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Nature Research, Nature Communications, 1(14), 2023

DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-38196-z

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Genome-wide association study of lung adenocarcinoma in East Asia and comparison with a European population

Journal article published in 2023 by Jianxin Shi ORCID, Kouya Shiraishi ORCID, Jiyeon Choi ORCID, Keitaro Matsuo, Tzu-Yu Chen ORCID, Juncheng Dai ORCID, Rayjean J. Hung ORCID, Kexin Chen, Xiao-Ou Shu, Young Tae Kim ORCID, Maria Teresa Landi, Dongxin Lin, Wei Zheng ORCID, Zhihua Yin, Baosen Zhou ORCID and other authors.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

AbstractLung adenocarcinoma is the most common type of lung cancer. Known risk variants explain only a small fraction of lung adenocarcinoma heritability. Here, we conducted a two-stage genome-wide association study of lung adenocarcinoma of East Asian ancestry (21,658 cases and 150,676 controls; 54.5% never-smokers) and identified 12 novel susceptibility variants, bringing the total number to 28 at 25 independent loci. Transcriptome-wide association analyses together with colocalization studies using a Taiwanese lung expression quantitative trait loci dataset (n = 115) identified novel candidate genes, including FADS1 at 11q12 and ELF5 at 11p13. In a multi-ancestry meta-analysis of East Asian and European studies, four loci were identified at 2p11, 4q32, 16q23, and 18q12. At the same time, most of our findings in East Asian populations showed no evidence of association in European populations. In our studies drawn from East Asian populations, a polygenic risk score based on the 25 loci had a stronger association in never-smokers vs. individuals with a history of smoking (Pinteraction = 0.0058). These findings provide new insights into the etiology of lung adenocarcinoma in individuals from East Asian populations, which could be important in developing translational applications.