Circulating isovalerylcarnitine and lung cancer risk
2022
Smith-Byrne, Karl | Cerani, Agustin | Guida, Florence | Zhou, Sirui | Agudo, Antonio | Aleksandrova, Krasimira (Dr.) | Barricarte, Aurelio | Barranco, Miguel Rodriguez | Bochers, Christoph H. | Gram, Inger Torhild | Han, Jun | Amos, Christopher | Hung, Rayjean J. | Grankvist, Kjell | Nost, Therese Haugdhal | Imaz, Liher | Chirlaque-Lopez, Maria Dolores | Johansson, Mikael | Kaaks, Rudolf | Kuhn, Tilman | Martin, Richard M. | McKay, James D. | Pala, Valeria | Robbins, Hilary A. | Sandanger, Torkjel M. | Schibli, David | Schulze, Matthias Bernd (Prof. Dr.) | Travis, Ruth C. | Vineis, Paolo | Weiderpass, Elisabete | Brennan, Paul | Johansson, Mattias | Richards, J. Brent
Background: Tobacco exposure causes 8 of 10 lung cancers, and identifying additional risk factors is challenging due to confounding introduced by smoking in traditional observational studies. Materials and Methods: We used Mendelian randomization (MR) to screen 207 metabolites for their role in lung cancer predisposition using independent genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of blood metabolite levels (n = 7,824) and lung cancer risk (n = 29,266 cases/56,450 controls). A nested case-control study (656 cases and 1,296 matched controls) was subsequently per-formed using prediagnostic blood samples to validate MR associ-ation with lung cancer incidence data from population-based cohorts (EPIC and NSHDS). Results: An MR-based scan of 207 circulating metabolites for lung cancer risk identified that blood isovalerylcarnitine (IVC) was associated with a decreased odds of lung cancer after accounting for multiple testing (log10-OR = 0.43; 95% CI, 0.29-0.63). Molar measurement of IVC in prediagnostic blood found similar results (log10-OR = 0.39; 95% CI, 0.21-0.72). Results were consistent across lung cancer subtypes. Conclusions: Independent lines of evidence support an inverse association of elevated circulating IVC with lung cancer risk through a novel methodologic approach that integrates genetic and tradi-tional epidemiology to efficiently identify novel cancer biomarkers. Impact: Our results find compelling evidence in favor of a protective role for a circulating metabolite, IVC, in lung cancer etiology. From the treatment of a Mendelian disease, isovaleric acidemia, we know that circulating IVC is modifiable through a restricted protein diet or glycine and L-carnatine supplementation. IVC may represent a modifiable and inversely associated biomarker for lung cancer.
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