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Dive into the research topics where Ana de Juan is active.

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Featured researches published by Ana de Juan.


Nature Genetics | 2011

Mutations in BRIP1 confer high risk of ovarian cancer

Thorunn Rafnar; Daniel F. Gudbjartsson; Patrick Sulem; Aslaug Jonasdottir; Asgeir Sigurdsson; Adalbjorg Jonasdottir; Søren Besenbacher; Pär Lundin; Simon N. Stacey; Julius Gudmundsson; Olafur T. Magnusson; Louise le Roux; Gudbjorg Orlygsdottir; Hafdis T. Helgadottir; Hrefna Johannsdottir; Arnaldur Gylfason; Laufey Tryggvadottir; Jon G. Jonasson; Ana de Juan; Eugenia Ortega; José Manuel Ramón-Cajal; María Dolores García-Prats; Carlos Mayordomo; Angeles Panadero; Fernando Rivera; Katja K. Aben; Anne M. van Altena; Leon F.A.G. Massuger; Mervi Aavikko; Paula Kujala

Ovarian cancer causes more deaths than any other gynecologic malignancy in developed countries. Sixteen million sequence variants, identified through whole-genome sequencing of 457 Icelanders, were imputed to 41,675 Icelanders genotyped using SNP chips, as well as to their relatives. Sequence variants were tested for association with ovarian cancer (N of affected individuals = 656). We discovered a rare (0.41% allelic frequency) frameshift mutation, c.2040_2041insTT, in the BRIP1 (FANCJ) gene that confers an increase in ovarian cancer risk (odds ratio (OR) = 8.13, P = 2.8 × 10−14). The mutation was also associated with increased risk of cancer in general and reduced lifespan by 3.6 years. In a Spanish population, another frameshift mutation in BRIP1, c.1702_1703del, was seen in 2 out of 144 subjects with ovarian cancer and 1 out of 1,780 control subjects (P = 0.016). This allele was also associated with breast cancer (seen in 6/927 cases; P = 0.0079). Ovarian tumors from heterozygous carriers of the Icelandic mutation show loss of the wild-type allele, indicating that BRIP1 behaves like a classical tumor suppressor gene in ovarian cancer.


Nature Genetics | 2012

Discovery of common variants associated with low TSH levels and thyroid cancer risk

Julius Gudmundsson; Patrick Sulem; Daniel F. Gudbjartsson; Jon G. Jonasson; Gisli Masson; Huiling He; Aslaug Jonasdottir; Asgeir Sigurdsson; Simon N. Stacey; Hrefna Johannsdottir; Hafdis T. Helgadottir; Wei Li; Rebecca Nagy; Matthew D. Ringel; Richard T. Kloos; Marieke de Visser; Theo S. Plantinga; Martin den Heijer; Esperanza Aguillo; Angeles Panadero; Enrique Prats; Almudena Garcia-Castaño; Ana de Juan; Fernando Rivera; G. Bragi Walters; Hjordis Bjarnason; Laufey Tryggvadottir; Gudmundur I. Eyjolfsson; Unnur S. Bjornsdottir; Hilma Holm

To search for sequence variants conferring risk of nonmedullary thyroid cancer, we focused our analysis on 22 SNPs with a P < 5 × 10−8 in a genome-wide association study on levels of thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) in 27,758 Icelanders. Of those, rs965513 has previously been shown to associate with thyroid cancer. The remaining 21 SNPs were genotyped in 561 Icelandic individuals with thyroid cancer (cases) and up to 40,013 controls. Variants suggestively associated with thyroid cancer (P < 0.05) were genotyped in an additional 595 non-Icelandic cases and 2,604 controls. After combining the results, three variants were shown to associate with thyroid cancer: rs966423 on 2q35 (OR = 1.34; Pcombined = 1.3 × 10−9), rs2439302 on 8p12 (OR = 1.36; Pcombined = 2.0 × 10−9) and rs116909374 on 14q13.3 (OR = 2.09; Pcombined = 4.6 × 10−11), a region previously reported to contain an uncorrelated variant conferring risk of thyroid cancer. A strong association (P = 9.1 × 10−91) was observed between rs2439302 on 8p12 and expression of NRG1, which encodes the signaling protein neuregulin 1, in blood.


PLOS Genetics | 2010

Ancestry-shift refinement mapping of the C6orf97-ESR1 breast cancer susceptibility locus.

