rs12207484 - ATP6V0CP3 - TBCC
Magnitude 2.2 · 1 study on file
Reported associations
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Meta-GWAS identifies the heritability of acute radiation-induced toxicities in head and neck cancer. - Radiotherapy and oncology : journal of the European Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology (2022) · Naderi E, Schack LMH, Welsh C, Sim AYL, Aguado-Barrera ME, Dudding T, Summersgil H, Martínez-Calvo L, Ong EHW, Odding Y, Varela-Pazos A, Steenbakkers RJHM, Crijns APG, Jena R, Pring M, Dennis J, Lobato-Busto R, Alsner J, Ness A, Nutting C, Thomson DJ, Gómez-Caamaño A, Eriksen JG, Thomas SJ, Bates AM, Overgaard J, Cascallar-Caneda LM, Duprez F, Barnett GC, Dorling L, Chua MLK, Vega A, West CML, Langendijk JA, Nicolaj Andreassen C, Alizadeh BZ · PubMed 36191651
We aimed to the genetic components and susceptibility variants associated with acute radiation-induced toxicities (RITs) in patients with head and neck cancer (HNC). We performed the largest meta-GWAS of seven European cohorts (n = 4,042). Patients were scored weekly during radiotherapy for acute RITs including dysphagia, mucositis, and xerostomia. We analyzed the effect of variants on the average burden (measured as area under curve, AUC) per each RIT, and standardized total average acute toxicity (STAT ) score using a multivariate linear regression. We tested suggestive variants (p < 1.0x10 ) in discovery set (three cohorts; n = 2,640) in a replication set (four cohorts; n = 1,402). We meta-analysed all cohorts to calculate RITs specific SNP-based heritability, and effect of poly
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