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Browsing by Author "Goodman, Gary"

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    A comprehensive genome-wide association study of lung cancer
    (Amer Assoc Cancer Research, 2009)
    Landi, Maria
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    Chatterjee, Nilanjan
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    Yu, Kai
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    Jacobs, Kevin
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    Bergen, Andrew W.
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    Goldin, Lynn R.
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    Goldstein, Alisa M.
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    Wang, Z.
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    Burdette, Laurie
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    Albanes, Demetrius
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    Oken, Martyn
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    Thun, Michael
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    Consonni, Dario
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    Pesatori, Angela C.
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    Amos, Christopher I.
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    Houlston, Richard S.
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    Brennan, P. C.
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    Hung, Rayjean J.
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    Gaborieau, Valerie
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    Spitz, Margaret R.
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    Wang, Y.
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    Krokan, Hans E.
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    Vatten, Lars
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    Benhamou, Simone
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    Metsapalu, Andres
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    Field, John K.
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    Chen, Chu
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    Goodman, Gary
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    Bickeboller, Heike  
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    Risch, Angela
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    Wichmann, H-Erich
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    Rafnar, Thorunn
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    Stefansson, Kari
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    Lathrop, Mark
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    Bertazzi, Pier Alberto
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    Tucker, Margaret A.
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    Chanock, Stephen J.
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    Caporaso, Neil E.
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    A Genome-wide Association Study of Lung Cancer Identifies a Region of Chromosome 5p15 Associated with Risk for Adenocarcinoma
    (Cell Press, 2009)
    Landi, Maria Teresa
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    Chatterjee, Nilanjan
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    Yu, Kai
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    Goldin, Lynn R.
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    Goldstein, Alisa M.
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    Rotunno, Melissa
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    Mirabello, Lisa
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    Jacobs, Kevin
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    Wheeler, William
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    Yeager, Meredith
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    Bergen, Andrew W.
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    Li, Qizhai
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    Consonni, Dario
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    Pesatori, Angela C.
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    Wacholder, Sholom
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    Thun, Michael
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    Diver, Ryan
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    Oken, Martin
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    Virtamo, Jarmo
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    Albanes, Demetrius
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    Wang, Z.
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    Burdette, Laurie
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    Doheny, Kimberly F.
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    Pugh, Elizabeth W.
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    Laurie, Cathy
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    Brennan, P. C.
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    Hung, Rayjean J.
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    Gaborieau, Valerie
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    McKay, James D.
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    Lathrop, Mark
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    McLaughlin, John R.
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    Wang, Y.
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    Tsao, Ming-Sound
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    Spitz, Margaret R.
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    Krokan, Hans E.
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    Vatten, Lars
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    Skorpen, Frank
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    Arnesen, Egil
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    Benhamou, Simone
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    Bouchard, Christine
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    Metsapalu, Andres
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    Vooder, Tonu
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    Nelis, Mari
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    Vaelk, Kristian
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    Field, John K.
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    Chen, Chu
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    Goodman, Gary
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    Sulem, Patrick
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    Thorleifsson, Gudmar
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    Rafnar, Thorunn
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    Eisen, Timothy
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    Sauter, Wiebke
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    Rosenberger, Albert  
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    Bickeboeller, Heike  
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    Risch, Angela
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    Chang-Claude, Jenny
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    Wichmann, Heinz-Erich
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    Stefansson, Kari
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    Houlston, Richard S.
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    Amos, Christopher I.
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    Fraumeni, Joseph F., Jr.
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    Savage, Sharon A.
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    Bertazzi, Pier Alberto
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    Tucker, Margaret A.
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    Chanock, Stephen J.
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    Caporaso, Neil E.