Simon N. Stacey; Patrick Sulem; Carlo Zanon; Sigurjon A. Gudjonsson; Gudmar Thorleifsson; Agnar Helgason; Aslaug Jonasdottir; Søren Besenbacher; Jelena Kostic; James D. Fackenthal; Dezheng Huo; Clement Adebamowo; Temidayo O. Ogundiran; Janet E. Olson; Zachary S. Fredericksen; Xianshu Wang; Maxime P. Look; Anieta M. Sieuwerts; John W.M. Martens; Isabel Pajares; María Dolores García-Prats; José Manuel Ramón-Cajal; Ana de Juan; Angeles Panadero; Eugenia Ortega; Katja K. Aben; Sita H. Vermeulen; Fatemeh Asadzadeh; K. C.Anton van Engelenburg; Sara Margolin

We used an approach that we term ancestry-shift refinement mapping to investigate an association, originally discovered in a GWAS of a Chinese population, between rs2046210[T] and breast cancer susceptibility. The locus is on 6q25.1 in proximity to the C6orf97 and estrogen receptor α (ESR1) genes. We identified a panel of SNPs that are correlated with rs2046210 in Chinese, but not necessarily so in other ancestral populations, and genotyped them in breast cancer case∶control samples of Asian, European, and African origin, a total of 10,176 cases and 13,286 controls. We found that rs2046210[T] does not confer substantial risk of breast cancer in Europeans and Africans (OR = 1.04, P = 0.099, and OR = 0.98, P = 0.77, respectively). Rather, in those ancestries, an association signal arises from a group of less common SNPs typified by rs9397435. The rs9397435[G] allele was found to confer risk of breast cancer in European (OR = 1.15, P = 1.2×10−3), African (OR = 1.35, P = 0.014), and Asian (OR = 1.23, P = 2.9×10−4) population samples. Combined over all ancestries, the OR was 1.19 (P = 3.9×10−7), was without significant heterogeneity between ancestries (Phet = 0.36) and the SNP fully accounted for the association signal in each ancestry. Haplotypes bearing rs9397435[G] are well tagged by rs2046210[T] only in Asians. The rs9397435[G] allele showed associations with both estrogen receptor positive and estrogen receptor negative breast cancer. Using early-draft data from the 1,000 Genomes project, we found that the risk allele of a novel SNP (rs77275268), which is closely correlated with rs9397435, disrupts a partially methylated CpG sequence within a known CTCF binding site. These studies demonstrate that shifting the analysis among ancestral populations can provide valuable resolution in association mapping.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2014

Genome-wide association study yields variants at 20p12.2 that associate with urinary bladder cancer.

Thorunn Rafnar; Patrick Sulem; Gudmar Thorleifsson; Sita H. Vermeulen; Hannes Helgason; Jona Saemundsdottir; Sigurjon A. Gudjonsson; Asgeir Sigurdsson; Simon N. Stacey; Julius Gudmundsson; Hrefna Johannsdottir; Kristin Alexiusdottir; Vigdis Petursdottir; Sigfus Nikulasson; Gudmundur Geirsson; Thorvaldur Jonsson; Katja K. Aben; Anne J. Grotenhuis; Gerald W. Verhaegh; Aleksandra M. Dudek; J. Alfred Witjes; Antoine G. van der Heijden; Alina Vrieling; Tessel E. Galesloot; Ana de Juan; Angeles Panadero; Fernando Rivera; Carolyn D. Hurst; D. Timothy Bishop; Sei C. Sak

Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of urinary bladder cancer (UBC) have yielded common variants at 12 loci that associate with risk of the disease. We report here the results of a GWAS of UBC including 1670 UBC cases and 90 180 controls, followed by replication analysis in additional 5266 UBC cases and 10 456 controls. We tested a dataset containing 34.2 million variants, generated by imputation based on whole-genome sequencing of 2230 Icelanders. Several correlated variants at 20p12, represented by rs62185668, show genome-wide significant association with UBC after combining discovery and replication results (OR = 1.19, P = 1.5 × 10(-11) for rs62185668-A, minor allele frequency = 23.6%). The variants are located in a non-coding region approximately 300 kb upstream from the JAG1 gene, an important component of the Notch signaling pathways that may be oncogenic or tumor suppressive in several forms of cancer. Our results add to the growing number of UBC risk variants discovered through GWAS.


