학술논문

Genetic determinants of blood-cell traits influence susceptibility to childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia
Document Type
article
Source
American Journal of Human Genetics. 108(10)
Subject
Epidemiology
Biological Sciences
Health Sciences
Genetics
Childhood Leukemia
Human Genome
Pediatric
Pediatric Cancer
Cancer
Clinical Research
Prevention
Rare Diseases
Hematology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Adult
Aged
Biomarkers
Tumor
Blood Platelets
Case-Control Studies
Child
Female
Genetic Predisposition to Disease
Genome-Wide Association Study
Humans
Lymphocytes
Male
Mendelian Randomization Analysis
Middle Aged
Monocytes
Neutrophils
Precursor Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma
Prognosis
Prospective Studies
Quantitative Trait Loci
United Kingdom
GWAS
Mendelian randomization
acute lymphoblastic leukemia
blood-cell traits
lymphocytes
Medical and Health Sciences
Genetics & Heredity
Biological sciences
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Health sciences
Language
Abstract
Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is the most common childhood cancer. Despite overlap between genetic risk loci for ALL and hematologic traits, the etiological relevance of dysregulated blood-cell homeostasis remains unclear. We investigated this question in a genome-wide association study (GWAS) of childhood ALL (2,666 affected individuals, 60,272 control individuals) and a multi-trait GWAS of nine blood-cell indices in the UK Biobank. We identified 3,000 blood-cell-trait-associated (p < 5.0 × 10-8) variants, explaining 4.0% to 23.9% of trait variation and including 115 loci associated with blood-cell ratios (LMR, lymphocyte-to-monocyte ratio; NLR, neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio; PLR, platelet-to-lymphocyte ratio). ALL susceptibility was genetically correlated with lymphocyte counts (rg = 0.088, p = 4.0 × 10-4) and PLR (rg = -0.072, p = 0.0017). In Mendelian randomization analyses, genetically predicted increase in lymphocyte counts was associated with increased ALL risk (odds ratio [OR] = 1.16, p = 0.031) and strengthened after accounting for other cell types (OR = 1.43, p = 8.8 × 10-4). We observed positive associations with increasing LMR (OR = 1.22, p = 0.0017) and inverse effects for NLR (OR = 0.67, p = 3.1 × 10-4) and PLR (OR = 0.80, p = 0.002). Our study shows that a genetically induced shift toward higher lymphocyte counts, overall and in relation to monocytes, neutrophils, and platelets, confers an increased susceptibility to childhood ALL.