    Three genetic loci for lung cancer risk have been identified by genome-wide association studies (GWAS), but inherited susceptibility to specific histologic types of king cancer is not well established. We conducted a GWAS of lung cancer and its major histologic types, genotyping 515,922 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 5739 lung cancer cases and 5848 controls from one population-based case-control study and three cohort studies. Results were combined with summary data from ten additional studies, for a total of 13,300 cases and 19,666 controls of European descent. Four Studies also provided histology data for replication, resulting in 3333 adenocarcinomas (AD), 2589 squamous cell carcinomas (SQ), and 1418 small cell carcinomas (SQ. In analyses by histology, rs2736100 (TERT), on chromosome 5p15.33, was associated with risk of adenocarcinoma (odds ratio [OR] = 1.23, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.13-1.33, p = 3.02 x 10(-7)), but not with other histologic types (OR = 1.01, p = 0.84 and OR = 1.00, p = 0.93 for SQ and SC, respectively). This finding was confirmed in each replication study and overall meta-analysis (OR = 1.24, 95% CI = 1.17-1.31, p = 3.74 x 10(-14) for AD; OR = 0.99, p = 0.69 and OR = 0.97, p = 0.48 for SQ and SC, respectively). Other previously reported association signals on 15q25 and 6p21 were also refined, but no additional loci reached genome-wide significance. In conclusion, a lung cancer GWAS identified a distinct hereditary contribution to adenocarcinoma.
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    Comprehensive functional annotation of susceptibility variants identifies genetic heterogeneity between lung adenocarcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma
    (2020)
    Qin, Na
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    Li, Yuancheng
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    Wang, Cheng
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    Zhu, Meng
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    Dai, Juncheng
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    Hong, Tongtong
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    Albanes, Demetrius
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    Lam, Stephen
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    Tardon, Adonina
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    Chen, Chu
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    Goodman, Gary
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    Bojesen, Stig E.
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    Landi, Maria Teresa
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    Johansson, Mattias
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    Risch, Angela
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    Wichmann, H-Erich
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    Bickeboller, Heike  
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    Rennert, Gadi
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    Arnold, Susanne
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    Brennan, Paul
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    Field, John K.
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    Shete, Sanjay
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    Le Marchand, Loic
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    Melander, Olle
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    Brunnstrom, Hans
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    Liu, Geoffrey
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    Hung, Rayjean J.
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    Andrew, Angeline
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    Kiemeney, Lambertus A.
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    Zienolddiny, Shan
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    Grankvist, Kjell
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    Johansson, Mikael
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    Caporaso, Neil
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    Woll, Penella
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    Lazarus, Philip
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    Schabath, Matthew B.
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    Aldrich, Melinda C.
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    Stevens, Victoria L.
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    Jin, Guangfu
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    Christiani, David C.
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    Hu, Zhibin
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    Amos, Christopher I.
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    Ma, Hongxia
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    Shen, Hongbing
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    Fine mapping of MHC region in lung cancer highlights independent susceptibility loci by ethnicity
    (2018)
    Ferreiro-Iglesias, Aida
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    Lesseur, Corina
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    McKay, James
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    Hung, Rayjean J.
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    Han, Younghun
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    Zong, Xuchen
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    Christiani, David
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    Johansson, Mattias
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    Xiao, Xiangjun
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    Li, Yafang
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    Qian, David C.
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    Ji, Xuemei
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    Liu, Geoffrey
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    Caporaso, Neil
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    Scelo, Ghislaine
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    Zaridze, David
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    Mukeriya, Anush
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    Kontic, Milica
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    Ognjanovic, Simona
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    Lissowska, Jolanta
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    Szołkowska, Małgorzata
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    Swiatkowska, Beata
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    Janout, Vladimir
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    Holcatova, Ivana
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    Bolca, Ciprian
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    Savic, Milan
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    Ognjanovic, Miodrag
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    Bojesen, Stig Egil
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    Wu, Xifeng
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    Albanes, Demetrios
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    Aldrich, Melinda C.
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    Tardon, Adonina
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    Fernandez-Somoano, Ana
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    Fernandez-Tardon, Guillermo
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    Le Marchand, Loic
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    Rennert, Gadi
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    Chen, Chu
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    Doherty, Jennifer
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    Goodman, Gary
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    Bickeböller, Heike  
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    Wichmann, H-Erich
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    Risch, Angela
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    Rosenberger, Albert  
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    Shen, Hongbing
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    Dai, Juncheng
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    Field, John K.
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    Davies, Michael
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    Woll, Penella
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    Teare, M. Dawn
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    Kiemeney, Lambertus A.
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    van der Heijden, Erik H. F. M.
