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GWAS Study

Clinical and genome-wide association analysis of chemoradiation-induced hearing loss in nasopharyngeal carcinoma.

He YQ, Luo LT, Wang TM et al.

37062025 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
777 Participants
46 Views
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

HY
He YQ
LL
Luo LT
WT
Wang TM
XW
Xue WQ
YD
Yang DW
LD
Li DH
DH
Diao H
XR
Xiao RW
DC
Deng CM
ZW
Zhang WL
LY
Liao Y
WY
Wu YX
WQ
Wang QL
ZT
Zhou T
LX
Li XZ
ZX
Zheng XH
ZP
Zhang PF
ZS
Zhang SD
HY
Hu YZ
SY
Sun Y
JW
Jia WH
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Chemoradiation-induced hearing loss (CRIHL) is one of the most devasting side effects for nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) patients, which seriously affects survivors' long-term quality of life. However, few studies have comprehensively characterized the risk factors for CRIHL. In this study, we found that age at diagnosis, tumor stage, and concurrent cisplatin dose were positively associated with chemoradiation-induced hearing loss. We performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) in 777 NPC patients and identified rs1050851 (within the exon 2 of NFKBIA), a variant with a high deleteriousness score, to be significantly associated with hearing loss risk (HR = 5.46, 95% CI 2.93-10.18, P = 9.51 × 10-08). The risk genotype of rs1050851 was associated with higher NFKBIA expression, which was correlated with lower cellular tolerance to cisplatin. According to permutation-based enrichment analysis, the variants mapping to 149 hereditary deafness genes were significantly enriched among GWAS top signals, which indicated the genetic similarity between hereditary deafness and CRIHL. Pathway analysis suggested that synaptic signaling was involved in the development of CRIHL. Additionally, the risk score integrating genetic and clinical factors can predict the risk of hearing loss with a relatively good performance in the test set. Collectively, this study shed new light on the etiology of chemoradiation-induced hearing loss, which facilitates high-risk individuals' identification for personalized prevention and treatment.

132 East Asian ancestry cases, 645 East Asian ancestry controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

777
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
East Asian
Ancestry
Chapter IV

AI-Generated Summary

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