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Featured researches published by John Lewis Etter.


PLOS Genetics | 2018

Paternal lineage early onset hereditary ovarian cancers: A Familial Ovarian Cancer Registry study

Kevin H. Eng; J. Brian Szender; John Lewis Etter; Jasmine Kaur; Samantha Poblete; Ruea-Yea Huang; Qianqian Zhu; Katherine Grzesik; Sebastiano Battaglia; Rikki Cannioto; John Krolewski; Emese Zsiros; P.J. Frederick; Shashikant Lele; Kirsten B. Moysich; Kunle Odunsi

Given prior evidence that an affected woman conveys a higher risk of ovarian cancer to her sister than to her mother, we hypothesized that there exists an X-linked variant evidenced by transmission to a woman from her paternal grandmother via her father. We ascertained 3,499 grandmother/granddaughter pairs from the Familial Ovarian Cancer Registry at the Roswell Park Cancer Institute observing 892 informative pairs with 157 affected granddaughters. We performed germline X-chromosome exome sequencing on 186 women with ovarian cancer from the registry. The rate of cancers was 28.4% in paternal grandmother/granddaughter pairs and 13.9% in maternal pairs consistent with an X-linked dominant model (Chi-square test X2 = 0.02, p = 0.89) and inconsistent with an autosomal dominant model (X2 = 20.4, p<0.001). Paternal grandmother cases had an earlier age-of-onset versus maternal cases (hazard ratio HR = 1.59, 95%CI: 1.12–2.25) independent of BRCA1/2 status. Reinforcing the X-linked hypothesis, we observed an association between prostate cancer in men and ovarian cancer in his mother and daughters (odds ratio, OR = 2.34, p = 0.034). Unaffected mothers with affected daughters produced significantly more daughters than sons (ratio = 1.96, p<0.005). We performed exome sequencing in reported BRCA negative cases from the registry. Considering age-of-onset, one missense variant (rs176026 in MAGEC3) reached chromosome-wide significance (Hazard ratio HR = 2.85, 95%CI: 1.75–4.65) advancing the age of onset by 6.7 years. In addition to the well-known contribution of BRCA, we demonstrate that a genetic locus on the X-chromosome contributes to ovarian cancer risk. An X-linked pattern of inheritance has implications for genetic risk stratification. Women with an affected paternal grandmother and sisters of affected women are at increased risk for ovarian cancer. Further work is required to validate this variant and to characterize carrier families.


British Journal of Cancer | 2017

History of thyroid disease and survival of ovarian cancer patients: results from the Ovarian Cancer Association Consortium, a brief report

Albina N. Minlikeeva; Jo L. Freudenheim; Rikki Cannioto; Kevin H. Eng; J. Brian Szender; P.C. Mayor; John Lewis Etter; Daniel W. Cramer; Brenda Diergaarde; Jennifer A. Doherty; Thilo Dörk; Robert P. Edwards; Anna deFazio; Grace Friel; Marc T. Goodman; Peter Hillemanns; Estrid Høgdall; Allan Jensen; Susan J. Jordan; Beth Y. Karlan; Susanne K. Kjaer; Ruediger Klapdor; Keitaro Matsuo; Mika Mizuno; Christina M. Nagle; Kunle Odunsi; Lisa E. Paddock; Mary Anne Rossing; Joellen M. Schildkraut; Barbara Schmalfeldt

Background:Findings from in vitro studies suggest that increased exposure to thyroid hormones can influence progression of ovarian tumours. However, epidemiologic evidence on this topic is limited.Methods:We pooled data from 11 studies from the Ovarian Cancer Association Consortium. Using multivariate Cox proportional hazards models, we estimated associations between hyper- and hypothyroidism and medications prescribed for these conditions with 5-year all-cause survival among women diagnosed with invasive ovarian cancer.Results:Overall, there was a nonsignificant association with history of hyperthyroidism (n=160 cases) and mortality (HR=1.22; 95% CI=0.97–1.53). Furthermore, diagnosis of hyperthyroidism within the 5 years before ovarian cancer diagnosis was associated with an increased risk of death (HR=1.94; 95% CI=1.19–3.18). A more modest association was observed with history of hypothyroidism (n=624 cases) and mortality (HR=1.16; 95% CI=1.03–1.31). Neither duration of hypothyroidism nor use of thyroid medications was associated with survival.Conclusions:In this large study of women with ovarian cancer, we found that recent history of hyperthyroidism and overall history of hypothyroidism were associated with worse 5-year survival.


