rs12437980 - LCTL

Magnitude 2.2 · 3 studies on file

Reported associations

  • Genetic landscape and functional exploration of kidney cancer predisposition in cross-ancestral populations. - Nature communications (2026) · Dai H, Chu X, Du H, Yang S, Yao Y, Yu X, Zhao Y, Dong P, Lyu Z, Wang W, Li H, Mi Z, Sheng C, Li X, Zheng H, Song F, Song F, Sun M, Dai J, Lan Q, Rothman N, Hu Z, Wei Q, Ye D, Yao X, Jia W, Chanock SJ, Shen H, Purdue MP, Li MJ, Chen K · PubMed 42000752

    Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is the most common type of kidney cancer, but its genetic architecture has not been fully characterized, particularly in Asian populations. Here, we perform a multi-ancestry meta-analysis of 33,712 RCC cases and 845,786 controls, including individuals of East Asian (5,313 cases and 96,912 controls), European (25,890 cases and 743,585 controls), African American (897 cases and 3,109 controls), and Latin American ancestry (1,612 cases and 2,180 controls), which unveils 10 novel RCC-associated loci and a Chinese-specific locus at 12p13.33. Leveraging genome-wide association study (GWAS) data and cross-ancestry expression quantitative trait loci (eQTLs) mapping from 266 kidney tissues, we refine the identification of putative causal variants and genes implicated in R

  • Multi-ancestry genome-wide association study of kidney cancer identifies 63 susceptibility regions. - Nature genetics (2024) · Purdue MP, Dutta D, Machiela MJ, Gorman BR, Winter T, Okuhara D, Cleland S, Ferreiro-Iglesias A, Scheet P, Liu A, Wu C, Antwi SO, Larkin J, Zequi SC, Sun M, Hikino K, Hajiran A, Lawson KA, Cárcano F, Blanchet O, Shuch B, Nepple KG, Margue G, Sundi D, Diver WR, Folgueira MAAK, van Bokhoven A, Neffa F, Brown KM, Hofmann JN, Rhee J, Yeager M, Cole NR, Hicks BD, Manning MR, Hutchinson AA, Rothman N, Huang WY, Linehan WM, Lori A, Ferragu M, Zidane-Marinnes M, Serrano SV, Magnabosco WJ, Vilas A, Decia R, Carusso F, Graham LS, Anderson K, Bilen MA, Arciero C, Pellegrin I, Ricard S, Scelo G, Banks RE, Vasudev NS, Soomro N, Stewart GD, Adeyoju A, Bromage S, Hrouda D, Gibbons N, Patel P, Sullivan M, Protheroe A, Nugent FI, Fournier MJ, Zhang X, Martin LJ, Komisarenko M, Eisen T, Cunningham SA, Connolly DC, Uzzo RG, Zaridze D, Mukeria A, Holcatova I, Hornakova A, Foretova L, Janout V, Mates D, Jinga V, Rascu S, Mijuskovic M, Savic S, Milosavljevic S, Gaborieau V, Abedi-Ardekani B, McKay J, Johansson M, Phouthavongsy L, Hayman L, Li J, Lungu I, Bezerra SM, Souza AG, Sares CTG, Reis RB, Gallucci FP, Cordeiro MD, Pomerantz M, Lee GM, Freedman ML, Jeong A, Greenberg SE, Sanchez A, Thompson RH, Sharma V, Thiel DD, Ball CT, Abreu D, Lam ET, Nahas WC, Master VA, Patel AV, Bernhard JC, Freedman ND, Bigot P, Reis RM, Colli LM, Finelli A, Manley BJ, Terao C, Choueiri TK, Carraro DM, Houlston R, Eckel-Passow JE, Abbosh PH, Ganna A, Brennan P, Gu J, Chanock SJ · PubMed 38671320

    Here, in a multi-ancestry genome-wide association study meta-analysis of kidney cancer (29,020 cases and 835,670 controls), we identified 63 susceptibility regions (50 novel) containing 108 independent risk loci. In analyses stratified by subtype, 52 regions (78 loci) were associated with clear cell renal cell carcinoma (RCC) and 6 regions (7 loci) with papillary RCC. Notably, we report a variant common in African ancestry individuals ( rs7629500 ) in the 3' untranslated region of VHL, nearly tripling clear cell RCC risk (odds ratio 2.72, 95% confidence interval 2.23-3.30). In cis-expression quantitative trait locus analyses, 48 variants from 34 regions point toward 83 candidate genes. Enrichment of hypoxia-inducible factor-binding sites underscores the importance of hypoxia-related mechan

  • Genetic analyses implicate complex links between adult testosterone levels and health and disease - Unknown journal (n.d.) · Unknown authors · PubMed 36653534

    ABSTRACT: Background Testosterone levels are linked with diverse characteristics of human health, yet, whether these associations reflect correlation or causation remains debated. Here, we provide a broad perspective on the role of genetically determined testosterone on complex diseases in both sexes. Methods Leveraging genetic and health registry data from the UK Biobank and FinnGen (total N = 625,650), we constructed polygenic scores (PGS) for total testosterone, sex-hormone binding globulin (SHBG) and free testosterone, associating these with 36 endpoints across different disease categories in the FinnGen. These analyses were combined with Mendelian Randomization (MR) and cross-sex PGS analyses to address causality. Results We show testosterone and SHBG levels are intricately tied t


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Lifestyle context

Concrete actions anchored to the cited research. We do not prescribe, we describe.

Lifestyle

  • blood pressure control Moderate

    Hypertension is an established kidney cancer risk factor; genetic risk warrants strict BP management

    Target BP <130/80 mmHg through diet, exercise, and medication as needed

  • excessive alcohol consumption Moderate

    Heavy alcohol use is an established kidney cancer risk factor; genetic risk warrants minimization

    Limit to <=1 drink per day for women, <=2 drinks per day for men

  • smoking Moderate

    Smoking is an established kidney cancer risk factor; genetic predisposition warrants strict avoidance

    Cessation if current smoker; maintain non-smoking status

  • weight management Moderate

    Obesity is an established kidney cancer risk factor; genetic risk warrants emphasis on weight control

    Maintain BMI in normal range (18.5-24.9 kg/m2) through diet and exercise

Screening

  • kidney cancer screening protocol High

    Genetic association with increased kidney and renal cell carcinoma risk (OR=1.06, p<1e-7)

    Discuss with physician about screening frequency and imaging protocols for genetic risk