Genetic variation inTERTmodifies the risk of hepatocellular carcinoma in alcohol-related cirrhosis: results from a genome-wide case-control study
Buch S., Innes H., Lutz PL., Nischalke HD., Marquardt JU., Fischer J., Weiss KH., Rosendahl J., Marot A., Krawczyk M., Casper M., Lammert F., Eyer F., Vogel A., Marhenke S., von Felden J., Sharma R., Atkinson SR., McQuillin A., Nattermann J., Schafmayer C., Franke A., Strassburg C., Rietschel M., Altmann H., Sulk S., Thangapandi VR., Brosch M., Lackner C., Stauber RE., Canbay A., Link A., Reiberger T., Mandorfer M., Semmler G., Scheiner B., Datz C., Romeo S., Ginanni Corradini S., Irving WL., Morling JR., Guha IN., Barnes E., Ansari MA., Quistrebert J., Valenti L., Müller SA., Morgan MY., Dufour J-F., Trebicka J., Berg T., Deltenre P., Mueller S., Hampe J., Stickel F.
ObjectiveHepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) often develops in patients with alcohol-related cirrhosis at an annual risk of up to 2.5%. Some host genetic risk factors have been identified but do not account for the majority of the variance in occurrence. This study aimed to identify novel susceptibility loci for the development of HCC in people with alcohol related cirrhosis.DesignPatients with alcohol-related cirrhosis and HCC (cases: n=1214) and controls without HCC (n=1866), recruited from Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Italy and the UK, were included in a two-stage genome-wide association study using a case–control design. A validation cohort of 1520 people misusing alcohol but with no evidence of liver disease was included to control for possible association effects with alcohol misuse. Genotyping was performed using the InfiniumGlobal Screening Array (V.24v2, Illumina) and the OmniExpress Array (V.24v1-0a, Illumina).ResultsAssociations with variants rs738409 inPNPLA3and rs58542926 inTM6SF2previously associated with an increased risk of HCC in patients with alcohol-related cirrhosis were confirmed at genome-wide significance. A novel locus rs2242652(A) inTERT(telomerase reverse transcriptase) was also associated with a decreased risk of HCC, in the combined meta-analysis, at genome-wide significance (p=6.41×10−9, OR=0.61 (95% CI 0.52 to 0.70). This protective association remained significant after correction for sex, age, body mass index and type 2 diabetes (p=7.94×10−5, OR=0.63 (95% CI 0.50 to 0.79). Carriage of rs2242652(A) inTERTwas associated with an increased leucocyte telomere length (p=2.12×10−44).ConclusionThis study identifies rs2242652 inTERTas a novel protective factor for HCC in patients with alcohol-related cirrhosis.