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Abstract
Background: Observational studies have
reported a positive association between body mass index (BMI) and
ovarian cancer risk. However,
questions remain as to whether this represents a
causal effect, or holds for all histological subtypes. The lack of
association
observed for serous cancers may, for instance, be
due to disease-associated weight loss. Mendelian randomization (MR) uses
genetic markers as proxies for risk factors to
overcome limitations of observational studies. We used MR to elucidate
the
relationship between BMI and ovarian cancer,
hypothesizing that genetically predicted BMI would be associated with
increased
risk of non-high grade serous ovarian cancers
(non-HGSC) but not HGSC.
Methods: We pooled data
from 39 studies (14 047 cases, 23 003 controls) in the Ovarian Cancer
Association Consortium. We constructed
a weighted genetic risk score (GRS, partial
F-statistic = 172), summing alleles at 87 single nucleotide
polymorphisms previously
associated with BMI, weighting by their published
strength of association with BMI. Applying two-stage
predictor-substitution
MR, we used logistic regression to estimate
study-specific odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) for
the association
between genetically predicted BMI and risk, and
pooled these using random-effects meta-analysis.
Results: Higher
genetically predicted BMI was associated with increased risk of non-HGSC
(pooled OR = 1.29) but not HGSC (pooled OR = 1.06,). Secondary analyses stratified by behaviour/subtype suggested
that, consistent with observational data, the
association was strongest for low-grade/borderline serous cancers
(OR = 1.93).
Conclusions: Our data suggest that higher BMI increases risk of non-HGSC, but not the more common and aggressive HGSC subtype, confirming
the observational evidence.
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