19 research outputs found
Identification of novel epithelial ovarian cancer loci in women of African ancestry.
Women of African ancestry have lower incidence of epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) yet worse survival compared to women of European ancestry. We conducted a genome-wide association study in African ancestry women with 755 EOC cases, including 537 high-grade serous ovarian carcinomas (HGSOC) and 1,235 controls. We identified four novel loci with suggestive evidence of association with EOC (p < 1 × 10-6 ), including rs4525119 (intronic to AKR1C3), rs7643459 (intronic to LOC101927394), rs4286604 (12 kb 3' of UGT2A2) and rs142091544 (5 kb 5' of WWC1). For HGSOC, we identified six loci with suggestive evidence of association including rs37792 (132 kb 5' of follistatin [FST]), rs57403204 (81 kb 3' of MAGEC1), rs79079890 (LOC105376360 intronic), rs66459581 (5 kb 5' of PRPSAP1), rs116046250 (GABRG3 intronic) and rs192876988 (32 kb 3' of GK2). Among the identified variants, two are near genes known to regulate hormones and diseases of the ovary (AKR1C3 and FST), and two are linked to cancer (AKR1C3 and MAGEC1). In follow-up studies of the 10 identified variants, the GK2 region SNP, rs192876988, showed an inverse association with EOC in European ancestry women (p = 0.002), increased risk of ER positive breast cancer in African ancestry women (p = 0.027) and decreased expression of GK2 in HGSOC tissue from African ancestry women (p = 0.004). A European ancestry-derived polygenic risk score showed positive associations with EOC and HGSOC in women of African ancestry suggesting shared genetic architecture. Our investigation presents evidence of variants for EOC shared among European and African ancestry women and identifies novel EOC risk loci in women of African ancestry
Correction to: The TANDEM investigation: efficacy and tolerability of levodopa-carbidopa intestinal gel in (LCIG) advanced Parkinson's disease patients.
A Transcriptome-Wide Association Study Among 97,898 Women to Identify Candidate Susceptibility Genes for Epithelial Ovarian Cancer Risk
Large-scale genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified
approximately 35 loci associated with epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC)
risk. The majority of GWAS-identified disease susceptibility variants
are located in noncoding regions, and causal genes underlying these
associations remain largely unknown. Here, we performed a
transcriptome-wide association study to search for novel genetic loci
and plausible causal genes at known GWAS loci. We used RNA sequencing
data (68 normal ovarian tissue samples from 68 individuals and 6,124
cross-tissue samples from 369 individuals) and high-density genotyping
data from European descendants of the Genotype-Tissue Expression (GTEx
V6) project to build ovarian and cross-tissue models of genetically
regulated expression using elastic net methods. We evaluated 17,121
genes for their cis-predicted gene expression in relation to EOC risk
using summary statistics data from GWAS of 97,898 women, including
29,396 EOC cases. With a Bonferroni-corrected significance level of P <
2.2 x 10(-6), we identified 35 genes, including FZD4 at 11q14.2 (Z =
5.08, P = 3.83 x 10(-7), the cross-tissue model; 1 Mb away from any
GWAS-identified EOC risk variant), a potential novel locus for EOC risk.
All other 34 significantly associated genes were located within 1 Mb of
known GWAS-identified loci, including 23 genes at 6 loci not previously
linked to EOC risk. Upon conditioning on nearby known EOC
GWAS-identified variants, the associations for 31 genes disappeared and
three genes remained (P < 1.47 x 10(-3)). These data identify one novel
locus (FZD4) and 34 genes at 13 known EOC risk loci associated with EOC
risk, providing new insights into EOC carcinogenesis.
Significance: Transcriptomic analysis of a large cohort confirms earlier
GWAS loci and reveals FZD4 as a novel locus associated with EOC risk.
(C) 2018 AACR
Menopausal hormone use and ovarian cancer risk: individual participant meta-analysis of 52 epidemiological studies
Background Half the epidemiological studies with information about
menopausal hormone therapy and ovarian cancer risk remain unpublished,
and some retrospective studies could have been biased by selective
participation or recall. We aimed to assess with minimal bias the
effects of hormone therapy on ovarian cancer risk.