Cancer treatment and research | 2018

Lifetime physical inactivity is associated with lung cancer risk and mortality

Rikki Cannioto; John Lewis Etter; Michael J. LaMonte; Andrew D. Ray; Janine M. Joseph; Emad Al Qassim; Kevin H. Eng; Kirsten B. Moysich

INTRODUCTION Investigations of the independent associations of physical inactivity with cancer endpoints have been mounting in the epidemiological literature, in part due to the high prevalence of physical inactivity among cancer patients and to evidence that inactivity associates with carcinogenesis via pathways independent of obesity. Yet, physical inactivity is not currently recognized as a well-established risk or prognostic factor for lung cancer. As such, we examined the associations of lifetime physical inactivity with lung cancer risk and mortality in a hospital-based, case-control study. PRESENTATION OF CASE Materials and Methods: The analyses included data from 660 lung cancer patients and 1335 matched cancer-free controls. Multivariable logistic regression analyses were utilized to assess the association between lifetime physical inactivity and lung cancer risk, and Cox proportional hazards models were utilized to estimate the association between lifetime physical inactivity and mortality among lung cancer cases.Results: We observed a significant positive association between lifetime physical inactivity and lung cancer risk: [Odds ratio (OR)=2.23, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.77-2.81]; the association remained significant among never smokers (OR=3.00, 95% CI:1.33-6.78) and non-smokers (OR=2.33, 95% CI: 1.79-3.02). We also observed a significant positive association between lifetime physical inactivity and lung cancer mortality [Hazard ratio (HR)=1.40, 95% CI: 1.14-1.71]; the association remained significant in non-smokers (HR=1.51, 95% CI: 1.16-1.95). DISCUSSION/CONCLUSION These data add to the body of evidence suggesting that physical inactivity is an independent risk and prognostic factor for cancer. Additional research utilizing prospectively collected data is needed to substantiate the current findings.


Cancer Epidemiology | 2018

Hereditary association between testicular cancer and familial ovarian cancer: A Familial Ovarian Cancer Registry study

John Lewis Etter; Kevin H. Eng; Rikki Cannioto; Jasmine Kaur; Hani Almohanna; Emad Alqassim; J. Brian Szender; Janine M. Joseph; Shashikant Lele; Kunle Odunsi; Kirsten B. Moysich

BACKGROUND Although family history of testicular cancer is well-established as a risk factor for testicular cancer, it is unknown whether family history of ovarian cancer is associated with risk of testicular cancer. MATERIALS AND METHODS Using data from the Familial Ovarian Cancer Registry on 2636 families with multiple cases of ovarian cancer, we systematically compared relative frequencies of ovarian cancer among relatives of men with testicular and non-testicular cancers. RESULTS Thirty-one families with cases of both ovarian and testicular cancer were identified. We observed that, among men with cancer, those with testicular cancer were more likely to have a mother with ovarian cancer than those with non-testicular cancers (OR = 3.32, p = 0.004). Zero paternal grandmothers of men with testicular cancer had ovarian cancer. CONCLUSION These observations provide compelling preliminary evidence for a familial association between ovarian and testicular cancers Future studies should be designed to further investigate this association and evaluate X-linkage.


Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 2017

No evidence that genetic variation in the myeloid-derived suppressor cell pathway influences ovarian cancer survival

Lara E. Sucheston-Campbell; Rikki Cannioto; Alyssa Clay; John Lewis Etter; Kevin H. Eng; Song Liu; Sebastiano Battaglia; Qiang Hu; J. Brian Szender; Albina N. Minlikeeva; Janine M. Joseph; P.C. Mayor; Scott I. Abrams; Brahm H. Segal; Paul K. Wallace; Kah Teong Soh; Emese Zsiros; Hoda Anton-Culver; Elisa V. Bandera; Matthias W. Beckmann; Andrew Berchuck; Line Bjørge; Amanda S. Bruegl; Ian G. Campbell; Shawn Patrice Campbell; Georgia Chenevix-Trench; Daniel W. Cramer; Agnieszka Dansonka-Mieszkowska; Fanny Dao; Brenda Diergaarde

