Association of Common Genetic Polymorphisms with Melanoma Patient IL-12p40 Blood Levels, Risk, and Outcomes.


Autoria(s): Fang, S; Wang, Y; Chun, YS; Liu, H; Ross, MI; Gershenwald, JE; Cormier, JN; Royal, RE; Lucci, A; Schacherer, CW; Reveille, JD; Chen, W; Sui, D; Bassett, RL; Wang, LE; Wei, Q; Amos, CI; Lee, JE
Data(s)

01/09/2015

Formato

2266 - 2272

Identificador

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25848976

S0022-202X(15)38992-2

J Invest Dermatol, 2015, 135 (9), pp. 2266 - 2272

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/10676

1523-1747

Relação

J Invest Dermatol

10.1038/jid.2015.138

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/10675

10161/10675

Tipo

Journal Article

Cobertura

United States

Resumo

Recent investigation has identified association of IL-12p40 blood levels with melanoma recurrence and patient survival. No studies have investigated associations of single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) with melanoma patient IL-12p40 blood levels or their potential contributions to melanoma susceptibility or patient outcome. In the current study, 818,237 SNPs were available for 1,804 melanoma cases and 1,026 controls. IL-12p40 blood levels were assessed among 573 cases (discovery), 249 cases (case validation), and 299 controls (control validation). SNPs were evaluated for association with log[IL-12p40] levels in the discovery data set and replicated in two validation data sets, and significant SNPs were assessed for association with melanoma susceptibility and patient outcomes. The most significant SNP associated with log[IL-12p40] was in the IL-12B gene region (rs6897260, combined P=9.26 × 10(-38)); this single variant explained 13.1% of variability in log[IL-12p40]. The most significant SNP in EBF1 was rs6895454 (combined P=2.24 × 10(-9)). A marker in IL12B was associated with melanoma susceptibility (rs3213119, multivariate P=0.0499; OR=1.50, 95% CI 1.00-2.24), whereas a marker in EBF1 was associated with melanoma-specific survival in advanced-stage patients (rs10515789, multivariate P=0.02; HR=1.93, 95% CI 1.11-3.35). Both EBF1 and IL12B strongly regulate IL-12p40 blood levels, and IL-12p40 polymorphisms may contribute to melanoma susceptibility and influence patient outcome.

Idioma(s)

ENG

Palavras-Chave #Aged #Case-Control Studies #Confidence Intervals #Female #Genetic Predisposition to Disease #Genotype #Humans #Interleukin-12 Subunit p40 #Male #Melanoma #Middle Aged #Multivariate Analysis #Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide #Prognosis #Reproducibility of Results #Risk Assessment #Skin Neoplasms #Survival Analysis