Abstract

BackgroundRadiation-induced oral mucositis (OM) is one of the most common acute complications for head and neck cancer. Severe OM is associated with radiation treatment breaks, which harms successful tumor management. Radiogenomics studies have indicated that genetic variants are associated with adverse effects of radiotherapy.MethodsA large-scale genome-wide scan was performed in 1467 nasopharyngeal carcinoma patients, including 753 treated with 2D-CRT from Genetic Architecture of the Radiotherapy Toxicity and Prognosis (GARTP) cohort and 714 treated with IMRT (192 from the GARTP and 522 newly recruited). Subgroup analysis by radiotherapy technique was further performed in the top associations. We also performed physical and regulatory mapping of the risk loci and gene set enrichment analysis of the candidate target genes.ResultsWe identified 50 associated genomic loci and 64 genes via positional mapping, expression quantitative trait locus (eQTL) mapping, chromatin interaction mapping and gene-based analysis, and 36 of these loci were replicated in subgroup analysis. Interestingly, one of the top loci located in TNKS, a gene relevant to radiation toxicity, was associated with increased OM risk with OR = 3.72 of the lead SNP rs117157809 (95% CI 2.10–6.57; P = 6.33 × 10−6). Gene set analyses showed that the 64 candidate target genes were enriched in the biological processes of regulating telomere capping and maintenance and telomerase activity (Top P = 7.73 × 10−7).ConclusionsThese results enhance the biological understanding of radiotherapy toxicity. The association signals enriched in telomere function regulation implicate the potential underlying mechanism and warrant further functional investigation and potential individual radiotherapy applications.

Highlights

  • Radiation-induced oral mucositis (OM) is one of the most common acute complications for head and neck cancer

  • Due to the high tumor control of nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) by radiotherapy, more attentions has been paid to the adverse effects of radiotherapy, especially radiation-induced OM [3]

  • Radiogenomics studies have suggested that common genetic variants are associated with radiotherapy adverse effects, and a single-nucleotide polymorphism-based predictive assay along with clinical factors could be used to estimate the risk of a patient with cancer developing adverse effects from radiotherapy

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Summary

Introduction

Radiation-induced oral mucositis (OM) is one of the most common acute complications for head and neck cancer. Radiogenomics studies have suggested that common genetic variants are associated with radiotherapy adverse effects, and a single-nucleotide polymorphism-based predictive assay along with clinical factors could be used to estimate the risk of a patient with cancer developing adverse effects from radiotherapy. Such an assay could be used for personalized therapy and for the prevention of severe adverse effects, which could improve quality of life for patients [4]

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