Cotterchio Michelle, Lowcock Elizabeth, Bider-Canfield Zoe, Lemire Mathieu, Greenwood Celia, Gallinger Steven, Hudson Thomas
Prevention and Cancer Control, Cancer Care Ontario, Toronto, ON M5G 2L7, Canada; Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5T 3M7, Canada.
Prevention and Cancer Control, Cancer Care Ontario, Toronto, ON M5G 2L7, Canada.
PLoS One. 2015 May 6;10(5):e0125273. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0125273. eCollection 2015.
Many epidemiology studies report that atopic conditions such as allergies are associated with reduced pancreas cancer risk. The reason for this relationship is not yet understood. This is the first study to comprehensively evaluate the association between variants in atopy-related candidate genes and pancreatic cancer risk.
A population-based case-control study of pancreas cancer cases diagnosed during 2011-2012 (via Ontario Cancer Registry), and controls recruited using random digit dialing utilized DNA from 179 cases and 566 controls. Following an exhaustive literature review, SNPs in 180 candidate genes were pre-screened using dbGaP pancreas cancer GWAS data; 147 SNPs in 56 allergy-related immunologic genes were retained and genotyped. Logistic regression was used to estimate age-adjusted odd ratio (AOR) for each variant and false discovery rate was used to adjust Wald p-values for multiple testing. Subsequently, a risk allele score was derived based on statistically significant variants.
18 SNPs in 14 candidate genes (CSF2, DENND1B, DPP10, FLG, IL13, IL13RA2, LRP1B, NOD1, NPSR1, ORMDL3, RORA, STAT4, TLR6, TRA) were significantly associated with pancreas cancer risk. After adjustment for multiple comparisons, two LRP1B SNPs remained statistically significant; for example, LRP1B rs1449477 (AA vs. CC: AOR=0.37, 95% CI: 0.22-0.62; p (adjusted)=0.04). Furthermore, the risk allele score was associated with a significant reduction in pancreas cancer risk (p=0.0007).
Preliminary findings suggest certain atopy-related variants may be associated with pancreas cancer risk. Further studies are needed to replicate this, and to elucidate the biology behind the growing body of epidemiologic evidence suggesting allergies may reduce pancreatic cancer risk.
许多流行病学研究报告称,诸如过敏等特应性疾病与胰腺癌风险降低相关。这种关系的原因尚不清楚。这是第一项全面评估特应性相关候选基因变异与胰腺癌风险之间关联的研究。
一项基于人群的病例对照研究,研究对象为2011年至2012年期间诊断出的胰腺癌病例(通过安大略癌症登记处),以及通过随机数字拨号招募的对照,使用了179例病例和566例对照的DNA。在进行详尽的文献综述后,利用dbGaP胰腺癌全基因组关联研究(GWAS)数据对180个候选基因中的单核苷酸多态性(SNP)进行预筛选;保留了56个过敏相关免疫基因中的147个SNP并进行基因分型。采用逻辑回归估计每个变异的年龄调整比值比(AOR),并使用错误发现率对多重检验的Wald p值进行调整。随后,基于具有统计学意义的变异得出风险等位基因评分。
14个候选基因(CSF2、DENND1B、DPP10、FLG、IL13、IL13RA2、LRP1B、NOD1、NPSR1、ORMDL3、RORA、STAT4、TLR6、TRA)中的18个SNP与胰腺癌风险显著相关。在进行多重比较调整后,两个LRP1B SNP仍具有统计学意义;例如,LRP1B rs1449477(AA与CC相比:AOR = 0.37,95%置信区间:0.22 - 0.62;调整后p = 0.04)。此外,风险等位基因评分与胰腺癌风险的显著降低相关(p = 0.0007)。
初步研究结果表明,某些特应性相关变异可能与胰腺癌风险相关。需要进一步研究来重复这一发现,并阐明越来越多的流行病学证据背后的生物学机制,这些证据表明过敏可能降低胰腺癌风险。