Genetic variants at 14q24.1 and breast cancer susceptibility: A fine-mapping study in Chinese women

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Abstract

A single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs999737 at 14q24.1 was identified as a susceptibility marker of breast cancer in a genome-wide association study of the European population, which was also confirmed by some of the following studies in populations of European descent. However, rs999737 is very rare or nonpolymorphic in non-Europeans including Chinese, and the role of other genetic variants at 14q24.1 has not been evaluated in populations of non-European descent. In this study, we first selected 21 common tagging SNPs (minor allele frequency [MAF] >0.05 in the Chinese population) by searching the Hapmap database, covering a linage disequilibrium region of more than 70Kb at 14q24.1, and then conducted a two-stage study (stage I: 878 cases and 900 controls; stage II: 914 cases and 967 controls) to investigate the associations between these tagging SNPs and risk of breast cancer in a Chinese population. In stage I, two SNPs (rs2842346 and rs17828907) were identified to be significantly associated with breast cancer risk (p=0.030 and 0.027 for genotype distributions, respectively). However, no significant associations were found between these two SNPs and breast cancer risk in either stage II or the combined dataset. These findings suggest that common variants at 14q24.1 might not be associated with the risk of breast cancer in the Chinese population, which will need the replication in additional larger studies. © Copyright 2012, Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.

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Ma, H., Li, H., Jin, G., Dai, J., Dong, J., Qin, Z., … Shen, H. (2012). Genetic variants at 14q24.1 and breast cancer susceptibility: A fine-mapping study in Chinese women. DNA and Cell Biology, 31(6), 1114–1120. https://doi.org/10.1089/dna.2011.1550

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