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GWAS Study

Genome-Wide Analyses of Nephrotoxicity in Platinum-Treated Cancer Patients Identify Association with Genetic Variant in <i>RBMS3</i> and Acute Kidney Injury.

Klumpers MJ, Witte W, Gattuso G et al.

35743677 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
195 Participants
68 Views
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

KM
Klumpers MJ
WW
Witte W
GG
Gattuso G
SE
Schiavello E
TM
Terenziani M
MM
Massimino M
GC
Gidding CEM
VS
Vermeulen SH
DC
Driessen CM
VH
Van Herpen CM
VM
Van Meerten E
GH
Guchelaar HJ
CM
Coenen MJH
TL
Te Loo DMWM
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Nephrotoxicity is a common and dose-limiting side effect of platinum compounds, which often manifests as acute kidney injury or hypomagnesemia. This study aimed to investigate the genetic risk loci for platinum-induced nephrotoxicity. Platinum-treated brain tumor and head-neck tumor patients were genotyped with genome-wide coverage. The data regarding the patient and treatment characteristics and the laboratory results reflecting the nephrotoxicity during and after the platinum treatment were collected from the medical records. Linear and logistic regression analyses were performed to investigate the associations between the genetic variants and the acute kidney injury and hypomagnesemia phenotypes. A cohort of 195 platinum-treated patients was included, and 9,799,032 DNA variants passed the quality control. An association was identified between RBMS3 rs10663797 and acute kidney injury (coefficient -0.10 (95% confidence interval -0.13--0.06), p-value 2.72 × 10-8). The patients who carried an AC deletion at this locus had statistically significantly lower glomerular filtration rates after platinum treatment. Previously reported associations, such as BACH2 rs4388268, could not be replicated in this study's cohort. No statistically significant associations were identified for platinum-induced hypomagnesemia. The genetic variant in RBMS3 was not previously linked to nephrotoxicity or related traits. The validation of this study's results in independent cohorts is needed to confirm this novel association.

195 European ancestry individuals

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

195
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European
Ancestry
Chapter IV

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