Scientific Reports (Jan 2022)

Genome-wide association study identifies tumor anatomical site-specific risk variants for colorectal cancer survival

  • Julia D. Labadie,
  • Sevtap Savas,
  • Tabitha A. Harrison,
  • Barb Banbury,
  • Yuhan Huang,
  • Daniel D. Buchanan,
  • Peter T. Campbell,
  • Steven J. Gallinger,
  • Graham G. Giles,
  • Marc J. Gunter,
  • Michael Hoffmeister,
  • Li Hsu,
  • Mark A. Jenkins,
  • Yi Lin,
  • Shuji Ogino,
  • Amanda I. Phipps,
  • Martha L. Slattery,
  • Robert S. Steinfelder,
  • Wei Sun,
  • Bethany Van Guelpen,
  • Xinwei Hua,
  • Jane C. Figuieredo,
  • Rish K. Pai,
  • Rami Nassir,
  • Lihong Qi,
  • Andrew T. Chan,
  • Ulrike Peters,
  • Polly A. Newcomb

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-03945-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Identification of new genetic markers may improve the prediction of colorectal cancer prognosis. Our objective was to examine genome-wide associations of germline genetic variants with disease-specific survival in an analysis of 16,964 cases of colorectal cancer. We analyzed genotype and colorectal cancer-specific survival data from a consortium of 15 studies. Approximately 7.5 million SNPs were examined under the log-additive model using Cox proportional hazards models, adjusting for clinical factors and principal components. Additionally, we ran secondary analyses stratifying by tumor site and disease stage. We used a genome-wide p-value threshold of 5 × 10–8 to assess statistical significance. No variants were statistically significantly associated with disease-specific survival in the full case analysis or in the stage-stratified analyses. Three SNPs were statistically significantly associated with disease-specific survival for cases with tumors located in the distal colon (rs698022, HR = 1.48, CI 1.30–1.69, p = 8.47 × 10–9) and the proximal colon (rs189655236, HR = 2.14, 95% CI 1.65–2.77, p = 9.19 × 10–9 and rs144717887, HR = 2.01, 95% CI 1.57–2.58, p = 3.14 × 10–8), whereas no associations were detected for rectal tumors. Findings from this large genome-wide association study highlight the potential for anatomical-site-stratified genome-wide studies to identify germline genetic risk variants associated with colorectal cancer-specific survival. Larger sample sizes and further replication efforts are needed to more fully interpret these findings.