Abstract
ABSTRACTEndometrial cancer presents a major public health issue, particularly in post-menopausal women. Whilst there are known risk factors for the disease, including oestrogen and obesity, these factors do not fully explain risk variability in cancer outcomes. The identification of novel risk factors may aid in better understanding of endometrial cancer development and, given the link with oestrogen metabolism, obesity and the risk of various cancers, the gut microbiome could be one such risk factor. Mendelian randomization (MR), a method that reduces biases of conventional epidemiological studies (namely, confounding and reverse causation) by using genetic variants to proxy exposures, was used to investigate the effect of gut microbial traits on endometrial cancer risk. Whilst our initial analyses showed that the presence of an unclassified group of bacteria in theErysipelotrichaceaefamily increased the risk of oestrogen-dependent endometrial cancer (odds ratio (OR) per approximate doubling of the genetic liability to presence vs absence: 1.13; 95% CI: 1.01, 1.26; P=0.03), subsequent sensitivity analyses, including colocalisation, suggested these findings were unlikely reflective of causality. This work highlights the importance of using a robust MR analysis pipeline, including sensitivity analyses to assess the validity of causal effect estimates obtained using MR.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference32 articles.
1. Diagnosis and Management of Endometrial Cancer;Am Fam Physician,2016
2. Uk CR . Uterine cancer statistics 2022 [updated 2015-05-14. Available from: https://www.cancerresearchuk.org/health-professional/cancer-statistics/statistics-by-cancer-type/uterine-cancer.
3. Institute NC. Cancer Stat Facts: Uterine Cancer 2023 [Available from: https://seer.cancer.gov/statfacts/html/corp.html.
4. Uk CR . Types and grades | Womb cancer | Cancer research UK 2022 [Available from: https://www.cancerresearchuk.org/about-cancer/womb-cancer/types-grades.
5. How the Gut Microbiome Links to Menopause and Obesity, with Possible Implications for Endometrial Cancer Development;Journal of Clinical Medicine,2021