BJUI Compass (Mar 2023)

Systematic review of reported association studies of monogenic genes and bladder cancer risk and confirmation analysis in a large population cohort

  • Abrar Mian,
  • Jun Wei,
  • Zhuqing Shi,
  • Andrew S. Rifkin,
  • S. Lilly Zheng,
  • Alexander P. Glaser,
  • James T. Kearns,
  • Brian T. Helfand,
  • Jianfeng Xu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/bco2.206
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 2
pp. 156 – 163

Abstract

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Abstract Objectives To evaluate which of previously reported monogenic genes are associated with increased bladder cancer risk, we reviewed published papers on associations of genes and bladder cancer risk and performed a confirmation study of these genes in a large population‐based cohort. Subjects and methods A systematic review of published papers prior to June 2022 was performed first to identify all genes where germline mutations were associated with bladder cancer risk. The associations of these candidate genes with bladder cancer risk were then tested among 1695 bladder cancer cases and 186 271 controls in the UK Biobank (UKB). The robust SKAT‐O, a gene‐based analysis that properly controls for type I error rates due to unbalanced case–control ratio, was used for association tests adjusting for age at recruitment, gender, smoking status, and genetic background. Results The systematic review identified nine genes that were significantly associated with bladder cancer risk in at least one study (p < 0.05), including MUTYH, MSH2, MSH6, MLH1, ATM, BRCA2, ERCC5, TGFB1 and CHEK2. When pathogenic/likely pathogenic mutations were aggregated within each gene, the association was confirmed for three genes in the UKB at p < 0.0056 (Bonferroni correction for nine tests), including CHEK2, ATM and BRCA2, all also known to be associated with hereditary breast cancer. Suggestive evidence of association was found for two other genes, including MLH1 (p = 0.006) and MSH2 (p = 0.007), both known to be associated with Lynch syndrome. Among these five genes, the bladder cancer risks range from 1.60 (ATM) to 4.88 (MLH1), and mutation carrier rates in cases range from 0.06% (MSH2) to 2.01% (CHEK2). Conclusion This study provides statistical evidence for association of previously reported genes and bladder cancer risk and has clinical utility for risk assessment and genetic counselling.

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