Abstract
Neuroblastoma is a malignant neoplasm of the developing sympathetic nervous system that is notable for its phenotypic diversity. High-risk patients typically have widely disseminated disease at diagnosis and a poor survival probability, but low-risk patients frequently have localized tumors that are almost always cured with little or no chemotherapy. Our genome-wide association study (GWAS) has identified common variants within FLJ22536, BARD1, and LMO1 as significantly associated with neuroblastoma and more robustly associated with high-risk disease. Here we show that a GWAS focused on low-risk cases identified SNPs within DUSP12 at 1q23.3 (P = 2.07×10-6), DDX4 and IL31RA both at 5q11.2 (P = 2.94×10-6 and 6.54×10-7 respectively), and HSD17B12 at 11p11.2 (P = 4.20×10-7) as being associated with the less aggressive form of the disease. These data demonstrate the importance of robust phenotypic data in GWAS analyses and identify additional susceptibility variants for neuroblastoma. © 2011 Nguyễn et al.
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CITATION STYLE
Nguyễn, L. B., Diskin, S. J., Capasso, M., Wang, K., Diamond, M. A., Glessner, J., … Maris, J. M. (2011). Phenotype restricted genome-wide association study using a gene-centric approach identifies three low-risk neuroblastoma susceptibility loci. PLoS Genetics, 7(3). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1002026
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