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Considering hormone-sensitive cancers as a single disease in the UK biobank reveals shared aetiology

Muktar Beshir Ahmed, Ville‐Petteri Mäkinen, Anwar Mulugeta, Jisu Shin, Terry Boyle, Elina Hyppönen, Sang Lee

2022Communications Biology22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Hormone-related cancers, including cancers of the breast, prostate, ovaries, uterine, and thyroid, globally contribute to the majority of cancer incidence. We hypothesize that hormone-sensitive cancers share common genetic risk factors that have rarely been investigated by previous genomic studies of site-specific cancers. Here, we show that considering hormone-sensitive cancers as a single disease in the UK Biobank reveals shared genetic aetiology. We observe that a significant proportion of variance in disease liability is explained by the genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), i.e., SNP-based heritability on the liability scale is estimated as 10.06% (SE 0.70%). Moreover, we find 55 genome-wide significant SNPs for the disease, using a genome-wide association study. Pair-wise analysis also estimates positive genetic correlations between some pairs of hormone-sensitive cancers although they are not statistically significant. Our finding suggests that heritable genetic factors may be a key driver in the mechanism of carcinogenesis shared by hormone-sensitive cancers.

Topics & Concepts

Single-nucleotide polymorphismBiobankDiseaseGenome-wide association studyGenetic associationSNPBiologyCancerProstate cancerBioinformaticsGeneticsOncologyInternal medicineMedicineGenotypeGeneGenetic Associations and EpidemiologyBRCA gene mutations in cancerGenetic factors in colorectal cancer
Considering hormone-sensitive cancers as a single disease in the UK biobank reveals shared aetiology | Litcius