Native American ancestry and breast cancer risk in Colombian and Mexican women: ruling out potential confounding through ancestry-informative markers

被引:0
|
作者
Zollner, Linda [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Torres, Diana [2 ,4 ]
Briceno, Ignacio [5 ]
Gilbert, Michael [2 ]
Torres-Mejia, Gabriela [6 ]
Dennis, Joe [7 ]
Bolla, Manjeet K. [7 ]
Wang, Qin [7 ]
Hamann, Ute [2 ]
Lorenzo Bermejo, Justo [1 ,8 ]
机构
[1] Heidelberg Univ, Inst Med Biometry, Stat Genet Res Grp, Heidelberg, Germany
[2] German Canc Res Ctr, Mol Genet Breast Canc, Neuenheimer Feld 580, D-69120 Heidelberg, Germany
[3] German Canc Res Ctr, Div Prote Stem Cells & Canc, Heidelberg, Germany
[4] Pontificia Univ Javeriana, Inst Human Genet, Bogota, Colombia
[5] Univ Sabana, Inst Genet Humana, Bogota, Colombia
[6] Natl Inst Publ Hlth, Ctr Populat Hlth Res, Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico
[7] Univ Cambridge, Ctr Canc Genet Epidemiol, Dept Publ Hlth & Primary Care, Cambridge, England
[8] Inst Cancerol Strasbourg Europe, Dept Biostat Precis Oncol, Strasbourg, France
基金
加拿大健康研究院; 美国国家卫生研究院; 欧盟地平线“2020”;
关键词
Genetic admixture; Ancestry-informative markers; Causal inference; Instrumental variables; Mendelian randomization; GENETIC ANCESTRY; MENDELIAN RANDOMIZATION; POPULATION-STRUCTURE; ADMIXTURE; ASSOCIATION; DIVERSITY; EPIDEMIOLOGY;
D O I
10.1186/s13058-023-01713-5
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
BackgroundLatin American and Hispanic women are less likely to develop breast cancer (BC) than women of European descent. Observational studies have found an inverse relationship between the individual proportion of Native American ancestry and BC risk. Here, we use ancestry-informative markers to rule out potential confounding of this relationship, estimating the confounder-free effect of Native American ancestry on BC risk.Methods and study populationWe used the informativeness for assignment measure to select robust instrumental variables for the individual proportion of Native American ancestry. We then conducted separate Mendelian randomization (MR) analyses based on 1401 Colombian women, most of them from the central Andean regions of Cundinamarca and Huila, and 1366 Mexican women from Mexico City, Monterrey and Veracruz, supplemented by sensitivity and stratified analyses.ResultsThe proportion of Colombian Native American ancestry showed a putatively causal protective effect on BC risk (inverse variance-weighted odds ratio [OR] = 0.974 per 1% increase in ancestry proportion, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.970-0.978, p = 3.1 x 10-40). The corresponding OR for Mexican Native American ancestry was 0.988 (95% CI 0.987-0.990, p = 1.4 x 10-44). Stratified analyses revealed a stronger association between Native American ancestry and familial BC (Colombian women: OR = 0.958, 95% CI 0.952-0.964; Mexican women: OR = 0.973, 95% CI 0.969-0.978), and stronger protective effects on oestrogen receptor (ER)-positive BC than on ER-negative and triple-negative BC.ConclusionsThe present results point to an unconfounded protective effect of Native American ancestry on BC risk in both Colombian and Mexican women which appears to be stronger for familial and ER-positive BC. These findings provide a rationale for personalised prevention programmes that take genetic ancestry into account, as well as for future admixture mapping studies.
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页数:13
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