Re-evaluating genetic variants identified in candidate gene studies of breast cancer risk using data from nearly 280,000 women of Asian and European ancestry. EBioMedicine Yang, Y. n., Shu, X. n., Shu, X. O., Bolla, M. K., Kweon, S. S., Cai, Q. n., Michailidou, K. n., Wang, Q. n., Dennis, J. n., Park, B. n., Matsuo, K. n., Kwong, A. n., Park, S. K., Wu, A. H., Teo, S. H., Iwasaki, M. n., Choi, J. Y., Li, J. n., Hartman, M. n., Shen, C. Y., Muir, K. n., Lophatananon, A. n., Li, B. n., Wen, W. n., Gao, Y. T., Xiang, Y. B., Aronson, K. J., Spinell, J. J., Gago-Dominguez, M. n., John, E. M., Kurian, A. W., Chang-Claude, J. n., Chen, S. T., Dörk, T. n., Evans, D. G., Schmidt, M. K., Shin, M. H., Giles, G. G., Milne, R. L., Simard, J. n., Kubo, M. n., Kraft, P. n., Kang, D. n., Easton, D. F., Zheng, W. n., Long, J. n. 2019

Abstract

We previously conducted a systematic field synopsis of 1059 breast cancer candidate gene studies and investigated 279 genetic variants, 51 of which showed associations. The major limitation of this work was the small sample size, even pooling data from all 1059 studies. Thereafter, genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have accumulated data for hundreds of thousands of subjects. It's necessary to re-evaluate these variants in large GWAS datasets.Of these 279 variants, data were obtained for 228 from GWAS conducted within the Asian Breast Cancer Consortium (24,206 cases and 24,775 controls) and the Breast Cancer Association Consortium (122,977 cases and 105,974 controls of European ancestry). Meta-analyses were conducted to combine the results from these two datasets.Of those 228 variants, an association was observed for 12 variants in 10 genes at a Bonferroni-corrected threshold of P?

View details for DOI 10.1016/j.ebiom.2019.09.006

View details for PubMedID 31629678