학술논문

Genetically Predicted Body Mass Index and Breast Cancer Risk: Mendelian Randomization Analyses of Data from 145,000 Women of European Descent.
Document Type
article
Author
Guo, YanWarren Andersen, ShanedaShu, Xiao-OuMichailidou, KyriakiBolla, Manjeet KWang, QinGarcia-Closas, MontserratMilne, Roger LSchmidt, Marjanka KChang-Claude, JennyDunning, AllisonBojesen, Stig EAhsan, HabibulAittomäki, KristiinaAndrulis, Irene LAnton-Culver, HodaArndt, VolkerBeckmann, Matthias WBeeghly-Fadiel, AliciaBenitez, JavierBogdanova, Natalia VBonanni, BernardoBørresen-Dale, Anne-LiseBrand, JudithBrauch, HiltrudBrenner, HermannBrüning, ThomasBurwinkel, BarbaraCasey, GrahamChenevix-Trench, GeorgiaCouch, Fergus JCox, AngelaCross, Simon SCzene, KamilaDevilee, PeterDörk, ThiloDumont, MartineFasching, Peter AFigueroa, JonineFlesch-Janys, DieterFletcher, OliviaFlyger, HenrikFostira, FlorentiaGammon, MarilieGiles, Graham GGuénel, PascalHaiman, Christopher AHamann, UteHooning, Maartje JHopper, John LJakubowska, AnnaJasmine, FarzanaJenkins, MarkJohn, Esther MJohnson, NicholaJones, Michael EKabisch, MariaKibriya, MuhammadKnight, Julia AKoppert, Linetta BKosma, Veli-MattiKristensen, VesselaLe Marchand, LoicLee, EunjungLi, JingmeiLindblom, AnnikaLuben, RobertLubinski, JanMalone, Kathi EMannermaa, ArtoMargolin, SaraMarme, FrederikMcLean, CatrionaMeijers-Heijboer, HanneMeindl, AlfonsNeuhausen, Susan LNevanlinna, HeliNeven, PatrickOlson, Janet EPerez, Jose IAPerkins, BarbaraPeterlongo, PaoloPhillips, Kelly-AnnePylkäs, KatriRudolph, AnjaSantella, ReginaSawyer, Elinor JSchmutzler, Rita KSeynaeve, CarolineShah, MitulShrubsole, Martha JSouthey, Melissa CSwerdlow, Anthony JToland, Amanda ETomlinson, IanTorres, DianaTruong, ThérèseUrsin, GiskeVan Der Luijt, Rob BVerhoef, Senno
Source
PLoS medicine. 13(8)
Subject
Humans
Breast Neoplasms
Genetic Predisposition to Disease
Body Mass Index
Models
Statistical
Risk Factors
Menopause
Polymorphism
Single Nucleotide
Middle Aged
European Continental Ancestry Group
Female
Mendelian Randomization Analysis
Models
Statistical
Polymorphism
Single Nucleotide
Genetics
Prevention
Breast Cancer
Nutrition
Clinical Research
Cancer
Aging
Human Genome
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
General & Internal Medicine
Medical and Health Sciences
Language
Abstract
BackgroundObservational epidemiological studies have shown that high body mass index (BMI) is associated with a reduced risk of breast cancer in premenopausal women but an increased risk in postmenopausal women. It is unclear whether this association is mediated through shared genetic or environmental factors.MethodsWe applied Mendelian randomization to evaluate the association between BMI and risk of breast cancer occurrence using data from two large breast cancer consortia. We created a weighted BMI genetic score comprising 84 BMI-associated genetic variants to predicted BMI. We evaluated genetically predicted BMI in association with breast cancer risk using individual-level data from the Breast Cancer Association Consortium (BCAC) (cases  =  46,325, controls  =  42,482). We further evaluated the association between genetically predicted BMI and breast cancer risk using summary statistics from 16,003 cases and 41,335 controls from the Discovery, Biology, and Risk of Inherited Variants in Breast Cancer (DRIVE) Project. Because most studies measured BMI after cancer diagnosis, we could not conduct a parallel analysis to adequately evaluate the association of measured BMI with breast cancer risk prospectively.ResultsIn the BCAC data, genetically predicted BMI was found to be inversely associated with breast cancer risk (odds ratio [OR]  =  0.65 per 5 kg/m2 increase, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.56-0.75, p = 3.32 × 10-10). The associations were similar for both premenopausal (OR   =   0.44, 95% CI:0.31-0.62, p  =  9.91 × 10-8) and postmenopausal breast cancer (OR  =  0.57, 95% CI: 0.46-0.71, p  =  1.88 × 10-8). This association was replicated in the data from the DRIVE consortium (OR  =  0.72, 95% CI: 0.60-0.84, p   =   1.64 × 10-7). Single marker analyses identified 17 of the 84 BMI-associated single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in association with breast cancer risk at p