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GWAS Study

Whole Exome-Wide Association Identifies Rare Variants in <i>APC</i> Associated with High-Risk Colorectal Cancer in the Middle East.

Siraj AK, Bu R, Azam S et al.

39518157 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
1541 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

SA
Siraj AK
BR
Bu R
AS
Azam S
QZ
Qadri Z
IK
Iqbal K
PS
Parvathareddy SK
AF
Al-Dayel F
AK
Al-Kuraya KS
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Colorectal cancer (CRC) displays a complex pattern of inheritance. It is postulated that much of the missing heritability of CRC is enriched in high-impact rare alleles, which might play a crucial role in the etiology and susceptibility of CRC. Methods: In this study, an exome-wide association analysis was performed in 146 patients with high-risk CRC in the Middle East and 1395 healthy controls. The aim was to identify rare germline variants in coding regions and their splicing sites associated with high-risk CRC in the Middle Eastern population. Results: Rare inactivating variants (RIVs) in APC had the strongest association with high-risk CRC (6/146 in cases vs. 1/1395 in controls, OR = 59.7, p = 5.13 × 10-12), whereas RIVs in RIMS1, an RAS superfamily member, were significantly associated with high-risk CRC (5/146 case vs. 2/1395 controls, OR = 24.7, p = 2.03 × 10-8). Rare damaging variants in 17 genes were associated with high-risk CRC at the exome-wide threshold (p < 2.5 × 10-6). Based on the sequence kernel association test, nonsynonymous variants in six genes (TNXB, TAP2, GPSM3, ADGRG4, TMEM229A, and ANKRD33B) had a significant association with high-risk CRC. RIVs in APC-the most common high-penetrance genetic factor-were associated with patients with high-risk CRC in the Middle East. Individuals who inherited APC RIVs had an approximate 60-fold increased risk of developing CRC and were likely to develop the disease earlier. Conclusions: We identified new potential CRC predisposition variants in other genes that could play a role in CRC inheritance. However, large collaborative studies are needed to confirm the association of these variants with high-risk CRC. These results provide information for counseling patients with high-risk CRC and their families in our population.

146 Middle Eastern ancestry cases, 1,395 Middle Eastern ancestry controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

1541
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
Greater Middle Eastern (Middle Eastern, North African or Persian)
Ancestry
Saudi Arabia
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

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