CYP24A1 variant modifies the association between use of oestrogen plus progestogen therapy and colorectal cancer risk Journal Article


Authors: Garcia-Albeniz, X.; Rudolph, A.; Hutter, C.; White, E.; Lin, Y.; Rosse, S. A.; Figueiredo, J. C.; Harrison, T. A.; Jiao, S.; Brenner, H.; Casey, G.; Hudson, T. J.; Thornquist, M.; Le Marchand, L.; Potter, J.; Slattery, M. L.; Zanke, B.; Baron, J. A.; Caan, B. J.; Chanock, S. J.; Berndt, S. I.; Stelling, D.; Fuchs, C. S.; Hoffmeister, M.; Butterbach, K.; Du, M.; James Gauderman, W.; Gunter, M. J.; Lemire, M.; Ogino, S.; Lin, J.; Hayes, R. B.; Haile, R. W.; Schoen, R. E.; Warnick, G. S.; Jenkins, M. A.; Thibodeau, S. N.; Schumacher, F. R.; Lindor, N. M.; Kolonel, L. N.; Hopper, J. L.; Gong, J.; Seminara, D.; Pflugeisen, B. M.; Ulrich, C. M.; Qu, C.; Duggan, D.; Cotterchio, M.; Campbell, P. T.; Carlson, C. S.; Newcomb, P. A.; Giovannucci, E.; Hsu, L.; Chan, A. T.; Peters, U.; Chang-Claude, J.
Article Title: CYP24A1 variant modifies the association between use of oestrogen plus progestogen therapy and colorectal cancer risk
Abstract: Background:Menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) use has been consistently associated with a decreased risk of colorectal cancer (CRC) in women. Our aim was to use a genome-wide gene-environment interaction analysis to identify genetic modifiers of CRC risk associated with use of MHT.Methods:We included 10 835 postmenopausal women (5419 cases and 5416 controls) from 10 studies. We evaluated use of any MHT, oestrogen-only (E-only) and combined oestrogen-progestogen (E+P) hormone preparations. To test for multiplicative interactions, we applied the empirical Bayes (EB) test as well as the Wald test in conventional case-control logistic regression as primary tests. The Cocktail test was used as secondary test.Results:The EB test identified a significant interaction between rs964293 at 20q13.2/CYP24A1 and E+P (interaction OR (95% CIs)=0.61 (0.52-0.72), P=4.8 × 10 -9). The secondary analysis also identified this interaction (Cocktail test OR=0.64 (0.52-0.78), P=1.2 × 10 -5 (alpha threshold=3.1 × 10 -4). The ORs for association between E+P and CRC risk by rs964293 genotype were as follows: C/C, 0.96 (0.61-1.50); A/C, 0.61 (0.39-0.95) and A/A, 0.40 (0.22-0.73), respectively.Conclusions:Our results indicate that rs964293 modifies the association between E+P and CRC risk. The variant is located near CYP24A1, which encodes an enzyme involved in vitamin D metabolism. This novel finding offers additional insight into downstream pathways of CRC etiopathogenesis. © 2016 Cancer Research UK.
Journal Title: British Journal of Cancer
Volume: 114
Issue: 2
ISSN: 0007-0920
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group  
Date Published: 2016-01-19
Start Page: 221
End Page: 229
Language: English
DOI: 10.1038/bjc.2015.443
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 26766742
PMCID: PMC4815813
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 3 February 2016 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Mengmeng   Du
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