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Discovery Analysis of TCGA Data Reveals Association between Germline Genotype and Survival in Ovarian Cancer Patients

BACKGROUND: Ovarian cancer remains a significant public health burden, with the highest mortality rate of all the gynecological cancers. This is attributable to the late stage at which the majority of ovarian cancers are diagnosed, coupled with the low and variable response of advanced tumors to sta...

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Autores principales: Braun, Rosemary, Finney, Richard, Yan, Chunhua, Chen, Qing-Rong, Hu, Ying, Edmonson, Michael, Meerzaman, Daoud, Buetow, Kenneth
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3605427/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23555554
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0055037
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author Braun, Rosemary
Finney, Richard
Yan, Chunhua
Chen, Qing-Rong
Hu, Ying
Edmonson, Michael
Meerzaman, Daoud
Buetow, Kenneth
author_facet Braun, Rosemary
Finney, Richard
Yan, Chunhua
Chen, Qing-Rong
Hu, Ying
Edmonson, Michael
Meerzaman, Daoud
Buetow, Kenneth
author_sort Braun, Rosemary
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Ovarian cancer remains a significant public health burden, with the highest mortality rate of all the gynecological cancers. This is attributable to the late stage at which the majority of ovarian cancers are diagnosed, coupled with the low and variable response of advanced tumors to standard chemotherapies. To date, clinically useful predictors of treatment response remain lacking. Identifying the genetic determinants of ovarian cancer survival and treatment response is crucial to the development of prognostic biomarkers and personalized therapies that may improve outcomes for the late-stage patients who comprise the majority of cases. METHODS: To identify constitutional genetic variations contributing to ovarian cancer mortality, we systematically investigated associations between germline polymorphisms and ovarian cancer survival using data from The Cancer Genome Atlas Project (TCGA). Using stage-stratified Cox proportional hazards regression, we examined [Image: see text]650,000 SNP loci for association with survival. We additionally examined whether the association of significant SNPs with survival was modified by somatic alterations. RESULTS: Germline polymorphisms at rs4934282 (AGAP11/C10orf116) and rs1857623 (DNAH14) were associated with stage-adjusted survival ([Image: see text] = 1.12e-07 and 1.80e-07, FDR [Image: see text] = 1.2e-04 and 2.4e-04, respectively). A third SNP, rs4869 (C10orf116), was additionally identified as significant in the exome sequencing data; it is in near-perfect LD with rs4934282. The associations with survival remained significant when somatic alterations. CONCLUSIONS: Discovery analysis of TCGA data reveals germline genetic variations that may play a role in ovarian cancer survival even among late-stage cases. The significant loci are located near genes previously reported as having a possible relationship to platinum and taxol response. Because the variant alleles at the significant loci are common (frequencies for rs4934282 A/C alleles = 0.54/0.46, respectively; rs1857623 A/G alleles = 0.55/0.45, respectively) and germline variants can be assayed noninvasively, our findings provide potential targets for further exploration as prognostic biomarkers and individualized therapies.
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spelling pubmed-36054272013-04-03 Discovery Analysis of TCGA Data Reveals Association between Germline Genotype and Survival in Ovarian Cancer Patients Braun, Rosemary Finney, Richard Yan, Chunhua Chen, Qing-Rong Hu, Ying Edmonson, Michael Meerzaman, Daoud Buetow, Kenneth PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Ovarian cancer remains a significant public health burden, with the highest mortality rate of all the gynecological cancers. This is attributable to the late stage at which the majority of ovarian cancers are diagnosed, coupled with the low and variable response of advanced tumors to standard chemotherapies. To date, clinically useful predictors of treatment response remain lacking. Identifying the genetic determinants of ovarian cancer survival and treatment response is crucial to the development of prognostic biomarkers and personalized therapies that may improve outcomes for the late-stage patients who comprise the majority of cases. METHODS: To identify constitutional genetic variations contributing to ovarian cancer mortality, we systematically investigated associations between germline polymorphisms and ovarian cancer survival using data from The Cancer Genome Atlas Project (TCGA). Using stage-stratified Cox proportional hazards regression, we examined [Image: see text]650,000 SNP loci for association with survival. We additionally examined whether the association of significant SNPs with survival was modified by somatic alterations. RESULTS: Germline polymorphisms at rs4934282 (AGAP11/C10orf116) and rs1857623 (DNAH14) were associated with stage-adjusted survival ([Image: see text] = 1.12e-07 and 1.80e-07, FDR [Image: see text] = 1.2e-04 and 2.4e-04, respectively). A third SNP, rs4869 (C10orf116), was additionally identified as significant in the exome sequencing data; it is in near-perfect LD with rs4934282. The associations with survival remained significant when somatic alterations. CONCLUSIONS: Discovery analysis of TCGA data reveals germline genetic variations that may play a role in ovarian cancer survival even among late-stage cases. The significant loci are located near genes previously reported as having a possible relationship to platinum and taxol response. Because the variant alleles at the significant loci are common (frequencies for rs4934282 A/C alleles = 0.54/0.46, respectively; rs1857623 A/G alleles = 0.55/0.45, respectively) and germline variants can be assayed noninvasively, our findings provide potential targets for further exploration as prognostic biomarkers and individualized therapies. Public Library of Science 2013-03-21 /pmc/articles/PMC3605427/ /pubmed/23555554 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0055037 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Braun, Rosemary
Finney, Richard
Yan, Chunhua
Chen, Qing-Rong
Hu, Ying
Edmonson, Michael
Meerzaman, Daoud
Buetow, Kenneth
Discovery Analysis of TCGA Data Reveals Association between Germline Genotype and Survival in Ovarian Cancer Patients
title Discovery Analysis of TCGA Data Reveals Association between Germline Genotype and Survival in Ovarian Cancer Patients
title_full Discovery Analysis of TCGA Data Reveals Association between Germline Genotype and Survival in Ovarian Cancer Patients
title_fullStr Discovery Analysis of TCGA Data Reveals Association between Germline Genotype and Survival in Ovarian Cancer Patients
title_full_unstemmed Discovery Analysis of TCGA Data Reveals Association between Germline Genotype and Survival in Ovarian Cancer Patients
title_short Discovery Analysis of TCGA Data Reveals Association between Germline Genotype and Survival in Ovarian Cancer Patients
title_sort discovery analysis of tcga data reveals association between germline genotype and survival in ovarian cancer patients
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3605427/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23555554
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0055037
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