Genome-wide analyses characterize shared heritability among cancers and identify novel cancer susceptibility regions

Abstract
The shared inherited genetic contribution to risk of different cancers is not fully known. In this study, we leverage results from 12 cancer genome-wide association studies (GWAS) to quantify pairwise genome-wide genetic correlations across cancers and identify novel cancer susceptibility loci. We collected GWAS summary statistics for 12 solid cancers based on 376 759 participants with cancer and 532 864 participants without cancer of European ancestry. The included cancer types were breast, colorectal, endometrial, esophageal, glioma, head and neck, lung, melanoma, ovarian, pancreatic, prostate, and renal cancers. We conducted cross-cancer GWAS and transcriptome-wide association studies to discover novel cancer susceptibility loci. Finally, we assessed the extent of variant-specific pleiotropy among cancers at known and newly identified cancer susceptibility loci. We observed widespread but modest genome-wide genetic correlations across cancers. In cross-cancer GWAS and transcriptome-wide association studies, we identified 15 novel cancer susceptibility loci. Additionally, we identified multiple variants at 77 distinct loci with strong evidence of being associated with at least 2 cancer types by testing for pleiotropy at known cancer susceptibility loci. Overall, these results suggest that some genetic risk variants are shared among cancers, though much of cancer heritability is cancer-specific and thus tissue-specific. The increase in statistical power associated with larger sample sizes in cross-disease analysis allows for the identification of novel susceptibility regions. Future studies incorporating data on multiple cancer types are likely to identify additional regions associated with the risk of multiple cancer types.
Funding Information
  • Government of Canada
  • Genome Canada
  • Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  • Ministère de l’Économie, de la Science et de l”Innovation du Québec
  • Génome Québec (PSR-SIIRI-701)
  • National Institutes of Health (U19 CA148065, X01HG007492)
  • Cancer Research UK (C1287/A10118, C1287/A16563, C1287/A10710)
  • European Union (H2020 633784, 634935)
  • National Cancer Institute
  • National Institutes of Health
  • U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (U01 CA164930, U01 CA137088, R01 CA059045, R21 CA191312, R01201407)
  • Center for Inherited Disease Research (HHSN268201700006I, HHSN268201200008I)
  • NCI Cancer Center Support (P30 CA015704)
  • Scientific Computing Infrastructure at Fred Hutch (S10OD028685)
  • National Institute on Aging (U01 AG18033, American Institute for Cancer Research)
  • National Institutes of Health (R01 CA189184, U01 CA206110)
  • National Cancer Institute
  • National Institutes of Health (U01 CA167551)
  • NIH (U01 CA122839, R01 CA143237, U19 CA148107, R01 CA81488, U19 CA148107)
  • Center for Inherited Disease Research
  • Johns Hopkins University (HHSN268201200008I)
  • Ontario Research Fund
  • Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  • U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (U19 CA148107, R01 CA081488, P30 CA014089, R01 CA197350, P01 CA196569, R01 CA201407, R01 CA242218)
  • National Institutes of Environmental Health Sciences
  • National Institutes of Health (T32 ES013678)