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Dive into the research topics where Karen A. Pooley is active.

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Featured researches published by Karen A. Pooley.


Nature Genetics | 2007

A common coding variant in CASP8 is associated with breast cancer risk

Angela Cox; Alison M. Dunning; Montserrat Garcia-Closas; Sabapathy P. Balasubramanian; Malcolm Reed; Karen A. Pooley; Serena Scollen; Caroline Baynes; Bruce A.J. Ponder; Stephen J. Chanock; Jolanta Lissowska; Louise A. Brinton; Beata Peplonska; Melissa C. Southey; John L. Hopper; Margaret McCredie; Graham G. Giles; Olivia Fletcher; Nichola Johnson; Isabel dos Santos Silva; Lorna Gibson; Stig E. Bojesen; Børge G. Nordestgaard; Christen K. Axelsson; Diana Torres; Ute Hamann; Christina Justenhoven; Hiltrud Brauch; Jenny Chang-Claude; Silke Kropp

The Breast Cancer Association Consortium (BCAC) has been established to conduct combined case-control analyses with augmented statistical power to try to confirm putative genetic associations with breast cancer. We genotyped nine SNPs for which there was some prior evidence of an association with breast cancer: CASP8 D302H (rs1045485), IGFBP3 −202 C → A (rs2854744), SOD2 V16A (rs1799725), TGFB1 L10P (rs1982073), ATM S49C (rs1800054), ADH1B 3′ UTR A → G (rs1042026), CDKN1A S31R (rs1801270), ICAM5 V301I (rs1056538) and NUMA1 A794G (rs3750913). We included data from 9–15 studies, comprising 11,391–18,290 cases and 14,753–22,670 controls. We found evidence of an association with breast cancer for CASP8 D302H (with odds ratios (OR) of 0.89 (95% confidence interval (c.i.): 0.85–0.94) and 0.74 (95% c.i.: 0.62–0.87) for heterozygotes and rare homozygotes, respectively, compared with common homozygotes; Ptrend = 1.1 × 10−7) and weaker evidence for TGFB1 L10P (OR = 1.07 (95% c.i.: 1.02–1.13) and 1.16 (95% c.i.: 1.08–1.25), respectively; Ptrend = 2.8 × 10−5). These results demonstrate that common breast cancer susceptibility alleles with small effects on risk can be identified, given sufficiently powerful studies.NOTE: In the version of this article initially published, there was an error that affected the calculations of the odds ratios, confidence intervals, between-study heterogeneity, trend test and test for association for SNP ICAM5 V301I in Table 1 (ICAM5 V301I); genotype counts in Supplementary Table 2 (ICAM5; ICR_FBCS and Kuopio studies) and minor allele frequencies, trend test and odds ratios for heterozygotes and rare homozygotes in Supplementary Table 3 (ICAM5; ICR_FBCS and Kuopio studies). The errors in Table 1 have been corrected in the PDF version of the article. The errors in supplementary information have been corrected online.


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2008

Multiple Loci With Different Cancer Specificities Within the 8q24 Gene Desert

Maya Ghoussaini; Honglin Song; Thibaud Koessler; Ali Amin Al Olama; Zsofia Kote-Jarai; Kristy Driver; Karen A. Pooley; Susan J. Ramus; Susanne K. Kjaer; Estrid Høgdall; Richard A. DiCioccio; Alice S. Whittemore; Simon A. Gayther; Graham G. Giles; Michelle Guy; Stephen M. Edwards; Jonathan Morrison; Jenny Donovan; Freddie C. Hamdy; David P. Dearnaley; Audrey Ardern-Jones; Amanda L. Hall; Lynne T. O'Brien; Beatrice N. Gehr-Swain; Rosemary A. Wilkinson; Paul M. Brown; John L. Hopper; David E. Neal; Paul Pharoah; Bruce A.J. Ponder

