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Seeking genetic susceptibility variants for colorectal cancer: the EPICOLON consortium experience
Author(s) -
Sergi Castellví–Bel,
Clara RuizPonte,
Ceres FernándezRozadilla,
Anna Abulí,
Jenifer Muñoz,
Xavier Bessa,
Alejandro BreaFernández,
Matteo Dal Ferro,
María D. Giraldez,
Rosa M. Xicola,
Xavier Llor,
Rodrigo Jover,
J. M. Piqué,
M. Andreu,
Antoni Castells,
Ángel Carracedo
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
mutagenesis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.723
H-Index - 91
eISSN - 1464-3804
pISSN - 0267-8357
DOI - 10.1093/mutage/ger047
Subject(s) - colorectal cancer , penetrance , medicine , exome sequencing , missing heritability problem , cancer , single nucleotide polymorphism , exome , population , genetics , oncology , genetic predisposition , biology , mutation , gene , genotype , environmental health , disease , phenotype
The EPICOLON consortium was initiated in 1999 by the Gastrointestinal Oncology Group of the Spanish Gastroenterology Association. It recruited consecutive, unselected, population-based colorectal cancer (CRC) cases and control subjects matched by age and gender without personal or familial history of cancer all over Spain with the main goal of gaining knowledge in Lynch syndrome and familial CRC. This epidemiological, prospective and multicentre study collected extensive clinical data and biological samples from ∼2000 CRC cases and 2000 controls in Phases 1 and 2 involving 25 and 14 participating hospitals, respectively. Genetic susceptibility projects in EPICOLON have included candidate-gene approaches evaluating single-nucleotide polymorphisms/genes from the historical category (linked to CRC risk by previous studies), from human syntenic CRC susceptibility regions identified in mouse, from the CRC carcinogenesis-related pathways Wnt and BMP, from regions 9q22 and 3q22 with positive linkage in CRC families, and from the mucin gene family. This consortium has also participated actively in the identification 5 of the 16 common, low-penetrance CRC genetic variants identified so far by genome-wide association studies. Finishing their own pangenomic study and performing whole-exome sequencing in selected CRC samples are among EPICOLON future research prospects.

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