학술논문

A large-scale assessment of two-way SNP interactions in breast cancer susceptibility using 46 450 cases and 42 461 controls from the breast cancer association consortium
Document Type
article
Author
Milne, Roger LHerranz, JesúsMichailidou, KyriakiDennis, JoeTyrer, Jonathan PZamora, M PilarArias-Perez, José IgnacioGonzález-Neira, AnnaPita, GuillermoAlonso, M RosarioWang, QinBolla, Manjeet KCzene, KamilaEriksson, MikaelHumphreys, KeithDarabi, HatefLi, JingmeiAnton-Culver, HodaNeuhausen, Susan LZiogas, ArgyriosClarke, Christina AHopper, John LDite, Gillian SApicella, CarmelSouthey, Melissa CChenevix-Trench, GeorgiaSwerdlow, AnthonyAshworth, AlanOrr, NicholasSchoemaker, MinoukJakubowska, AnnaLubinski, JanJaworska-Bieniek, KatarzynaDurda, KatarzynaAndrulis, Irene LKnight, Julia AGlendon, GordMulligan, Anna MarieBojesen, Stig ENordestgaard, Børge GFlyger, HenrikNevanlinna, HeliMuranen, Taru AAittomäki, KristiinaBlomqvist, CarlChang-Claude, JennyRudolph, AnjaSeibold, PetraFlesch-Janys, DieterWang, XianshuOlson, Janet EVachon, CelinePurrington, KristenWinqvist, RobertPylkäs, KatriJukkola-Vuorinen, ArjaGrip, MerviDunning, Alison MShah, MitulGuénel, PascalTruong, ThérèseSanchez, MarieMulot, ClaireBrenner, HermannDieffenbach, Aida KarinaArndt, VolkerStegmaier, ChristaLindblom, AnnikaMargolin, SaraHooning, Maartje JHollestelle, AntoinetteCollée, J MargrietJager, AgnesCox, AngelaBrock, Ian WReed, Malcolm WRDevilee, PeterTollenaar, Robert AEMSeynaeve, CarolineHaiman, Christopher AHenderson, Brian ESchumacher, FredrickLe Marchand, LoicSimard, JacquesDumont, MartineSoucy, PennyDörk, ThiloBogdanova, Natalia VHamann, UteFörsti, AstaRüdiger, ThomasUlmer, Hans-UlrichFasching, Peter AHäberle, LotharEkici, Arif BBeckmann, Matthias WFletcher, OliviaJohnson, Nicholados Santos Silva, IsabelPeto, Julian
Source
Human Molecular Genetics. 23(7)
Subject
Breast Cancer
Human Genome
Genetics
Cancer
Prevention
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Breast Neoplasms
Case-Control Studies
Epistasis
Genetic
Female
Genetic Predisposition to Disease
Genome-Wide Association Study
Humans
Logistic Models
Polymorphism
Single Nucleotide
kConFab Investigators
Australian Ovarian Cancer Study Group
GENICA Network
TNBCC
Biological Sciences
Medical and Health Sciences
Genetics & Heredity
Language
Abstract
Part of the substantial unexplained familial aggregation of breast cancer may be due to interactions between common variants, but few studies have had adequate statistical power to detect interactions of realistic magnitude. We aimed to assess all two-way interactions in breast cancer susceptibility between 70,917 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) selected primarily based on prior evidence of a marginal effect. Thirty-eight international studies contributed data for 46,450 breast cancer cases and 42,461 controls of European origin as part of a multi-consortium project (COGS). First, SNPs were preselected based on evidence (P < 0.01) of a per-allele main effect, and all two-way combinations of those were evaluated by a per-allele (1 d.f.) test for interaction using logistic regression. Second, all 2.5 billion possible two-SNP combinations were evaluated using Boolean operation-based screening and testing, and SNP pairs with the strongest evidence of interaction (P < 10(-4)) were selected for more careful assessment by logistic regression. Under the first approach, 3277 SNPs were preselected, but an evaluation of all possible two-SNP combinations (1 d.f.) identified no interactions at P < 10(-8). Results from the second analytic approach were consistent with those from the first (P > 10(-10)). In summary, we observed little evidence of two-way SNP interactions in breast cancer susceptibility, despite the large number of SNPs with potential marginal effects considered and the very large sample size. This finding may have important implications for risk prediction, simplifying the modelling required. Further comprehensive, large-scale genome-wide interaction studies may identify novel interacting loci if the inherent logistic and computational challenges can be overcome.