Multi-ancestry genome-wide association study of 4069 children with glioma identifies 9p21.3 risk locus

Author:

Foss-Skiftesvik Jon123ORCID,Li Shaobo4ORCID,Rosenbaum Adam5,Hagen Christian Munch3,Stoltze Ulrik Kristoffer26,Ljungqvist Sally5,Hjalmars Ulf5,Schmiegelow Kjeld2ORCID,Morimoto Libby7ORCID,de Smith Adam J4,Mathiasen René2,Metayer Catherine8,Hougaard David3,Melin Beatrice5,Walsh Kyle M9,Bybjerg-Grauholm Jonas3,Dahlin Anna M5,Wiemels Joseph L4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery, Rigshospitalet University Hospital , Copenhagen , Denmark

2. Department of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, Rigshospitalet University Hospital , Copenhagen , Denmark

3. Section for Neonatal Genetics, Statens Serum Institute , Copenhagen , Denmark

4. Center for Genetic Epidemiology, Department of Population and Public Health Sciences, University of Southern California , Los Angeles, California , USA

5. Department of Radiation Sciences, Oncology, Umeå University , Umeå , Sweden

6. Department of Clinical Genetics, Rigshospitalet University Hospital , Copenhagen , Denmark

7. Center for Personalized Medicine, Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles , Los Angeles, California , USA

8. School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley , Berkeley, California , USA

9. Division of Neuro-Epidemiology, Department of Neurosurgery, Duke University , Durham, North Carolina , USA

Abstract

Abstract Background Although recent sequencing studies have revealed that 10% of childhood gliomas are caused by rare germline mutations, the role of common variants is undetermined and no genome-wide significant risk loci for pediatric central nervous system tumors have been identified to date. Methods Meta-analysis of 3 population-based genome-wide association studies comprising 4069 children with glioma and 8778 controls of multiple genetic ancestries. Replication was performed in a separate case–control cohort. Quantitative trait loci analyses and a transcriptome-wide association study were conducted to assess possible links with brain tissue expression across 18 628 genes. Results Common variants in CDKN2B-AS1 at 9p21.3 were significantly associated with astrocytoma, the most common subtype of glioma in children (rs573687, P-value of 6.974e-10, OR 1.273, 95% CI 1.179–1.374). The association was driven by low-grade astrocytoma (P-value of 3.815e-9) and exhibited unidirectional effects across all 6 genetic ancestries. For glioma overall, the association approached genome-wide significance (rs3731239, P-value of 5.411e-8), while no significant association was observed for high-grade tumors. Predicted decreased brain tissue expression of CDKN2B was significantly associated with astrocytoma (P-value of 8.090e-8). Conclusions In this population-based genome-wide association study meta-analysis, we identify and replicate 9p21.3 (CDKN2B-AS1) as a risk locus for childhood astrocytoma, thereby establishing the first genome-wide significant evidence of common variant predisposition in pediatric neuro-oncology. We furthermore provide a functional basis for the association by showing a possible link to decreased brain tissue CDKN2B expression and substantiate that genetic susceptibility differs between low- and high-grade astrocytoma.

Funder

Danish Cancer Society

Danish Childhood Cancer Foundation

Danish Childhood Brain Tumor Foundation

Dagmar Marshall Foundation

Harboe Foundation

Swedish Childhood Cancer Fund

Cancer Research Foundation in Northern Sweden

Swedish Research Council

Swedish Cancer Foundation

National Cancer Institute

National Institutes of Health

California Department of Public Health

California Health and Safety Code Section

National Cancer Institute’s Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results Program

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

California Biobank Program

Gabriella Miller Kids First Pediatric Research Program

Kids First Data Resource Portal

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cancer Research,Neurology (clinical),Oncology

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