Epigenome-wide association study reveals decreased average methylation levels years before breast cancer diagnosis
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/24803Dato
2015-08-04Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
van Veldhoven, Karin; Polidoro, Silvia; Baglietto, Laura; Severi, Gianluca; Sacerdote, Carlotta; Panico, Salvatore; Mattiello, Amalia; Palli, Domenico; Masala, Giovanna; Krogh, Vittorio; Agnoli, Claudia; Tumino, Rosario; Frasca, Graziella; Flower, Kirsty; Curry, Ed; Orr, Nicholas; Tomczyk, Katarzyna; Jones, Michael E.; Ashworth, Alan; Swerdlow, Anthony; Chadeau-Hyam, Marc; Lund, Eiliv; Garcia-Closas, Montserrat; Sandanger, Torkjel M; Flanagan, James M.; Vineis, PaoloSammendrag
Results: In EPIC, we found that high epigenome-wide methylation was associated with lower risk of breast cancer (odds ratio (OR) per 1 SD = 0.61, 95 % confidence interval (CI) 0.47–0.80; −0.2 % average difference in epigenome-wide methylation for cases and controls). Specifically, this was observed in gene bodies (OR = 0.51, 95 % CI 0.38–0.69) but not in gene promoters (OR = 0.92, 95 % CI 0.64–1.32). The association was not replicated in NOWAC (OR = 1.03 95 % CI 0.81–1.30). The reasons for heterogeneity across studies are unclear. However, data from the BGS cohort was consistent with epigenome-wide hypomethylation in breast cancer cases across the overlapping 450k probe sites (difference in average epigenome-wide methylation in case and control DNA pools = −0.2 %).
Conclusions: We conclude that epigenome-wide hypomethylation of DNA from pre-diagnostic blood samples may be predictive of breast cancer risk and may thus be useful as a clinical biomarker.