Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Adiposity, metabolites, and colorectal cancer risk: Mendelian randomization study

Caroline J. Bull, Joshua A. Bell, Neil Murphy, Eleanor Sanderson, George Davey Smith, Nicholas J. Timpson, Barbara L. Banbury, Demetrius Albanes, Sonja I. Berndt, Stéphane Bezieau, D. Timothy Bishop, Hermann Brenner, Daniel D. Buchanan, Andrea N. Burnett‐Hartman, Graham Casey, Sergi Castellvı́-Bel, Andrew T. Chan, Jenny Chang‐Claude, Amanda J. Cross, Albert de la Chapelle, Jane C. Figueiredo, Steven Gallinger, Susan M. Gapstur, Graham G. Giles, Stephen B. Gruber, Andrea Gsur, Jochen Hampe, Heather Hampel, Tabitha A. Harrison, Michael Hoffmeister, Li Hsu, Wen‐Yi Huang, Jeroen R. Huyghe, Mark A. Jenkins, Corinne E. Joshu, Temitope O. Keku, Tilman Kühn, Sun‐Seog Kweon, Loı̈c Le Marchand, Christopher I. Li, Li Li, Annika Lindblom, Vicente Martín, Anne M. May, Roger L. Milne, Vı́ctor Moreno, Polly A. Newcomb, Kenneth Offit, Shuji Ogino, Amanda I. Phipps, Elizabeth A. Platz, John D. Potter, Conghui Qu, J. Ramón Quirós, Gad Rennert, Elio Ríboli, Lori C. Sakoda, Clemens Schafmayer, Robert E. Schoen, Martha L. Slattery, Catherine M. Tangen, Kostas K. Tsilidis, Cornelia M. Ulrich, Fränzel J.B. van Duijnhoven, Bethany Van Guelpen, Kala Visvanathan, Pavel Vodička, Ludmila Vodičková, Hansong Wang, Emily White, Alicja Wolk, Michael O. Woods, Anna H. Wu, Peter T. Campbell, Wei Zheng, Ulrike Peters, Emma E. Vincent, Marc J. Gunter

BMC Medicine · 2020

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Summary

BACKGROUND: Higher adiposity increases the risk of colorectal cancer (CRC), but whether this relationship varies by anatomical sub-site or by sex is unclear. Further, the metabolic alterations mediating the effects of adiposity on CRC are not fully understood. METHODS: We examined sex- and site-specific associations of adiposity with CRC risk and whether adiposity-associated metabolites explain the associations of adiposity with CRC. Genetic variants from genome-wide association studies of body mass index (BMI) and waist-to-hip ratio (WHR, unadjusted for BMI; N = 806,810), and 123 metabolites from targeted nuclear magnetic resonance metabolomics (N = 24,925), were used as instruments. Sex-combined and sex-specific Mendelian randomization (MR) was conducted for BMI and WHR with CRC risk (58

Subject
Other / interdisciplinary
Source type
Peer-reviewed study
System type
Other
DOI
10.1186/s12916-020-01855-9
Catalogue ID
SNmoj1ys4c-2u9olb
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