Methods Individual participant datasets from 52 epidemiological studies
were analysed centrally. The principal analyses involved the prospective
studies (with last hormone therapy use extrapolated forwards for up to 4
years). Sensitivity analyses included the retrospective studies.
Adjusted Poisson regressions yielded relative risks (RRs) versus
never-use.
Findings During prospective follow-up, 12 110 postmenopausal women, 55%
(6601) of whom had used hormone therapy, developed ovarian cancer. Among
women last recorded as current users, risk was increased even with <5
years of use (RR 1.43, 95% CI 1.31-1.56; p<0.0001). Combining
current-or-recent use (any duration, but stopped <5 years before
diagnosis) resulted in an RR of 1.37 (95% CI 1.29-1.46; p<0.0001); this
risk was similar in European and American prospective studies and for
oestrogen-only and oestrogen-progestagen preparations, but differed
across the four main tumour types (heterogeneity p<0.0001), being
definitely increased only for the two most common types, serous (RR
1.53, 95% CI 1.40-1.66; p<0.0001) and endometrioid (1.42, 1.20-1.67;
p<0.0001). Risk declined the longer ago use had ceased, although about
10 years after stopping long-duration hormone therapy use there was
still an excess of serous or endometrioid tumours (RR 1.25, 95% CI
1.07-1.46, p=0.005).
Interpretation The increased risk may well be largely or wholly causal;
if it is, women who use hormone therapy for 5 years from around age 50
years have about one extra ovarian cancer per 1000 users and, if its
prognosis is typical, about one extra ovarian cancer death per 1700
users
Ovarian cancer and smoking: individual participant meta-analysis including 28 114 women with ovarian cancer from 51 epidemiological studies
Background Smoking has been linked to mucinous ovarian cancer, but its
effects on other ovarian cancer subtypes and on overall ovarian cancer
risk are unclear, and the findings from most studies with relevant data
are unpublished. To assess these associations, we review the published
and unpublished evidence.
Methods Eligible epidemiological studies were identified by electronic
searches, review articles, and discussions with colleagues. Individual
participant data for 28 114 women with and 94 942 without ovarian cancer
from 51 epidemiological studies were analysed centrally, yielding
adjusted relative risks (RRs) of ovarian cancer in smokers compared with
never smokers.
Findings After exclusion of studies with hospital controls, in which
smoking could have affected recruitment, overall ovarian cancer
incidence was only slightly increased in current smokers compared with
women who had never smoked (RR 1.06, 95% CI 1.01-1.11, p=0.01). Of 17
641 epithelial cancers with specified histology, 2314 (13%) were
mucinous, 2360 (13%) endometrioid, 969 (5%) clear-cell, and 9086
(52%) serous. Smoking-related risks varied substantially across these
subtypes (p(heterogeneity)<0.0001). For mucinous cancers, incidence was
increased in current versus never smokers (1.79, 95% CI 1.60-2.00,
p<0.0001), but the increase was mainly in borderline malignant rather
than in fully malignant tumours (2.25, 95% CI 1.91-2.65 vs 1.49,
1.28-1.73; p(heterogeneity)=0.01; almost half the mucinous tumours were
only borderline malignant). Both endometrioid (0.81, 95% CI 0.72-0.92,
p=0.001) and clear-cell ovarian cancer risks (0.80, 95% CI 0.65-0.97,
p=0.03) were reduced in current smokers, and there was no significant
association for serous ovarian cancers (0.99, 95% CI 0.93-1.06, p=0.8).
These associations did not vary significantly by 13 sociodemographic and
personal characteristics of women including their body-mass index,
parity, and use of alcohol, oral contraceptives, and menopausal hormone
therapy.
Interpretation The excess of mucinous ovarian cancers in smokers, which
is mainly of tumours of borderline malignancy, is roughly
counterbalanced by the deficit of endometrioid and clear-cell ovarian
cancers. The substantial variation in smoking-related risks by tumour
subtype is important for understanding ovarian carcinogenesis
Guidelines for the therapeutic use of botulinum toxin in movement disorders. Italian Study Group for Movement Disorders, Italian Society of Neurology.
