Assessing the Cumulative Contribution of New and Established Common Genetic Risk Factors to Early-Onset Prostate Cancer

We assessed the evidence for association between 23 recently reported prostate cancer variants and early-onset prostate cancer and the aggregate value of 63 prostate cancer variants for predicting early-onset disease using 931 unrelated men diagnosed with prostate cancer prior to age 56 years and 1,...

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Published inCancer epidemiology, biomarkers & prevention Vol. 25; no. 5; pp. 766 - 772
Main Authors Lange, Ethan M, Ribado, Jessica V, Zuhlke, Kimberly A, Johnson, Anna M, Keele, Gregory R, Li, Jin, Wang, Yunfei, Duan, Qing, Li, Ge, Gao, Zhengrong, Li, Yun, Xu, Jianfeng, Zheng, S Lilly, Cooney, Kathleen A
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.05.2016
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Summary:We assessed the evidence for association between 23 recently reported prostate cancer variants and early-onset prostate cancer and the aggregate value of 63 prostate cancer variants for predicting early-onset disease using 931 unrelated men diagnosed with prostate cancer prior to age 56 years and 1,126 male controls. Logistic regression models were used to test the evidence for association between the 23 new variants and early-onset prostate cancer. Weighted and unweighted sums of total risk alleles across these 23 variants and 40 established variants were constructed. Weights were based on previously reported effect size estimates. Receiver operating characteristic curves and forest plots, using defined cut-points, were constructed to assess the predictive value of the burden of risk alleles on early-onset disease. Ten of the 23 new variants demonstrated evidence (P < 0.05) for association with early-onset prostate cancer, including four that were significant after multiple test correction. The aggregate burden of risk alleles across the 63 variants was predictive of early-onset prostate cancer (AUC = 0.71 using weighted sums), especially in men with a high burden of total risk alleles. A high burden of risk alleles is strongly associated with early-onset prostate cancer. Our results provide the first formal replication for several of these 23 new variants and demonstrate that a high burden of common-variant risk alleles is a major risk factor for early-onset prostate cancer. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev; 25(5); 766-72. ©2015 AACR.
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Current Address: Program for Personalized Cancer Care and Department of Surgery, NorthShore University Health System, Evanston, IL
ISSN:1055-9965
1538-7755
DOI:10.1158/1055-9965.EPI-14-0995