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GWAS Study

Multi-ancestry GWAS meta-analyses of lung cancer reveal susceptibility loci and elucidate smoking-independent genetic risk.

Gorman BR, Ji SG, Francis M et al.

39366959 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
260154 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

GB
Gorman BR
JS
Ji SG
FM
Francis M
SA
Sendamarai AK
SY
Shi Y
DP
Devineni P
SU
Saxena U
PE
Partan E
DA
DeVito AK
BJ
Byun J
HY
Han Y
XX
Xiao X
SD
Sin DD
TW
Timens W
MJ
Moser J
MS
Muralidhar S
RR
Ramoni R
HR
Hung RJ
MJ
McKay JD
BY
Bossé Y
SR
Sun R
AC
Amos CI
PS
Pyarajan S
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Lung cancer remains the leading cause of cancer mortality, despite declining smoking rates. Previous lung cancer GWAS have identified numerous loci, but separating the genetic risks of lung cancer and smoking behavioral susceptibility remains challenging. Here, we perform multi-ancestry GWAS meta-analyses of lung cancer using the Million Veteran Program cohort (approximately 95% male cases) and a previous study of European-ancestry individuals, jointly comprising 42,102 cases and 181,270 controls, followed by replication in an independent cohort of 19,404 cases and 17,378 controls. We then carry out conditional meta-analyses on cigarettes per day and identify two novel, replicated loci, including the 19p13.11 pleiotropic cancer locus in squamous cell lung carcinoma. Overall, we report twelve novel risk loci for overall lung cancer, lung adenocarcinoma, and squamous cell lung carcinoma, nine of which are externally replicated. Finally, we perform PheWAS on polygenic risk scores for lung cancer, with and without conditioning on smoking. The unconditioned lung cancer polygenic risk score is associated with smoking status in controls, illustrating a reduced predictive utility in non-smokers. Additionally, our polygenic risk score demonstrates smoking-independent pleiotropy of lung cancer risk across neoplasms and metabolic traits.

39,664 European ancestry cases, 119,158 European ancestry controls, 2,438 African ancestry cases, 62,112 African ancestry controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

260154
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
Yes
Replicated
17,417 European ancestry cases, 13,599 European ancestry controls, 1,987 African ancestry cases, 3,779 African ancestry controls
Replication Participants
European, African unspecified
Ancestry
U.S.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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