A large-scale meta-analysis to refine colorectal cancer risk estimates associated with MUTYH variants Journal Article


Authors: Theodoratou, E.; Campbell, H.; Tenesa, A.; Houlston, R.; Webb, E.; Lubbe, S.; Broderick, P.; Gallinger, S.; Croitoru, E. M.; Jenkins, M. A.; Win, A. K.; Cleary, S. P.; Koessler, T.; Pharoah, P. D.; Küry, S.; Bézieau, S.; Buecher, B.; Ellis, N. A.; Peterlongo, P.; Offit, K.; Aaltonen, L. A.; Enholm, S.; Lindblom, A.; Zhou, X. L.; Tomlinson, I. P.; Moreno, V.; Blanco, I.; Capellà, G.; Barnetson, R.; Porteous, M. E.; Dunlop, M. G.; Farrington, S. M.
Article Title: A large-scale meta-analysis to refine colorectal cancer risk estimates associated with MUTYH variants
Abstract: Background: Defective DNA repair has a causal role in hereditary colorectal cancer (CRC). Defects in the base excision repair gene MUTYH are responsible for MUTYH-associated polyposis and CRC predisposition as an autosomal recessive trait. Numerous reports have suggested MUTYH mono-allelic variants to be low penetrance risk alleles. We report a large collaborative meta-analysis to assess and refine CRC risk estimates associated with bi-allelic and mono-allelic MUTYH variants and investigate age and sex influence on risk. Methods: MUTYH genotype data were included from 20 565 cases and 15 524 controls. Three logistic regression models were tested: a crude model; adjusted for age and sex; adjusted for age, sex and study. Results: All three models produced very similar results. MUTYH bi-allelic carriers demonstrated a 28-fold increase in risk (95% confidence interval (CI): 6.95-115). Significant bi-allelic effects were also observed for G396D and Y179C/G396D compound heterozygotes and a marginal mono-allelic effect for variant Y179C (odds ratio (OR)1.34; 95% CI: 1.00-1.80). A pooled meta-analysis of all published and unpublished datasets submitted showed bi-allelic effects for MUTYH, G396D and Y179C (OR10.8, 95% CI: 5.02-23.2; OR6.47, 95% CI: 2.33-18.0; OR3.35, 95% CI: 1.14-9.89) and marginal mono-allelic effect for variants MUTYH (OR1.16, 95% CI: 1.00-1.34) and Y179C alone (OR1.34, 95% CI: 1.01-1.77). Conclusions: Overall, this large study refines estimates of disease risk associated with mono-allelic and bi-allelic MUTYH carriers. © 2010 Cancer Research UK.
Keywords: adult; aged; middle aged; gene mutation; mutation; cancer risk; colorectal cancer; allele; genetic predisposition to disease; genetic variability; genotype; risk factors; heterozygote; age; risk assessment; colorectal neoplasms; systematic review; genetic risk; ethnicity; hormone substitution; sex; meta-analysis; base excision repair; dna glycosylase muty; carrier risk estimates; mutyh; dna glycosylases
Journal Title: British Journal of Cancer
Volume: 103
Issue: 12
ISSN: 0007-0920
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group  
Date Published: 2010-12-07
Start Page: 1875
End Page: 1884
Language: English
DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6605966
PUBMED: 21063410
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC3008602
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Export Date: 20 April 2011" - "CODEN: BJCAA" - "Source: Scopus"
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  1. Kenneth Offit
    789 Offit