Identification of germline genetic variants that increase prostate cancer risk and influence development of aggressive disease

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Abstract

Prostate cancer (PrCa) is a heterogeneous disease, which presents in individual patients across a diverse phenotypic spectrum ranging from indolent to fatal forms. No robust biomarkers are currently available to enable routine screening for PrCa or to distinguish clinically significant forms, therefore late stage identification of advanced disease and overdiagnosis plus overtreatment of insignificant disease both remain areas of concern in healthcare provision. PrCa has a substantial heritable component, and technological advances since the completion of the Human Genome Project have facilitated improved identification of inherited genetic factors influencing susceptibility to development of the disease within families and populations. These genetic markers hold promise to enable improved understanding of the biological mechanisms underpinning PrCa development, facilitate genetically informed PrCa screening programmes and guide appropriate treatment provi-sion. However, insight remains largely lacking regarding many aspects of their manifestation; es-pecially in relation to genes associated with aggressive phenotypes, risk factors in non‐European populations and appropriate approaches to enable accurate stratification of higher and lower risk individuals. This review discusses the methodology used in the elucidation of genetic loci, genes and individual causal variants responsible for modulating PrCa susceptibility; the current state of understanding of the allelic spectrum contributing to PrCa risk; and prospective future translational applications of these discoveries in the developing eras of genomics and personalised medicine.

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Saunders, E. J., Kote‐jarai, Z., & Eeles, R. A. (2021, February 1). Identification of germline genetic variants that increase prostate cancer risk and influence development of aggressive disease. Cancers. MDPI AG. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13040760

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