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Genetic determinants of telomere length and risk of common cancers: a Mendelian randomization study.


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Authors

Zhang, Chenan 
Doherty, Jennifer A 
Hung, Rayjean J 
Lindström, Sara 

Abstract

Epidemiological studies have reported inconsistent associations between telomere length (TL) and risk for various cancers. These inconsistencies are likely attributable, in part, to biases that arise due to post-diagnostic and post-treatment TL measurement. To avoid such biases, we used a Mendelian randomization approach and estimated associations between nine TL-associated SNPs and risk for five common cancer types (breast, lung, colorectal, ovarian and prostate cancer, including subtypes) using data on 51 725 cases and 62 035 controls. We then used an inverse-variance weighted average of the SNP-specific associations to estimate the association between a genetic score representing long TL and cancer risk. The long TL genetic score was significantly associated with increased risk of lung adenocarcinoma (P = 6.3 × 10(-15)), even after exclusion of a SNP residing in a known lung cancer susceptibility region (TERT-CLPTM1L) P = 6.6 × 10(-6)). Under Mendelian randomization assumptions, the association estimate [odds ratio (OR) = 2.78] is interpreted as the OR for lung adenocarcinoma corresponding to a 1000 bp increase in TL. The weighted TL SNP score was not associated with other cancer types or subtypes. Our finding that genetic determinants of long TL increase lung adenocarcinoma risk avoids issues with reverse causality and residual confounding that arise in observational studies of TL and disease risk. Under Mendelian randomization assumptions, our finding suggests that longer TL increases lung adenocarcinoma risk. However, caution regarding this causal interpretation is warranted in light of the potential issue of pleiotropy, and a more general interpretation is that SNPs influencing telomere biology are also implicated in lung adenocarcinoma risk.

Description

Keywords

Adult, Aged, Case-Control Studies, Female, Genetic Association Studies, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Genetic Variation, Humans, Male, Mendelian Randomization Analysis, Middle Aged, Neoplasms, Odds Ratio, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Risk, Telomere Homeostasis

Journal Title

Hum Mol Genet

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0964-6906
1460-2083

Volume Title

24

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)
Sponsorship
National Cancer Institute (U19CA148537)
National Cancer Institute (U19CA148065)
Medical Research Council (MR/L003120/1)
Wellcome Trust (100114/Z/12/Z)
British Heart Foundation (None)
This work was supported by the Genetic Associations and Mechanisms in Oncology Network, GAMEON: Discovery, Biology, and Risk of Inherited Variants in Breast Cancer, DRIVE, PI: D. Hunter (grant number U19 CA148065); Colorectal Transdisciplinary Study, CORECT, PI: S. Gruber (grant number U19 CA148107); Transdisciplinary Research in Cancer of the Lung, TRICL, PI: C. Amos (grant number U19 CA148127); Follow-up of ovarian cancer genetic association and interaction studies, FOCI, PI: T. Sellers (grant number U19 CA148112); Elucidating Loci Involved in Prostate Cancer Susceptibility, ELLIPSE, PI: B. Henderson (grant number U19 CA148537); Genetics and Epidemiology of Colorectal Cancer Consortium, GECCO: National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (grant numbers U01 CA137088, R01 CA059045); National Institute of Health, National Institute on Aging (T32AG000243; P30AG012857) to CZ; Cancer Research Foundation Young Investigator Award to BLP; The Wellcome Trust (grant number 100114) to SB; The NHMRC Senior Principal Research Fellow to GCT.