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    Yuan, Jian-Min
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    Hong, Yun-Chul
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    Haugen, Aage
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    Zienolddiny, Shanbeh
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    Lam, Stephen
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    Tsao, Ming-Sound
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    Johansson, Mikael
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    Grankvist, Kjell
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    Schabath, Matthew B.
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    Andrew, Angeline
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    Duell, Eric
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    Melander, Olle
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    Brunnström, Hans
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    Lazarus, Philip
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    Arnold, Susanne
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    Slone, Stacey
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    Byun, Jinyoung
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    Kamal, Ahsan
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    Zhu, Dakai
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    Landi, Maria Teresa
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    Amos, Christopher I.
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    Brennan, Paul
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    Genome‐wide association study of INDELs identified four novel susceptibility loci associated with lung cancer risk
    (2020)
    Dai, Juncheng
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    Huang, Mingtao
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    Amos, Christopher I.
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    Hung, Rayjean J.
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    Tardon, Adonina
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    Andrew, Angeline
    ;
    Chen, Chu
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    Christiani, David C.
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    Albanes, Demetrius
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    Rennert, Gadi
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    Fan, Jingyi
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    Goodman, Gary
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    Liu, Geoffrey
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    Field, John K.
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    Grankvist, Kjell
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    Kiemeney, Lambertus A.
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    Le Marchand, Loic
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    Schabath, Matthew B.
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    Johansson, Mattias
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    Aldrich, Melinda C.
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    Johansson, Mikael
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    Caporaso, Neil
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    Lazarus, Philip
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    Lam, Stephan
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    Bojesen, Stig E.
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    Arnold, Susanne
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    Landi, Maria Teresa
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    Risch, Angela
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    Wichmann, H‐Erich
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    Bickeboller, Heike  
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    Brennan, Paul
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    Shete, Sanjay
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    Melander, Olle
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    Brunnstrom, Hans
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    Zienolddiny, Shan
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    Woll, Penella
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    Stevens, Victoria
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    Hu, Zhibin
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    Shen, Hongbing
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    Genome-wide interaction study of smoking behavior and non-small cell lung cancer risk in Caucasian population
    (2017)
    Li, Yafang
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    Xiao, Xiangjun
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    Han, Younghun
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    Gorlova, Olga
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    Qian, David
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    Leighl, Natasha
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    Johansen, Jakob S
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    Barnett, Matt
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    Chen, Chu
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    Goodman, Gary
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    Cox, Angela
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    Taylor, Fiona
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    Woll, Penella
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    Wichmann, H -Erich
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    Manz, Judith
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    Muley, Thomas
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    Risch, Angela
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    Rosenberger, Albert  
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    Arnold, Susanne M
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    Haura, Eric B
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    Bolca, Ciprian
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    Holcatova, Ivana
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    Janout, Vladimir
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    Kontic, Milica
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    Lissowska, Jolanta
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    Mukeria, Anush
    ;
    Ognjanovic, Simona
    ;
    Orlowski, Tadeusz M
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    Scelo, Ghislaine
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    Swiatkowska, Beata
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    Zaridze, David
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    Bakke, Per
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    Skaug, Vidar
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    Zienolddiny, Shanbeh
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    Duell, Eric J
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    Butler, Lesley M
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    Houlston, Richard
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    Soler Artigas, María
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    Grankvist, Kjell
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    Johansson, Mikael
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    Shepherd, Frances A
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    Marcus, Michael W
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    Brunnström, Hans
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    Manjer, Jonas
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    Melander, Olle
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    Muller, David C
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    Overvad, Kim
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    Trichopoulou, Antonia
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    Tumino, Rosario
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    Liu, Geoffrey
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    Bojesen, Stig E
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    Wu, Xifeng
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    Marchand, Loic Le
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    Albanes, Demetrios
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    Bickeböller, Heike  
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    Aldrich, Melinda C
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    Bush, William S
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    Tardon, Adonina
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    Rennert, Gad
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    Teare, M Dawn
    ;
    Field, John K
    ;
    Kiemeney, Lambertus A
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    Lazarus, Philip
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    Haugen, Aage
    ;
    Lam, Stephen
    ;
    Schabath, Matthew B
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    Andrew, Angeline S
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    Bertazzi, Pier Alberto
    ;
    Pesatori, Angela C
    ;
    Christiani, David C
    ;
    Caporaso, Neil
    ;
    Johansson, Mattias
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    McKay, James D
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    Brennan, Paul
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    Hung, Rayjean J
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    Amos, Christopher I
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    Hierarchical modeling identifies novel lung cancer susceptibility variants in inflammation pathways among 10,140 cases and 11,012 controls
    (Springer, 2013)
    Brenner, Darren R.
