Abstract
Abstract Lung cancer incidence and mortality in the U.S. have substantial ethnic disparities. African Americans of both sexes have the high incidence rate at 56.8 and the highest death rate at 38.1 per 100,000 people from 2015 to 2019. Non-Hispanic black men have the highest incidence at 73.9 and the highest death rate at 56.3 per 100,000 people. While many genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of lung cancer have discovered ~45 putative risk loci, a large proportion of the heritability of lung cancer remains unexplained. To date, most single population-based GWAS have been performed in Europeans while there are a few Asian ancestry-specific genetic studies and two cross-ancestry studies. Non-European GWAS of lung cancer has been underrepresented. Although African Americans have higher lung cancer incidence and poorer lung cancer survival rate, and smoke fewer cigarettes per day compared to Europeans, few comprehensive GWAS of lung cancer in African Americans has been conducted. This study aims to decipher the genetic component of predisposition to lung cancer among African Americans. This study aims to decipher the genetic component of predisposition to lung cancer among African Americans. We conducted an African-ancestry GWAS comprising 2,280 lung cancer cases and 4,301 controls to comprehensively characterize common and low-frequency lung cancer genetic susceptibility loci using HRC imputed lung cancer data. The novel variants in or near VWF on 12p13.31 (OR=1.29, P=6.93 × 10−9) for overall lung cancer and GACAT3 on 2p24.3 (0.65, 1.24 × 10−9), TRIP13 on 5p15.33 (3.49, 1.00 × 10−8), ERC1 on 12p13.33 (4.64, 6.08 × 10−9), LMAN1L (near CYP1A1) on 15q24.1 (4.25, 8.71 × 10−9) for lung squamous cell cancer were identified at a genome-wide significance level. Our GWAS of lung cancer identified five novel genetic susceptibility associations and confirmed several variants on 15q25 and 19q13. Further works are required to elucidate the possible biological mechanisms underlying these associations among lung cancer and histological subtypes in African Americans. Citation Format: Jinyoung Byun, Younghun Han, Xiangjun Xiao, Christine Lusk, Hoda J. Badr, Rayjean Hung, Ann G. Schwartz, Christopher I. Amos, INTEGRAL Consortium. Genome-wide association study of African Americans reveals new susceptibility loci contributing to lung cancer and mechanisms of population-specific etiology. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2023; Part 1 (Regular and Invited Abstracts); 2023 Apr 14-19; Orlando, FL. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2023;83(7_Suppl):Abstract nr 5218.
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