ABSTRACT:
Concordance of Multiple Analytical Approaches Demonstrates
a Complex Relationship Between DNA Repair Gene SNPs, Smoking,
and Bladder Cancer Susceptibility
Study results of
single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and cancer susceptibility
are often conflicting, possibly because of the analytic challenges
of testing for multiple genetic and environmental risk factors
using traditional analytic tools. We investigated the relationship
between DNA repair gene SNPs, smoking, and bladder cancer
susceptibility in 355 cases and 559 controls enrolled in
a population-based study of bladder cancer in the US. Our
multifaceted analytical approach included logistic regression,
multifactor dimensionality reduction, and hierarchical interaction
graphs for the analysis of gene-gene and gene-environment
interactions followed by linkage disequilibrium and haplotype
analysis. Overall, we did not find an association between
any single DNA repair gene SNP and bladder cancer risk. We
did find a marginally significant elevated risk of the XPD
codon 751 homozygote variant among never smokers [adjusted
odds ratio (OR) 2.5, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.0-6.2].
In addition, the XRCC1 194 variant allele was associated
with a reduced bladder cancer risk among heavy smokers [adjusted
OR 0.4, 95% CI 0.2-0.9)]. The best predictors of bladder
cancer included the XPD codon 751 and 312 SNPs along with
smoking. Interpretation of this multifactor model revealed
that the relationship between the XPD SNPs and bladder cancer
is mostly non-additive while the effect of smoking is mostly
additive. Since the two XPD SNPs are in significant linkage
disequilibrium (D'=0.52, P=0.0001), we estimated XPD haplotypes.
Individuals with variant XPD haplotypes were more susceptible
to bladder cancer [e.g. adjusted OR 2.5, 95% CI 1.7-3.6]
and the effect was magnified when smoking was considered.
These results support the hypothesis that common polymorphisms
in DNA repair genes modify bladder cancer risk and emphasize
the need for a multifaceted statistical approach to identify
gene-gene and gene-environment interactions.