Background: The precise mechanism by which the immune system is adversely affected in cancer patients remains poorly understood, but the accumulation of immunosuppressive/protumorigenic myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) is thought to be a prominent mechanism contributing to immunologic tolerance of malignant cells in epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC). To this end, we hypothesized genetic variation in MDSC pathway genes would be associated with survival after EOC diagnoses. Methods: We measured the hazard of death due to EOC within 10 years of diagnosis, overall and by invasive subtype, attributable to SNPs in 24 genes relevant in the MDSC pathway in 10,751 women diagnosed with invasive EOC. Versatile Gene-based Association Study and the admixture likelihood method were used to test gene and pathway associations with survival. Results: We did not identify individual SNPs that were significantly associated with survival after correction for multiple testing (P < 3.5 × 10−5), nor did we identify significant associations between the MDSC pathway overall, or the 24 individual genes and EOC survival. Conclusions: In this well-powered analysis, we observed no evidence that inherited variations in MDSC-associated SNPs, individual genes, or the collective genetic pathway contributed to EOC survival outcomes. Impact: Common inherited variation in genes relevant to MDSCs was not associated with survival in women diagnosed with invasive EOC. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev; 26(3); 420–4. ©2016 AACR.


Cancer Epidemiology | 2017

The association of lifetime physical inactivity with bladder and renal cancer risk: A hospital-based case-control analysis

Rikki Cannioto; John Lewis Etter; Lauren Beryl Guterman; Janine M. Joseph; Nicholas R. Gulati; Kristina L. Schmitt; Michael J. LaMonte; Ryan Nagy; Albina N. Minlikeeva; J.B. Szender; Kirsten B. Moysich

OBJECTIVES Recreational physical inactivity has been gaining recognition as an independent epidemiological exposure of interest in relation to cancer endpoints due to evidence suggesting that it may associate with cancer independent of obesity. In the current analyses, we examined the associations of lifetime recreational physical inactivity with renal and bladder cancer risk. METHODS In this hospital-based case-control study, we identified N=160 renal cancer patients, N=208 bladder cancer patients, and N=766 age frequency-matched controls without cancer. Participants self-reporting never participating in any regular/weekly recreational physical activity throughout their lifetime were classified as physically inactive. Utilizing unconditional multivariable logistic regression analyses, we estimated odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals to represent the associations between lifetime physical inactivity and renal and bladder cancer risk. RESULTS In multivariable logistic regression models, we observed significant positive associations between lifetime recreational physical inactivity and renal cancer and bladder cancer risk: odds ratio=1.77 (95% CI: 1.10-2.85) and odds ratio=1.73 (95% CI: 1.13-2.63), respectively. Similar associations also persisted among individuals who were not obese for both renal and bladder cancer: odds ratio=1.75 (95% CI: 1.03-2.98) and odds ratio=1.70 (95% CI: 1.08-2.69), respectively. CONCLUSIONS In this case-control study, we observed evidence of a positive association between renal and bladder cancer with lifetime recreational physical inactivity. These data add to the growing body of evidence suggesting that physical inactivity may be an important independent risk factor for cancer. However, additional studies using a larger sample and prospectively collected data are needed to substantiate the current findings.


Leukemia Research | 2018

Lifetime physical inactivity is associated with increased risk for Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin lymphoma: A case-control study

John Lewis Etter; Rikki Cannioto; Kah Teong Soh; Emad Alquassim; Hani Almohanna; Zachary Dunbar; Janine M. Joseph; Sophia R. Balderman; Francisco J. Hernandez-Ilizaliturri; Kirsten B. Moysich

