GWAS in the SIGNAL/PHARE clinical cohort restricts the association between the FGFR2 locus and estrogen receptor status to HER2-negative breast cancer patients
Affiliation auteurs | !!!! Error affiliation !!!! |
Titre | GWAS in the SIGNAL/PHARE clinical cohort restricts the association between the FGFR2 locus and estrogen receptor status to HER2-negative breast cancer patients |
Type de publication | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 2016 |
Auteurs | Cox DG, Curtit E, Romieu G, Fumoleau P, Rios M, Bonnefoi H, Bachelot T, Soulie P, Jouannaud C, Bourgeois H, Petit T, Tennevet I, Assouline D, Mathieu M-C, Jacquin J-P, Lavau-Denes S, Darut-Jouve A, Ferrero J-M, Tarpin C, Levy C, Delecroix V, Trillet-Lenoir V, Cojocarasu O, Meunier J, Pierga J-Y, Faure-Mercier C, Blanche H, Sahbatou M, Boland A, Bacq D, Besse C, Deleuze J-F, Pauporte I, Thomas G, Pivot X |
Journal | ONCOTARGET |
Volume | 7 |
Pagination | 77358-77364 |
Date Published | NOV 22 |
Type of Article | Article |
Mots-clés | Association, Breast, estrogen receptor, GWAS, HER2 |
Résumé | Genetic polymorphisms are associated with breast cancer risk. Clinical and epidemiological observations suggest that clinical characteristics of breast cancer, such as estrogen receptor or HER2 status, are also influenced by hereditary factors. To identify genetic variants associated with pathological characteristics of breast cancer patients, a Genome Wide Association Study was performed in a cohort of 9365 women from the French nationwide SIGNAL/PHARE studies (NCT00381901/RECF1098). Strong association between the FGFR2 locus and ER status of breast cancer patients was observed (ER-positive n=6211, ER-negative n=2516; rs3135718 OR=1.34 p=5.46x10-12). This association was limited to patients with HER2-negative tumors (ER-positive n=4267, ER-negative n=1185; rs3135724 OR=1.85 p=1.16x10-11). The FGFR2 locus is known to be associated with breast cancer risk. This study provides sound evidence for an association between variants in the FGFR2 locus and ER status among breast cancer patients, particularly among patients with HER2-negative disease. This refinement of the association between FGFR2 variants and ER-status to HER2-negative disease provides novel insight to potential biological and clinical influence of genetic polymorphisms on breast tumors. |
DOI | 10.18632/oncotarget.12669 |