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Prostate Cancer Susceptibility Polymorphism rs2660753 Is Not Associated with Invasive Ovarian Cancer

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Date

2011

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American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)
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Amankwah, E. K., L. E. Kelemen, Q. Wang, H. Song, G. Chenevix-Trench, J. Beesley, P. M. Webb, et al. 2011. “Prostate Cancer Susceptibility Polymorphism Rs2660753 Is Not Associated with Invasive Ovarian Cancer.” Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers & Prevention 20 (5) (March 17): 1028–1031. doi:10.1158/1055-9965.epi-11-0053.

Abstract

Background

We previously reported an association between rs2660753, a prostate cancer susceptibility polymorphism, and invasive epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) [odds ratio (OR)=1.2, 95% confidence interval (CI)=1.0-1.4, Ptrend=0.01] that showed a stronger association with the serous histological subtype (OR=1.3, 95% CI=1.1-1.5, Ptrend=0.003).

Methods

We sought to replicate this association in 12 other studies comprising 4,482 cases and 6,894 controls of white non-Hispanic ancestry in the Ovarian Cancer Association Consortium.

Results

No evidence for an association with all cancers or serous cancers was observed in a combined analysis of data from the replication studies (all: OR=1.0, 95% CI=0.9-1.1, Ptrend=0.61; serous: OR=1.0, 95% CI=0.9-1.1, Ptrend=0.85) or from the combined analysis of discovery and replication studies (all: OR=1.0, 95% CI=1.0-1.1, Ptrend= 0.28; serous: OR=1.1, 95% CI=1.0-1.2, Ptrend=0.11). There was no evidence for statistical heterogeneity in ORs across the studies.

Conclusions

Although rs2660753 is a strong a prostate cancer susceptibility polymorphism, the association with another hormonally related cancer, invasive EOC, is not supported by this replication study.

Impact

Our findings, based on a larger sample size, emphasize the importance of replicating potentially promising genetic risk associations.

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Keywords

chromosome 3p, SNP, ovarian cancer, risk factors

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