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Common genetic variation in alcohol-related hepatocellular carcinoma: a case-control genome-wide association study.

Trepo, E. (E.), Caruso, S. (S), Yang, J. (J.), Imbeaud, S. (S), Couchy, G. (G), Bayard, Q. (Q.), Letouze, E. (E.), Ganne-Carrie, N. (N), Moreno, C. (C.), Oussalah, A. (A.), Feray, C. (C.), Blanc, J. (J.F.), Clément, B. (Bruno), Hillon, P. (P), Boursier, J. (J), Paradis, V. (V.), Calderaro, J. (J.), Gnemmi, V. (V.), Nault, J-C. (J.-C.), Gueant, J-L. (J.-L.), Deviere, J. (J.), Archambeaud, I. (I), Vitellius, C. (C.), Turlin, B. (B.), Bronowicki, J-P. (J.-P.), Gustot, T. (T.), Sutton, A. (A.), Ziol, M. (M), Nahon, P. (P.), Zucman-Rossi, J. (J)

2021Dépôt institutionnel de l'Université libre de Bruxelles (Université Libre de Bruxelles)75 citationsOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background: Hepatocellular carcinoma is a frequent consequence of alcohol-related liver disease, with variable incidence among heavy drinkers. We did a genome-wide association study (GWAS) to identify common genetic variants for alcohol-related hepatocellular carcinoma.Methods: We conducted a two-stage case-control GWAS in a discovery cohort of 2107 unrelated European patients with alcohol-related liver disease aged 20–92 years recruited between Oct 22, 1993, and March 12, 2017. Cases were patients with alcohol-related hepatocellular carcinoma diagnosed by imaging or histology. Controls were patients with alcohol-related liver disease without hepatocellular carcinoma. We used an additive logistic regression model adjusted for the first ten principal components to assess genetic variants associated with alcohol-related hepatocellular carcinoma. We did another analysis with adjustment for age, sex, and liver fibrosis. New candidate associations (p<1 × 10−6) and variants previously associated with alcohol-related hepatocellular carcinoma were evaluated in a validation cohort of 1933 patients with alcohol-related liver disease aged 29–92 years recruited between July 21, 1995, and May 2, 2019. We did a meta-analysis of the two case–control cohorts.Findings: The discovery cohort included 775 cases and 1332 controls. Of 7 962 325 variants assessed, we identified WNT3A-WNT9A (rs708113; p=1·11 × 10−8) and found support for previously reported regions associated with alcohol-related hepatocellular carcinoma risk at TM6SF2 (rs58542926; p=6·02 × 10−10), PNPLA3 (rs738409; p=9·29 × 10−7), and HSD17B13 (rs72613567; p=2·49 × 10−4). The validation cohort included 874 cases and 1059 controls and three variants were replicated: WNT3A-WNT9A (rs708113; p=1·17 × 10−3), TM6SF2 (rs58542926; p=4·06 × 10−5), and PNPLA3 (rs738409; p=1·17 × 10−4). All three variants reached GWAS significance in the meta-analysis: WNT3A-WNT9A (odds ratio 0·73, 95% CI 0·66–0·81; p=3·93 × 10−10), TM6SF2 (1·77, 1·52–2·07; p=3·84×10−13), PNPLA3 (1·34, 1·22–1·47; p=7·30 × 10−10). Adjustment for clinical covariates yielded similar results. We observed an additive effect of at-risk alleles on alcohol-related hepatocellular carcinoma. WNT3A-WNT9A rs708113 was not associated with liver fibrosis.Interpretation: WNT3A-WNT9A is a susceptibility locus for alcohol-related hepatocellular carcinoma, suggesting an early role of the Wnt–β-catenin pathway in alcohol-related hepatocellular carcinoma carcinogenesis.

Topics & Concepts

Hepatocellular carcinomaGenome-wide association studyGenetic variationGeneticsVariation (astronomy)BiologyGenetic associationAssociation (psychology)GenomeMedicineSingle-nucleotide polymorphismGenotypeGenePsychologyPsychotherapistPhysicsAstrophysicsLiver Disease Diagnosis and TreatmentAlcohol Consumption and Health EffectsHepatocellular Carcinoma Treatment and Prognosis
Common genetic variation in alcohol-related hepatocellular carcinoma: a case-control genome-wide association study. | Litcius