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Radiogenomics Consortium Genome-Wide Association Study Meta-Analysis of Late Toxicity After Prostate Cancer Radiotherapy.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Authors

Kerns, Sarah L 
Fachal, Laura 
Dorling, Leila 
Barnett, Gillian C 
Baran, Andrea 

Abstract

BACKGROUND: A total of 10%-20% of patients develop long-term toxicity following radiotherapy for prostate cancer. Identification of common genetic variants associated with susceptibility to radiotoxicity might improve risk prediction and inform functional mechanistic studies. METHODS: We conducted an individual patient data meta-analysis of six genome-wide association studies (n = 3871) in men of European ancestry who underwent radiotherapy for prostate cancer. Radiotoxicities (increased urinary frequency, decreased urinary stream, hematuria, rectal bleeding) were graded prospectively. We used grouped relative risk models to test associations with approximately 6 million genotyped or imputed variants (time to first grade 2 or higher toxicity event). Variants with two-sided Pmeta less than 5 × 10-8 were considered statistically significant. Bayesian false discovery probability provided an additional measure of confidence. Statistically significant variants were evaluated in three Japanese cohorts (n = 962). All statistical tests were two-sided. RESULTS: Meta-analysis of the European ancestry cohorts identified three genomic signals: single nucleotide polymorphism rs17055178 with rectal bleeding (Pmeta = 6.2 × 10-10), rs10969913 with decreased urinary stream (Pmeta = 2.9 × 10-10), and rs11122573 with hematuria (Pmeta = 1.8 × 10-8). Fine-scale mapping of these three regions was used to identify another independent signal (rs147121532) associated with hematuria (Pconditional = 4.7 × 10-6). Credible causal variants at these four signals lie in gene-regulatory regions, some modulating expression of nearby genes. Previously identified variants showed consistent associations (rs17599026 with increased urinary frequency, rs7720298 with decreased urinary stream, rs1801516 with overall toxicity) in new cohorts. rs10969913 and rs17599026 had similar effects in the photon-treated Japanese cohorts. CONCLUSIONS: This study increases the understanding of the architecture of common genetic variants affecting radiotoxicity, points to novel radio-pathogenic mechanisms, and develops risk models for testing in clinical studies. Further multinational radiogenomics studies in larger cohorts are worthwhile.

Description

Keywords

0604 Genetics, 1112 Oncology and Carcinogenesis, Biomedical, Clinical Medicine and Science, Prevention, Human Genome, Patient Safety, Cancer, Aging, Prostate Cancer, Biotechnology, Urologic Diseases, Clinical Research, Genetics, Cancer, 2.1 Biological and endogenous factors

Journal Title

J Natl Cancer Inst

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0027-8874
1460-2105

Volume Title

112

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Rights

All rights reserved
Sponsorship
Cancer Research UK (16565)
National Cancer Institute (U19CA148537)
Cancer Research UK (via University of Manchester) (A18504)
Cancer Research UK (16563)
Cancer Research UK (10118)
European Commission FP7 Collaborative projects (CP) (608126)