Disease areas:
  • cancer and other tissue growths
  • heart and blood vessels
Last updated:
Author(s):
Akl C. Fahed, Minxian Wang, Julian R. Homburger, Aniruddh P. Patel, Alexander G. Bick, Cynthia L. Neben, Carmen Lai, Deanna Brockman, Anthony Philippakis, Patrick T. Ellinor, Christopher A. Cassa, Matthew Lebo, Kenney Ng, Eric S. Lander, Alicia Y. Zhou, Sekar Kathiresan, Amit V. Khera
Publish date:
20 August 2020
Journal:
Nature Communications
PubMed ID:
32820175

Abstract

Genetic variation can predispose to disease both through (i) monogenic risk variants that disrupt a physiologic pathway with large effect on disease and (ii) polygenic risk that involves many variants of small effect in different pathways. Few studies have explored the interplay between monogenic and polygenic risk. Here, we study 80,928 individuals to examine whether polygenic background can modify penetrance of disease in tier 1 genomic conditions – familial hypercholesterolemia, hereditary breast and ovarian cancer, and Lynch syndrome. Among carriers of a monogenic risk variant, we estimate substantial gradients in disease risk based on polygenic background – the probability of disease by age 75 years ranged from 17% to 78% for coronary artery disease, 13% to 76% for breast cancer, and 11% to 80% for colon cancer. We propose that accounting for polygenic background is likely to increase accuracy of risk estimation for individuals who inherit a monogenic risk variant.

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Institution:
Broad Institute, United States of America

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