BACKGROUND Although physical activity is a well-established risk factor for several cancer types, studies evaluating its association with lymphoma have yielded inconclusive results. In such cases where physical activity is not clearly associated with cancer risk in a dose-dependent manner, investigators have begun examining physical inactivity as an independent exposure of interest. METHODS Associations of self-reported, lifetime physical inactivity with risk of developing Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) and non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) were evaluated in a hospital-based case control study using data from the Patient Epidemiology Data System at Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center. Participants included 87 patients with HL and 236 patients with NHL as well as 348 and 952 cancer-free controls, respectively. Multivariable-adjusted logistic regression models were fit to calculate odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) estimating the association between physical inactivity and lymphoma risk. RESULTS We observed significant, positive associations between lifetime recreational physical inactivity and risk of both HL (OR = 1.90, 95% CI: 1.15-3.15) and NHL (OR = 1.35, 95% CI: 1.01-1.82). CONCLUSIONS The current analysis provides evidence for a positive association between physical inactivity and risk of both HL and NHL. These results add to a growing body of research suggesting that lifetime physical inactivity may be an important independent, modifiable behavioral risk factor for cancer.


Cancer Causes & Control | 2018

Anthropometric characteristics and ovarian cancer risk and survival

Albina N. Minlikeeva; Kirsten B. Moysich; P.C. Mayor; John Lewis Etter; Rikki Cannioto; Roberta B. Ness; Kristen Starbuck; Robert P. Edwards; Brahm H. Segal; Sashikant Lele; Kunle Odunsi; Brenda Diergaarde; Francesmary Modugno

PurposeMultiple studies have examined the role of anthropometric characteristics in ovarian cancer risk and survival; however, their results have been conflicting. We investigated the associations between weight change, height and height change and risk and outcome of ovarian cancer using data from a large population-based case–control study.MethodsData from 699 ovarian cancer cases and 1,802 controls who participated in the HOPE study were included. We used unconditional logistic regression adjusted for age, race, number of pregnancies, use of oral contraceptives, and family history of breast or ovarian cancer to examine the associations between self-reported height and weight and height change with ovarian cancer risk. Cox proportional hazards regression models adjusted for age and stage were used to examine the association between the exposure variables and overall and progression-free survival among ovarian cancer cases.ResultsWe observed an increased risk of ovarian cancer mortality and progression for gaining more than 20 pounds between ages 18–30, HR 1.36; 95% CI 1.05–1.76, and HR 1.31; 95% CI 1.04–1.66, respectively. Losing weight and gaining it back multiple times was inversely associated with both ovarian cancer risk, OR 0.78; 95% CI 0.63–0.97 for 1–4 times and OR 0.73; 95% CI 0.54–0.99 for 5–9 times, and mortality, HR 0.63; 95% CI 0.40–0.99 for 10–14 times. Finally, being taller during adolescence and adulthood was associated with increased risk of mortality. Taller stature and weight gain over lifetime were not related to ovarian cancer risk.ConclusionsOur results suggest that height and weight and their change over time may influence ovarian cancer risk and survival. These findings suggest that biological mechanisms underlying these associations may be hormone driven and may play an important role in relation to ovarian carcinogenesis and tumor progression.


Gynecologic Oncology | 2018

Variability in body mass index (BMI) during adjuvant chemotherapy is associated with clinical outcomes among invasive ovarian cancer patients

Kristen Starbuck; Rikki Cannioto; John Lewis Etter; Kirsten B. Moysich; W. Duncan; K. Morrell; H. Almohanna; J.M. Joseph; J.B. Szender; Emese Zsiros; Kunle Odunsi; P.J. Frederick; S.B. Lele; S.N. Akers; Kevin H. Eng


Gynecologic Oncology | 2018

Proton pump inhibitor use during chemotherapy for platinum-resistant or platinum-refractory ovarian cancer improves overall survival

Kristen Starbuck; Sarah Belliotti; K. Morrell; John Lewis Etter; K. Kolesnikova; Emese Zsiros; Kunle Odunsi; S.B. Lele; P.J. Frederick; S.N. Akers; Kevin H. Eng

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Kevin H. Eng

Roswell Park Cancer Institute

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Kunle Odunsi

Roswell Park Cancer Institute

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Rikki Cannioto

Roswell Park Cancer Institute

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Emese Zsiros

Roswell Park Cancer Institute

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Kirsten B. Moysich

Roswell Park Cancer Institute

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P.J. Frederick

Roswell Park Cancer Institute

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J.B. Szender

Roswell Park Cancer Institute

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Janine M. Joseph

Roswell Park Cancer Institute

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P.C. Mayor

Roswell Park Cancer Institute

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S.B. Lele

Roswell Park Cancer Institute

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