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Circulating vitamin D concentration and risk of seven cancers: Mendelian randomisation study

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Item Type:Article
Title:Circulating vitamin D concentration and risk of seven cancers: Mendelian randomisation study
Creators Name:Dimitrakopoulou, V.I., Tsilidis, K.K., Haycock, P.C., Dimou, N.L., Al-Dabhani, K., Martin, R.M., Lewis, S.J., Gunter, M.J., Mondul, A., Shui, I.M., Theodoratou, E., Nimptsch, K., Lindstroem, S., Albanes, D., Kuehn, T., Key, T.J., Travis, R.C., Vimaleswaran, K.S., Kraft, P., Pierce, B.L. and Schildkraut, J.M.
Abstract:Objective: To determine if circulating concentrations of vitamin D are causally associated with risk of cancer. Design: Mendelian randomisation study. Setting: Large genetic epidemiology networks (the Genetic Associations and Mechanisms in Oncology (GAME-ON), the Genetic and Epidemiology of Colorectal Cancer Consortium (GECCO), and the Prostate Cancer Association Group to Investigate Cancer Associated Alterations in the Genome (PRACTICAL) consortiums, and the MR-Base platform). Participants: 70 563 cases of cancer (22 898 prostate cancer, 15 748 breast cancer, 12 537 lung cancer, 11 488 colorectal cancer, 4369 ovarian cancer, 1896 pancreatic cancer, and 1627 neuroblastoma) and 84 418 controls. Exposures: Four single nucleotide polymorphisms (rs2282679, rs10741657, rs12785878 and rs6013897) associated with vitamin D were used to define a multi-polymorphism score for circulating 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) concentrations. Main outcomes measures: The primary outcomes were the risk of incident colorectal, breast, prostate, ovarian, lung, and pancreatic cancer and neuroblastoma, which was evaluated with an inverse variance weighted average of the associations with specific polymorphisms and a likelihood based approach. Secondary outcomes based on cancer subtypes by sex, anatomic location, stage, and histology were also examined. Results: There was little evidence that the multi-polymorphism score of 25(OH)D was associated with risk of any of the seven cancers or their subtypes. Specifically, the odds ratios per 25 nmol/L increase in genetically determined 25(OH)D concentrations were 0.92 (95% confidence interval 0.76 to 1.10) for colorectal cancer, 1.05 (0.89 to 1.24) for breast cancer, 0.89 (0.77 to 1.02) for prostate cancer, and 1.03 (0.87 to 1.23) for lung cancer. The results were consistent with the two different analytical approaches, and the study was powered to detect relative effect sizes of moderate magnitude (for example, 1.20-1.50 per 25 nmol/L decrease in 25(OH)D for most primary cancer outcomes. The Mendelian randomisation assumptions did not seem to be violated. Conclusions: There is little evidence for a linear causal association between circulating vitamin D concentration and risk of various types of cancer, though the existence of causal clinically relevant effects of low magnitude cannot be ruled out. These results, in combination with previous literature, provide evidence that Population-wide screening for vitamin D deficiency and subsequent widespread vitamin D supplementation should not currently be recommended as a strategy for primary cancer prevention.
Keywords:Breast Neoplasms, Case-Control Studies, Colorectal Neoplasms, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Genetic Variation, Genome-Wide Association Study, Incidence, Lung Neoplasms, Mendelian Randomization Analysis, Neoplasms, Neuroblastoma, Ovarian Neoplasms, Pancreatic Neoplasms, Prostatic Neoplasms, Risk Assessment, Single Nucleotide Polymorphism, Vitamin D, Vitamin D Deficiency
Source:BMJ
ISSN:1756-1833
Publisher:BMJ Publishing Group
Volume:359
Page Range:j4761
Date:31 October 2017
Official Publication:https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.j4761
PubMed:View item in PubMed

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