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    Brennan, P. C.
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    Boffetta, Paolo
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    Amos, Christopher I.
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    Spitz, Margaret R.
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    Chen, Chu
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    Goodman, Gary
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    Heinrich, Joachim
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    Bickeboeller, Heike  
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    Rosenberger, Albert  
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    Risch, Angela
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    Muley, Thomas
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    McLaughlin, John R.
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    Benhamou, Simone
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    Bouchardy, Christine
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    Lewinger, Juan Pablo
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    Witte, John S.
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    Chen, Gary
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    Bull, Shelley
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    Hung, Rayjean J.
    Recent evidence suggests that inflammation plays a pivotal role in the development of lung cancer. In this study, we used a two-stage approach to investigate associations between genetic variants in inflammation pathways and lung cancer risk based on genome-wide association study (GWAS) data. A total of 7,650 sequence variants from 720 genes relevant to inflammation pathways were identified using keyword and pathway searches from Gene Cards and Gene Ontology databases. In Stage 1, six GWAS datasets from the International Lung Cancer Consortium were pooled (4,441 cases and 5,094 controls of European ancestry), and a hierarchical modeling (HM) approach was used to incorporate prior information for each of the variants into the analysis. The prior matrix was constructed using (1) role of genes in the inflammation and immune pathways; (2) physical properties of the variants including the location of the variants, their conservation scores and amino acid coding; (3) LD with other functional variants and (4) measures of heterogeneity across the studies. HM affected the priority ranking of variants particularly among those having low prior weights, imprecise estimates and/or heterogeneity across studies. In Stage 2, we used an independent NCI lung cancer GWAS study (5,699 cases and 5,818 controls) for in silico replication. We identified one novel variant at the level corrected for multiple comparisons (rs2741354 in EPHX2 at 8q21.1 with p value = 7.4 x 10(-6)), and confirmed the associations between TERT (rs2736100) and the HLA region and lung cancer risk. HM allows for prior knowledge such as from bioinformatic sources to be incorporated into the analysis systematically, and it represents a complementary analytical approach to the conventional GWAS analysis.
  • Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
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    Hierarchical modeling identifies novel lung cancer susceptibility variants in inflammation pathways among 10,140 cases and 11,012 controls (vol 132, pg 579, 2013)
    (Springer, 2016)
    Brenner, Darren R.
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    Brennan, P. C.
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    Boffetta, Paolo
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    Amos, Christopher I.
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    Spitz, Margaret R.
    ;
    Chen, Chu
    ;
    Goodman, Gary
    ;
    Heinrich, Joachim
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    Bickeboeller, Heike  
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    Rosenberger, Albert  
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    Risch, Angela
    ;
    Muley, Thomas
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    McLaughlin, John R.
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    Benhamou, Simone
    ;
    Bouchardy, Christine
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    Lewinger, Juan Pablo
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    Witte, John S.
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    Chen, Gary
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    Bull, Shelley
    ;
    Hung, Rayjean J.
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    Influence of common genetic variation on lung cancer risk: meta-analysis of 14 900 cases and 29 485 controls
    (Oxford Univ Press, 2012)
    Timofeeva, Maria N.
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    Hung, Rayjean J.
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    Rafnar, Thorunn
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    Christiani, David C.
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    Field, John K.
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    Bickeboeller, Heike  
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    Risch, Angela
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    McKay, James D.
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    Wang, Y.
    ;
    Dai, Juncheng
    ;
    Gaborieau, Valerie
    ;
    McLaughlin, John R.
    ;
    Brenner, Darren
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    Narod, Steven A.
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    Caporaso, Neil E.
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    Albanes, Demetrius
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    Thun, Michael
    ;
    Eisen, Timothy
    ;
    Wichmann, Heinz-Erich
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    Rosenberger, Albert  
    ;
    Han, Younghun
    ;
    Chen, Wei
    ;
    Zhu, D.