Nature Communications | 2017

A genome-wide association study yields five novel thyroid cancer risk loci

Julius Gudmundsson; Gudmar Thorleifsson; Jon K. Sigurdsson; Lilja Stefansdottir; Jon G. Jonasson; Sigurjon A. Gudjonsson; Daniel F. Gudbjartsson; Gisli Masson; Hrefna Johannsdottir; Gisli H. Halldorsson; Simon N. Stacey; Hannes Helgason; Patrick Sulem; Leigha Senter; Huiling He; Sandya Liyanarachchi; Matthew D. Ringel; Esperanza Aguillo; Angeles Panadero; Enrique Prats; Almudena Garcia-Castaño; Ana de Juan; Fernando Rivera; Li Xu; Lambertus A. Kiemeney; Gudmundur I. Eyjolfsson; Olof Sigurdardottir; Isleifur Olafsson; Kristvinsson H; Romana T. Netea-Maier

The great majority of thyroid cancers are of the non-medullary type. Here we report findings from a genome-wide association study of non-medullary thyroid cancer, including in total 3,001 patients and 287,550 controls from five study groups of European descent. Our results yield five novel loci (all with Pcombined<3 × 10−8): 1q42.2 (rs12129938 in PCNXL2), 3q26.2 (rs6793295 a missense mutation in LRCC34 near TERC), 5q22.1 (rs73227498 between NREP and EPB41L4A), 10q24.33 (rs7902587 near OBFC1), and two independently associated variants at 15q22.33 (rs2289261 and rs56062135; both in SMAD3). We also confirm recently published association results from a Chinese study of a variant on 5p15.33 (rs2736100 near the TERT gene) and present a stronger association result for a moderately correlated variant (rs10069690; OR=1.20, P=3.2 × 10−7) based on our study of individuals of European ancestry. In combination, these results raise several opportunities for future studies of the pathogenesis of thyroid cancer.


Advances in Anatomic Pathology | 2011

Spontaneous complete regression in merkel cell carcinoma after biopsy.

José Fernando Val-Bernal; Almudena García-Castaño; Rosario García-Barredo; Rosa Landeras; Ana de Juan; María Francisca Garijo


Laryngoscope | 2004

Long‐Term Results of a Phase II Trial of Induction Chemotherapy with Uracil‐Ftegafur (UFT), Vinorelbine, and Cisplatin (UFTVP) followed by Radiotherapy Concomitant with UFT and Carboplatin (RT/UFTJ) in a Primary Site Preservation Setting for Resectable Locally Advanced Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Larynx and Hypopharynx

F. Rivera; Maria Eugenia Vega-Villegas; Marta Lopez-Brea; Almudena García-Castaño; Ana de Juan; Antonio Collado; Piedad Galdós; Antonio Rubio; Adolfo del Valle; Julio Rama; Jaime Sanz‐Ortiz


Psicooncología: investigación y clínica biopsicosocial en oncología | 2004

Aspectos psicológicos de la toxicidad de la quimioterapia

Fernando Rivera; Carlos Raymundo Martínez López; Ana López; Mª Eugenia Vega; Almudena García; Ana de Juan; José Manuel López; Javier Ramos


Clinical & Translational Oncology | 2007

Long term results of a phase II trial of Induction Chemotherapy with Uracil-Ftegafur (UFT), Vinorelbine and Cisplatin (UFTVP) followed by Radiotherapy concomitant with UFT and Carboplatin (RT/UFTJ) in Non-Resectable Locally Advanced (Stage IV-B) Squamous Cell Head and Neck Carcinoma and Peripheral Blood Stem Cell Support (PBSCS) with Febrile Neutropenia

F. Rivera; Maria Eugenia Vega-Villegas; Marta López-Brea; Almudena García-Castaño; Ana de Juan; Francisco Javier Ramos; Antonio Collado; Piedad Galdós; Antonio Rubio; Adolfo del Valle; Julio Rama; Marta Mayorga; Jaime Sanz-Ortiz


Clinical & Translational Oncology | 2007

Long term results of a phase II trial of Induction Chemotherapy with Uracil-Ftegafur (UFT), Vinorelbine and Cisplatin (UFTVP) followed by Radiotherapy concomitant with UFT and Carboplatin (RT/UFTJ) in Non-Resectable Locally Advanced (Stage IV-B) Squamous Cell Head and Neck Carcinoma

F. Rivera; Maria Eugenia Vega-Villegas; Marta López-Brea; Almudena García-Castaño; Ana de Juan; Francisco Javier Ramos; Antonio Collado; Piedad Galdós; Antonio Rubio; Adolfo del Valle; Julio Rama; Marta Mayorga; Jaime Sanz-Ortiz

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