- Main
Genome-wide association study of prostate cancer in men of African ancestry identifies a susceptibility locus at 17q21
- Haiman, Christopher A;
- Chen, Gary K;
- Blot, William J;
- Strom, Sara S;
- Berndt, Sonja I;
- Kittles, Rick A;
- Rybicki, Benjamin A;
- Isaacs, William B;
- Ingles, Sue A;
- Stanford, Janet L;
- Diver, W Ryan;
- Witte, John S;
- Hsing, Ann W;
- Nemesure, Barbara;
- Rebbeck, Timothy R;
- Cooney, Kathleen A;
- Xu, Jianfeng;
- Kibel, Adam S;
- Hu, Jennifer J;
- John, Esther M;
- Gueye, Serigne M;
- Watya, Stephen;
- Signorello, Lisa B;
- Hayes, Richard B;
- Wang, Zhaoming;
- Yeboah, Edward;
- Tettey, Yao;
- Cai, Qiuyin;
- Kolb, Suzanne;
- Ostrander, Elaine A;
- Zeigler-Johnson, Charnita;
- Yamamura, Yuko;
- Neslund-Dudas, Christine;
- Haslag-Minoff, Jennifer;
- Wu, William;
- Thomas, Venetta;
- Allen, Glenn O;
- Murphy, Adam;
- Chang, Bao-Li;
- Zheng, S Lilly;
- Leske, M Cristina;
- Wu, Suh-Yuh;
- Ray, Anna M;
- Hennis, Anselm JM;
- Thun, Michael J;
- Carpten, John;
- Casey, Graham;
- Carter, Erin N;
- Duarte, Edder R;
- Xia, Lucy Y;
- Sheng, Xin;
- Wan, Peggy;
- Pooler, Loreall C;
- Cheng, Iona;
- Monroe, Kristine R;
- Schumacher, Fredrick;
- Le Marchand, Loic;
- Kolonel, Laurence N;
- Chanock, Stephen J;
- Berg, David Van Den;
- Stram, Daniel O;
- Henderson, Brian E
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1038/ng.839Abstract
In search of common risk alleles for prostate cancer that could contribute to high rates of the disease in men of African ancestry, we conducted a genome-wide association study, with 1,047,986 SNP markers examined in 3,425 African-Americans with prostate cancer (cases) and 3,290 African-American male controls. We followed up the most significant 17 new associations from stage 1 in 1,844 cases and 3,269 controls of African ancestry. We identified a new risk variant on chromosome 17q21 (rs7210100, odds ratio per allele = 1.51, P = 3.4 × 10(-13)). The frequency of the risk allele is ∼5% in men of African descent, whereas it is rare in other populations (<1%). Further studies are needed to investigate the biological contribution of this allele to prostate cancer risk. These findings emphasize the importance of conducting genome-wide association studies in diverse populations.
Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
Main Content
Enter the password to open this PDF file:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-