Glioma comprises about 40% of all primary brain tumors accounting for as many as 26,000 U.S. and European deaths annually. Inherited susceptibility plays a role with 2-fold increased risk of glioma among first-degree relatives of glioma cases. We initiated a multi-center, international linkage study: """"""""Genetic Epidemiology of Glioma International Consortium"""""""" in 2007 to address the role of inherited susceptibility. Since this study does not allow us currently to address the role of genetic susceptibility in sporadic cases, we propose this case- control study to address this gap. Members of the consortium have conducted genome wide association studies (GWAS) that will be the discovery phase (phase I). While of high value for discovery, we propose to recruit 6,000 newly diagnosed glioma cases and 6,000 age-gender-ethnicity-matched controls, and collect detailed epidemiologic data and biologic samples from the 13 participating Gliogene sites. We hypothesize that novel inherited variation influencing the susceptibility to glioma can be identified by high density SNP analysis, and propose the following specific aims: SA1: Identify common genetic variants contributing to the risk of glioma. We plan to conduct phases 2 and 3 of the 3 phase approach, specifically we will: (SA1a) Validate GWAS findings from the discovery sets, and replicate the top hits (~23,000 SNPs) with lowest p- values from the two phase GWA studies in a series of 2,000 cases and 2,000 controls (phase 2, validation). Validate the top hits from the test set (aim 1a). From stage 2, genes with SNPs displaying an association at pd10-4 (including the complete haplotype tagging - approximately 100 SNPs) will then be genotyped in a further series of 4,000 cases and 4,000 controls (stage 3, validation). SNPs significant at 10-7 or better will be considered in the final analyses. (SA1b). Using an a priori hypothesis that DNA repair in inflammation contribute to glioma risk, we will selectively interrogate DNA repair and inflammation pathway genes using data for select genes derived from the high-density array. We will conduct a hypothesis driven genetic association in DNA repair and in inflammation/immune function related genes with glioma risk using functional genomic and bioinformatic tools to interrogate available databases. (SA2): Evaluate gene-gene (G-G) and gene- environmental (G-E) interactions with strong biologic relevance to identify G-G and G-E interactions for glioma risk using machine-learning tools (MDR, FITF, and CART) in these exploratory analyses. There are no existing glioma case-control studies with sufficient numbers of biological samples and common epidemiologic data to conduct a comprehensive validation and replication study, or to address the issues of tumor heterogeneity as we will in this study.

Public Health Relevance

Gliomas are a rare and understudied disease that is rapidly fatal. The proposed case-control study of primary malignant glioma (Gliogene Consortium) includes 13-centers, and will address the role of genetic susceptibility in sporadic cases. It will identify common genetic variants contributing to the risk of glioma from a genome wide association study.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01CA139020-04
Application #
8464531
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-PSE-A (03))
Program Officer
Seminara, Daniela
Project Start
2010-03-18
Project End
2015-12-31
Budget Start
2013-02-01
Budget End
2013-12-31
Support Year
4
Fiscal Year
2013
Total Cost
$1,862,222
Indirect Cost
$333,687
Name
Baylor College of Medicine
Department
Pediatrics
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
051113330
City
Houston
State
TX
Country
United States
Zip Code
77030
Ostrom, Quinn T; Kinnersley, Ben; Armstrong, Georgina et al. (2018) Age-specific genome-wide association study in glioblastoma identifies increased proportion of 'lower grade glioma'-like features associated with younger age. Int J Cancer 143:2359-2366
Kinnersley, Ben; Houlston, Richard S; Bondy, Melissa L (2018) Genome-Wide Association Studies in Glioma. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 27:418-428
Mostovenko, Ekaterina; Liu, Yanhong; Amirian, E Susan et al. (2018) Combined Proteomic-Molecular Epidemiology Approach to Identify Precision Targets in Brain Cancer. ACS Chem Neurosci 9:80-84
Disney-Hogg, Linden; Sud, Amit; Law, Philip J et al. (2018) Influence of obesity-related risk factors in the aetiology of glioma. Br J Cancer 118:1020-1027
Takahashi, Hannah; Cornish, Alex J; Sud, Amit et al. (2018) Mendelian randomisation study of the relationship between vitamin D and risk of glioma. Sci Rep 8:2339
Amirian, E Susan; Ostrom, Quinn T; Armstrong, Georgina N et al. (2018) Aspirin, Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs (NSAIDs), and Glioma Risk: Original Data from the Glioma International Case-Control Study and a Meta-Analysis. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev :
Disney-Hogg, Linden; Cornish, Alex J; Sud, Amit et al. (2018) Impact of atopy on risk of glioma: a Mendelian randomisation study. BMC Med 16:42
Ostrom, Quinn T; Kinnersley, Ben; Wrensch, Margaret R et al. (2018) Sex-specific glioma genome-wide association study identifies new risk locus at 3p21.31 in females, and finds sex-differences in risk at 8q24.21. Sci Rep 8:7352
Jacobs, Daniel I; Liu, Yanhong; Gabrusiewicz, Konrad et al. (2018) Germline polymorphisms in myeloid-associated genes are not associated with survival in glioma patients. J Neurooncol 136:33-39
Berntsson, Shala G; Merrell, Ryan T; Amirian, E Susan et al. (2018) Glioma-related seizures in relation to histopathological subtypes: a report from the glioma international case-control study. J Neurol 265:1432-1442

Showing the most recent 10 out of 32 publications