    ;
    Spitz, Margaret R.
    ;
    Wu, X.
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    Pande, Mala
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    Zhao, Yang
    ;
    Zaridze, David
    ;
    Szeszenia-Dabrowska, Neonilia
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    Lissowska, Jolanta
    ;
    Rudnai, Peter
    ;
    Fabianova, Eleonora
    ;
    Mates, Dana
    ;
    Bencko, Vladimir
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    Foretova, Lenka
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    Janout, Vladimir
    ;
    Krokan, Hans E.
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    Gabrielsen, Maiken Elvestad
    ;
    Skorpen, Frank
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    Vatten, Lars
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    Njolstad, Inger
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    Chen, Chu
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    Goodman, Gary
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    Lathrop, Mark
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    Benhamou, Simone
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    Vooder, Tonu
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    Vaelk, Kristjan
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    Nelis, Mari
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    Metspalu, Andres
    ;
    Raji, Olaide Y.
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    Chen, Ying
    ;
    Gosney, John
    ;
    Liloglou, Triantafillos
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    Muley, Thomas
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    Dienemann, Hendrik
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    Thorleifsson, Gudmar
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    Shen, Hongbing
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    Stefansson, Kari
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    Brennan, P. C.
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    Amos, Christopher I.
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    Houlston, Richard S.
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    Landi, Maria Teresa
    Recent genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have identified common genetic variants at 5p15.33, 6p216p22 and 15q25.1 associated with lung cancer risk. Several other genetic regions including variants of CHEK2 (22q12), TP53BP1 (15q15) and RAD52 (12p13) have been demonstrated to influence lung cancer risk in candidate- or pathway-based analyses. To identify novel risk variants for lung cancer, we performed a meta-analysis of 16 GWASs, totaling 14 900 cases and 29 485 controls of European descent. Our data provided increased support for previously identified risk loci at 5p15 (P 7.2 10(16)), 6p21 (P 2.3 10(14)) and 15q25 (P 2.2 10(63)). Furthermore, we demonstrated histology-specific effects for 5p15, 6p21 and 12p13 loci but not for the 15q25 region. Subgroup analysis also identified a novel disease locus for squamous cell carcinoma at 9p21 (CDKN2A/p16(INK4A)/p14(ARF)/CDKN2B/p15(INK4B)/ANRIL; rs1333040, P 3.0 10(7)) which was replicated in a series of 5415 Han Chinese (P 0.03; combined analysis, P 2.3 10(8)). This large analysis provides additional evidence for the role of inherited genetic susceptibility to lung cancer and insight into biological differences in the development of the different histological types of lung cancer.
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    Susceptibility Loci of CNOT6 in the General mRNA Degradation Pathway and Lung Cancer Risk-A Re-Analysis of Eight GWASs
    (Wiley, 2017)
    Zhou, Fei
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    Wang, Y.
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    Liu, Hongliang
    ;
    Ready, Neal
    ;
    Han, Younghun
    ;
    Hung, Rayjean J.
    ;
    Brhane, Yonathan
    ;
    McLaughlin, John R.
    ;
    Brennan, P. C.
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    Bickeboeller, Heike  
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    Rosenberger, Albert  
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    Houlston, Richard S.
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    Caporaso, Neil E.
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    Landi, Maria Teresa
    ;
    Brueske, Irene
    ;
    Risch, Angela
    ;
    Ye, Yuanqing
    ;
    Wu, X.
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    Christiani, David C.
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    Goodman, Gary
    ;
    Chen, Chu
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    Amos, Christopher I.
