A germline variant on chromosome 4q31.1 associates with susceptibility to developing colon cancer metastasis

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Abstract

We tested for germline variants showing association to colon cancer metastasis using a genome-wide association study that compared Ashkenazi Jewish individuals with stage IV metastatic colon cancers versus those with stage I or II non-metastatic colon cancers. In a two-stage study design, we demonstrated significant association to developing metastatic disease for rs60745952, that in Ashkenazi discovery and validation cohorts, respectively, showed an odds ratio (OR) = 2.3 (P = 2.73E-06) and OR = 1.89 (P = 8.05E-04) (exceeding validation threshold of 0.0044). Significant association to metastatic colon cancer was further confirmed by a meta-analysis of rs60745952 in these datasets plus an additional Ashkenazi validation cohort (OR = 1.92; 95% CI: 1.28-2.87), and by a permutation test that demonstrated a significantly longer haplotype surrounding rs60745952 in the stage IV samples. rs60745952, located in an intergenic region on chromosome 4q31.1, and not previously associated with cancer, is, thus, a germline genetic marker for susceptibility to developing colon cancer metastases among Ashkenazi Jews.

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APA

Markowitz, S. D., Nock, N. L., Schmit, S. L., Stadler, Z. K., Joseph, V., Zhang, L., … Gruber, S. B. (2016). A germline variant on chromosome 4q31.1 associates with susceptibility to developing colon cancer metastasis. PLoS ONE, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0146435

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