The interaction between pesticide use and genetic variants involved in lipid metabolism on prostate cancer risk

  • Gabriella Andreotti
  • Stella Koutros
  • Sonja I Berndt
  • Kathryn Hughes Barry
  • Lifang Hou
  • Jane A Hoppin
  • Dale P Sandler
  • Jay H Lubin
  • Laurie A Burdette
  • Jeffrey Yuenger
  • Meredith Yeager
  • Laura E Beane Freeman
  • Michael C R Alavanja
Publication date
April 2020

Abstract

Background. Lipid metabolism processes have been implicated in prostate carcinogenesis. Since several pesticides are lipophilic or are metabolized via lipid-related mechanisms, they may interact with variants of genes in the lipid metabolism pathway. Methods. In a nested case-control study of 776 cases and 1444 controls from the Agricultural Health Study (AHS), a prospective cohort study of pesticide applicators, we examined the interactions between 39 pesticides (none, low, and high exposure) and 220 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 59 genes. The false discovery rate (FDR) was used to account for multiple comparisons. Results. We found 17 interactions that displayed a significant monotonic increase in prostate cancer risk with pes...

Extracted data

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