Since its introduction in the early '80s the use of botulinum toxin has improved the quality of life of the patients affected by movement disorders. Toxin's neuromuscular blocking action allows a symptomatic treatment of those clinical conditions characterised by excessive muscular activity. Although the dosages used are safe and the side-effects are reversible, a correct use of botulinum toxin depends on the knowledge of its clinical pharmacology and of the anatomy of the body segments to be injected. In addition, the treatment of more complex conditions, i.e. laringeal dystonia, imposes an inter-disciplinary approach and specialised injection techniques. In this review, the Italian Study Group on Movement Disorders presents the consensus guidelines for the therapeutic use of botulinum toxin in movement disorders. The main toxin types, their use and administration modalities, and the training guidelines will be presented
Menstrual and reproductive characteristics and breast density in young women
PURPOSE: Breast density is strongly related to breast cancer risk, but determinants of breast density in young women remain largely unknown. METHODS: Associations of reproductive and menstrual characteristics with breast density measured by magnetic resonance imaging were evaluated in a cross-sectional study of 176 healthy women, 25–29 years old, using linear mixed effects models. RESULTS: Parity was significantly inversely associated with breast density. In multivariable adjusted models that included non-reproductive variables, mean percent dense breast volume (%DBV) decreased from 20.5 % in nulliparous women to 16.0 % in parous women, while mean absolute dense breast volume (ADBV) decreased from 85.3 to 62.5 cm(3). Breast density also was significantly inversely associated with the age women started using hormonal contraceptives, whereas it was significantly positively associated with duration of hormonal contraceptive use. In adjusted models, mean %DBV decreased from 21.7 % in women who started using hormones at 12–17 years of age to 14.7 % in those who started using hormones at 22–28 years of age, while mean ADBV decreased from 86.2 to 53.7 cm(3). The age at which women started using hormonal contraceptives and duration of hormone use were inversely correlated, and mean %DBV increased from 15.8 % in women who used hormones for not more than 2.0 years to 22.0 % in women who used hormones for more than 8 years, while mean ADBV increased from 61.9 to 90.4 cm(3) over this interval. CONCLUSIONS: Breast density in young women is inversely associated with parity and the age women started using hormonal contraceptives but positively associated with duration of hormone use
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Racial/ethnic differences in the epidemiology of ovarian cancer: a pooled analysis of 12 case-control studies.
BackgroundOvarian cancer incidence differs substantially by race/ethnicity, but the reasons for this are not well understood. Data were pooled from the African American Cancer Epidemiology Study (AACES) and 11 case-control studies in the Ovarian Cancer Association Consortium (OCAC) to examine racial/ethnic differences in epidemiological characteristics with suspected involvement in epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) aetiology.MethodsWe used multivariable logistic regression to estimate associations for 17 reproductive, hormonal and lifestyle characteristics and EOC risk by race/ethnicity among 10 924 women with invasive EOC (8918 Non-Hispanic Whites, 433 Hispanics, 911 Blacks, 662 Asian/Pacific Islanders) and 16 150 controls (13 619 Non-Hispanic Whites, 533 Hispanics, 1233 Blacks, 765 Asian/Pacific Islanders). Likelihood ratio tests were used to evaluate heterogeneity in the risk factor associations by race/ethnicity.ResultsWe observed statistically significant racial/ethnic heterogeneity for hysterectomy and EOC risk (P = 0.008), where the largest odds ratio (OR) was observed in Black women [OR = 1.64, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.34-2.02] compared with other racial/ethnic groups. Although not statistically significant, the associations for parity, first-degree family history of ovarian or breast cancer, and endometriosis varied by race/ethnicity. Asian/Pacific Islanders had the greatest magnitude of association for parity (≥3 births: OR = 0.38, 95% CI = 0.28-0.54), and Black women had the largest ORs for family history (OR = 1.77, 95% CI = 1.42-2.21) and endometriosis (OR = 2.42, 95% CI = 1.65-3.55).ConclusionsAlthough racial/ethnic heterogeneity was observed for hysterectomy, our findings support the validity of EOC risk factors across all racial/ethnic groups, and further suggest that any racial/ethnic population with a higher prevalence of a modifiable risk factor should be targeted to disseminate information about prevention
