Association of Polygenic Score With Tumor Molecular Subtypes in Papillary Thyroid Carcinoma

Author:

Wang Jennifer R12ORCID,Zafereo Mark E1,Wang Wenyi34ORCID,Joshu Corinne2,Ray Debashree25

Affiliation:

1. Department of Head and Neck Surgery, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center , Houston, TX 77030 , USA

2. Department of Epidemiology, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University , Baltimore, MD 21205 , USA

3. Department of Bioinformatics and Computational Biology, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center , Houston, TX 77005 , USA

4. Department of Biostatistics, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center , Houston, TX 77005 , USA

5. Department of Biostatistics, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University , Baltimore, MD 21205 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Context Genome-wide association studies have identified germline variants associated with elevated PTC risk. It is also known that somatic driver mutations contribute to PTC development and as such PTCs can be further categorized into different molecular subtypes based on their somatic alterations. However, it remains unknown whether identified germline variants predictive of PTC risk are associated with specific molecular subtypes. Objective The primary goal of the present study is to determine whether germline genetic risk, as assessed using a polygenic score (PGS) is associated with molecular subtypes of papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC), defined based on tumor driver mutation status. Methods This study was carried out using data from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) thyroid cancer study. A previously validated 10–single-nucleotide variation PGS for PTC derived from genome-wide association study hits was calculated to ascertain germline genetic risk. The primary molecular subtypes of interest were defined by tumor driver mutation status (BRAFV600E-mutated vs RAS-mutated vs “other”). We also explored associations between PGS and molecular subtypes defined by messenger RNA (mRNA) expression, microRNA expression, and DNA methylation patterns. Polytomous logistic regression analysis was used to assess the association between PGS and PTC molecular subtype with and without adjustment for clinical variables. Odds ratios (ORs) with their 95% CIs were estimated. Results A total of 359 patients were included in the study. PGS was significantly associated specific tumor molecular subtypes defined by tumor driver mutation status. Increasing germline risk was associated with having a higher odd of BRAFV600E-mutated PTC compared to PTCs without driver mutations in the “other” category. No significant difference was detected in terms of PGS tumor categorization in the RAS subtype compared to BRAFV600E. In exploratory analyses, PGS was also associated with mRNA-, microRNA-, and DNA methylation–defined molecular subtypes, as defined by the TCGA PTC study. Conclusion PGS has molecular subtype-specific associations in PTC, which has implications for their use in risk prediction.

Funder

Mark Foundation for Cancer Research

American Thyroid Association ThyCA

Petrick Thyroid Cancer Research Fund

Publisher

The Endocrine Society

Subject

Biochemistry (medical),Clinical Biochemistry,Endocrinology,Biochemistry,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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