, Richard, Chatterjee, Nilanjan, Hu, Wei, Caporaso, Neil E., Park, Jae Yong, Chen, Chien-Jen, Kim, Yeul Hong, Kim, Young Tae, Landi, Maria Teresa, Shen, Hongbing, Lawrence, Charles, Burdett, Laurie, Yeager, Meredith, Chang, I-Shou, Mitsudomi, Tetsuya, Kim, Hee Nam, Chang, Gee-Chen, Bassig, Bryan A., Tucker, Margaret, Wei, Fusheng, Yin, Zhihua, An, She-Juan, Qian, Biyun, Lee, Victor Ho Fun, Lu, Daru, Liu, Jianjun, Jeon, Hyo-Sung, Hsiao, Chin-Fu, Sung, Jae Sook, Kim, Jin Hee, Gao, Yu-Tang, Tsai, Ying-Huang, Jung, Yoo Jin, Guo, Huan, Hu, Zhibin, Hutchinson, Amy, Wang, Wen-Chang, Klein, Robert J., Chung, Charles C., Oh, In-Jae, Chen, Kuan-Yu, Berndt, Sonja I., Wu, Wei, Chang, Jiang, Zhang, Xu-Chao, Huang, Ming-Shyan, Zheng, Hong, Wang, Junwen Zhao, Xueying, Li, Yuqing, Choi, Jin Eun, Su, Wu-Chou, Park, Kyong Hwa, Sung, Sook Whan, Chen, Yuh-Min, Liu, Li, Kang, Chang Hyun, Hu, Lingmin, Chen, Chung-Hsing, Pao, William, Kim, Young-Chul, Yang, Tsung-Ying, Xu, Jun, Guan, Peng, Tan, Wen, Su, Jian, Wang, Chih-Liang, Li, Haixin, Sihoe, Alan Dart Loon, Zhao, Zhenhong, Chen, Ying, Choi, Yi Young, Hung, Jen-Yu, Kim, Jun Suk, Yoon, Ho-Il, Cai, Qiuyin, Lin, Chien-Chung, Park, In Kyu, Xu, Ping, Dong, Jing, Kim, Christopher, He, Qincheng, Perng, Reury-Perng, Kohno, Takashi, Kweon, Sun-Seog, Chen, Chih-Yi, Vermeulen, Roel C. H., Wu, Junjie, Lim, Wei-Yen, Chen, Kun-Chieh, Chow, Wong-Ho, Ji, Bu-Tian, Chan, John K. C., Chu, Minjie, Li, Yao-Jen, Yokota, Jun, Li, Jihua, Chen, Hongyan, Xiang, Yong-Bing, Yu, Chong-Jen, Kunitoh, Hideo, Wu, Guoping, Jin, Li, Lo, Yen-Li, Shiraishi, Kouya, Chen, Ying-Hsiang, Lin, Hsien-Chih, Wu, Tangchun, Wong, Maria Pik, Wu, Yi-Long, Yang, Pan-Chyr, Zhou, Baosen, Shin, Min-Ho, Fraumeni, Joseph F., Jr., Zheng, Wei, Lin, Dongxin, Chanock, Stephen J., Rothman, Nathaniel, Lan, Qing
المساهمون: Department of Internal Medicine
سنة النشر: 2015
المجموعة: National Cheng Kung University: NCKU Institutional Repository / 國立成功大學機構典藏
مصطلحات موضوعية: association study, genetics, lung cancer, telomere length, genetic risk score
الوصف: Recent evidence from several relatively small nested case-control studies in prospective cohorts shows an association between longer telomere length measured phenotypically in peripheral white blood cell (WBC) DNA and increased lung cancer risk. We sought to further explore this relationship by examining a panel of seven telomere-length associated genetic variants in a large study of 5,457 never-smoking female Asian lung cancer cases and 4,493 never-smoking female Asian controls using data from a previously reported genome-wide association study. Using a group of 1,536 individuals with phenotypically measured telomere length in WBCs in the prospective Shanghai Women's Health study, we demonstrated the utility of a genetic risk score (GRS) of seven telomere-length associated variants to predict telomere length in an Asian population. We then found that GRSs used as instrumental variables to predict longer telomere length were associated with increased lung cancer risk (OR=1.51 (95% CI=1.34-1.69) for upper vs. lower quartile of the weighted GRS, p value=4.54 x 10(-14)) even after removing rs2736100 (p value=4.81 x 10(-3)), a SNP in the TERT locus robustly associated with lung cancer risk in prior association studies. Stratified analyses suggested the effect of the telomere-associated GRS is strongest among younger individuals. We found no difference in GRS effect between adenocarcinoma and squamous cell subtypes. Our results indicate that a genetic background that favors longer telomere length may increase lung cancer risk, which is consistent with earlier prospective studies relating longer telomere length with increased lung cancer risk.What's new? The possibility for a relationship between telomere length and cancer is intriguing, but many questions remain, including whether short or long telomeres are involved. Here, a genetic risk score derived from seven telomere-length associated genetic variants revealed a positive association between telomere length and lung cancer risk in Asian women who never smoked. ...
نوع الوثيقة: article in journal/newspaper
وصف الملف: 99 bytes; text/html
اللغة: English
العلاقة: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER, Vol. 137, No. 2, pp. 311-319; http://ir.lib.ncku.edu.tw/handle/987654321/167374Test; http://ir.lib.ncku.edu.tw/bitstream/987654321/167374/1/index.htmlTest
DOI: 10.1002/ijc.29393
الإتاحة: https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.29393Test
http://ir.lib.ncku.edu.tw/handle/987654321/167374Test
http://ir.lib.ncku.edu.tw/bitstream/987654321/167374/1/index.htmlTest
رقم الانضمام: edsbas.4CEC05B9
قاعدة البيانات: BASE