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    Wei, Qingyi
    Purpose: mRNA degradation is an important regulatory step for controlling gene expression and cell functions. Genetic abnormalities involved in mRNA degradation genes were found to be associated with cancer risks. Therefore, we systematically investigated the roles of genetic variants in the general mRNA degradation pathway in lung cancer risk. Experimental design: Meta-analyses were conducted using summary data from six lung cancer genome-wide association studies (GWASs) from the Transdisciplinary Research in Cancer of the Lung and additional two GWASs from Harvard University and deCODE in the International Lung Cancer Consortium. Expression quantitative trait loci analysis (eQTL) was used for in silico functional validation of the identified significant susceptibility loci. Results: This pathway-based analysis included 6816 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) in 68 genes in 14 463 lung cancer cases and 44 188 controls. In the single-locus analysis, we found that 20 SNPs were associated with lung cancer risk with a false discovery rate threshold of < 0.05. Among the 11 newly identified SNPs in CNOT6, which were in high linkage disequilibrium, the rs2453176 with a RegulomDB score "1f" was chosen as the tagSNP for further analysis. We found that the rs2453176 T allele was significantly associated with lung cancer risk (odds ratio -1.11, 95% confidence interval -1.04-1.18) in the eight GWASs. In the eQTL analysis, we found that levels of CNOT6 mRNA expression were significantly correlated with the rs2453176 T allele, which provided additional biological basis for the observed positive association. Conclusion: The CNOT6 rs2453176 SNP may be a new functional susceptible locus for lung cancer risk. (C) 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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    Transcriptome-wide association study reveals candidate causal genes for lung cancer
    (2019)
    Bossé, Yohan
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    Li, Zhonglin
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    Xia, Jun
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    Manem, Venkata
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    Carreras-Torres, Robert
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    Gabriel, Aurélie
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    Gaudreault, Nathalie
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    Albanes, Demetrius
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    Aldrich, Melinda C.
    ;
    Andrew, Angeline
    ;
    Arnold, Susanne
    ;
    Bickeböller, Heike  
    ;
    Bojesen, Stig E.
    ;
    Brennan, Paul
    ;
    Brunnstrom, Hans
    ;
    Caporaso, Neil
    ;
    Chen, Chu
    ;
    Christiani, David C.
    ;
    Field, John K.
    ;
    Goodman, Gary
    ;
    Grankvist, Kjell
    ;
    Houlston, Richard
    ;
    Johansson, Mattias
    ;
    Johansson, Mikael
    ;
    Kiemeney, Lambertus A.
    ;
    Lam, Stephen
    ;
    Landi, Maria T.
    ;
    Lazarus, Philip
    ;
    Le Marchand, Loic
    ;
    Liu, Geoffrey
    ;
    Melander, Olle
    ;
    Rennert, Gadi
    ;
    Risch, Angela
    ;
    Rosenberg, Susan M.
    ;
    Schabath, Matthew B.
    ;
    Shete, Sanjay
    ;
    Song, Zhuoyi
    ;
    Stevens, Victoria L.
    ;
    Tardon, Adonina
    ;
    Wichmann, H.-Erich
    ;
    Woll, Penella
    ;
    Zienolddiny, Shan
    ;
    Obeidat, Ma’en
    ;
    Timens, Wim
    ;
    Hung, Rayjean J.
    ;
    Joubert, Philippe
    ;
    Amos, Christopher I.
    ;
    McKay, James D.
    We have recently completed the largest GWAS on lung cancer including 29,266 cases and 56,450 controls of European descent. The goal of our study has been to integrate the complete GWAS results with a large-scale expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) mapping study in human lung tissues (n = 1,038) to identify candidate causal genes for lung cancer. We performed transcriptome-wide association study (TWAS) for lung cancer overall, by histology (adenocarcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma and small cell lung cancer) and smoking subgroups (never- and ever-smokers). We performed replication analysis using lung data from the Genotype-Tissue Expression (GTEx) project. DNA damage assays were performed in human lung fibroblasts for selected TWAS genes. As expected, the main TWAS signal for all histological subtypes and ever-smokers was on chromosome 15q25. The gene most strongly associated with lung cancer at this locus using the TWAS approach was IREB2 (pTWAS = 1.09E-99), where lower predicted expression increased lung cancer risk. A new lung adenocarcinoma susceptibility locus was revealed on 9p13.3 and associated with higher predicted expression of AQP3 (pTWAS = 3.72E-6). Among the 45 previously described lung cancer GWAS loci, we mapped candidate target gene for 17 of them. The association AQP3-adenocarcinoma on 9p13.3 was replicated using GTEx (pTWAS = 6.55E-5). Consistent with the effect of risk alleles on gene expression levels, IREB2 knockdown and AQP3 overproduction promote endogenous DNA damage. These findings indicate genes whose expression in lung tissue directly influences lung cancer risk.

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