Abstract

SummaryGenome-wide association studies (GWASs) have identified thousands of cancer risk loci revealing many risk regions shared across multiple cancers. Characterizing the cross-cancer shared genetic basis can increase our understanding of global mechanisms of cancer development. In this study, we collected GWAS summary statistics based on up to 375,468 cancer cases and 530,521 controls for fourteen types of cancer, including breast (overall, estrogen receptor [ER]-positive, and ER-negative), colorectal, endometrial, esophageal, glioma, head/neck, lung, melanoma, ovarian, pancreatic, prostate, and renal cancer, to characterize the shared genetic basis of cancer risk. We identified thirteen pairs of cancers with statistically significant local genetic correlations across eight distinct genomic regions. Specifically, the 5p15.33 region, harboring the TERT and CLPTM1L genes, showed statistically significant local genetic correlations for multiple cancer pairs. We conducted a cross-cancer fine-mapping of the 5p15.33 region based on eight cancers that showed genome-wide significant associations in this region (ER-negative breast, colorectal, glioma, lung, melanoma, ovarian, pancreatic, and prostate cancer). We used an iterative analysis pipeline implementing a subset-based meta-analysis approach based on cancer-specific conditional analyses and identified ten independent cross-cancer associations within this region. For each signal, we conducted cross-cancer fine-mapping to prioritize the most plausible causal variants. Our findings provide a more in-depth understanding of the shared inherited basis across human cancers and expand our knowledge of the 5p15.33 region in carcinogenesis.

Highlights

  • Cancer is a major global public health problem

  • Genetic correlations due to sample overlap We estimated the number of controls overlapping between pairs of cancers, as these would induce a correlation in the Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) summary statistics between cancers

  • Local genetic correlation revealed specific regions in the genome with shared heritability across cancers We first partitioned the genome into 1,703 regions and estimated the pairwise local genetic correlation between fourteen types of cancers

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Summary

Introduction

Approximately 1.9 million individuals are projected to be newly diagnosed with cancer, and more than 600,000 affected individuals are projected to die of cancer in 2021.2 Inherited genetic variants, along with environmental exposures, contribute substantially to the pathogenesis of (Affiliations continued on page) Ó 2021 The Authors. Purdue,[6] Renal Cancer GWAS Consortium, Paul Pharoah,[9] Rayjean J. Amundadottir,[6] Peter Kraft,[7,8] Bogdan Pasaniuc,[2,53,54] and Sara Lindstrom1,15,*

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