Recent studies based on genome-wide association, linkage, and admixture scan analysis have reported associations of various genetic variants in 8q24 with susceptibility to breast, prostate, and colorectal cancer. This locus lies within a 1.18-Mb region that contains no known genes but is bounded at its centromeric end by FAM84B and at its telomeric end by c-MYC, two candidate cancer susceptibility genes. To investigate the associations of specific loci within 8q24 with specific cancers, we genotyped the nine previously reported cancer-associated single-nucleotide polymorphisms across the region in four case-control sets of prostate (1854 case subjects and 1894 control subjects), breast (2270 case subjects and 2280 control subjects), colorectal (2299 case subjects and 2284 control subjects), and ovarian (1975 case subjects and 3411 control subjects) cancer. Five different haplotype blocks within this gene desert were specifically associated with risks of different cancers. One block was solely associated with risk of breast cancer, three others were associated solely with the risk of prostate cancer, and a fifth was associated with the risk of prostate, colorectal, and ovarian cancer, but not breast cancer. We conclude that there are at least five separate functional variants in this region.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2008

Common Breast Cancer-Predisposition Alleles Are Associated with Breast Cancer Risk in BRCA1 and BRCA2 Mutation Carriers

Antonis C. Antoniou; Amanda B. Spurdle; Olga M. Sinilnikova; Sue Healey; Karen A. Pooley; Rita K. Schmutzler; Beatrix Versmold; Christoph Engel; Alfons Meindl; Norbert Arnold; Wera Hofmann; Christian Sutter; Dieter Niederacher; Helmut Deissler; Trinidad Caldés; Kati Kämpjärvi; Heli Nevanlinna; Jacques Simard; Jonathan Beesley; Xiaoqing Chen; Susan L. Neuhausen; Timothy R. Rebbeck; Theresa Wagner; Henry T. Lynch; Claudine Isaacs; Jeffrey N. Weitzel; Patricia A. Ganz; Mary B. Daly; Gail E. Tomlinson; Olufunmilayo I. Olopade

Germline mutations in BRCA1 and BRCA2 confer high risks of breast cancer. However, evidence suggests that these risks are modified by other genetic or environmental factors that cluster in families. A recent genome-wide association study has shown that common alleles at single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in FGFR2 (rs2981582), TNRC9 (rs3803662), and MAP3K1 (rs889312) are associated with increased breast cancer risks in the general population. To investigate whether these loci are also associated with breast cancer risk in BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutation carriers, we genotyped these SNPs in a sample of 10,358 mutation carriers from 23 studies. The minor alleles of SNP rs2981582 and rs889312 were each associated with increased breast cancer risk in BRCA2 mutation carriers (per-allele hazard ratio [HR] = 1.32, 95% CI: 1.20-1.45, p(trend) = 1.7 x 10(-8) and HR = 1.12, 95% CI: 1.02-1.24, p(trend) = 0.02) but not in BRCA1 carriers. rs3803662 was associated with increased breast cancer risk in both BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutation carriers (per-allele HR = 1.13, 95% CI: 1.06-1.20, p(trend) = 5 x 10(-5) in BRCA1 and BRCA2 combined). These loci appear to interact multiplicatively on breast cancer risk in BRCA2 mutation carriers. The differences in the effects of the FGFR2 and MAP3K1 SNPs between BRCA1 and BRCA2 carriers point to differences in the biology of BRCA1 and BRCA2 breast cancer tumors and confirm the distinct nature of breast cancer in BRCA1 mutation carriers.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Shortened Telomere length is associated with increased risk of cancer: A meta-analysis

Hongxia Ma; Ziyuan Zhou; Sheng Wei; Zhensheng Liu; Karen A. Pooley; Alison M. Dunning; Ulrika Svenson; Göran Roos; H. Dean Hosgood; Min Shen; Qingyi Wei

Background Telomeres play a key role in the maintenance of chromosome integrity and stability, and telomere shortening is involved in initiation and progression of malignancies. A series of epidemiological studies have examined the association between shortened telomeres and risk of cancers, but the findings remain conflicting. Methods A dataset composed of 11,255 cases and 13,101 controls from 21 publications was included in a meta-analysis to evaluate the association between overall cancer risk or cancer-specific risk and the relative telomere length. Heterogeneity among studies and their publication bias were further assessed by the χ2-based Q statistic test and Eggers test, respectively. Results The results showed that shorter telomeres were significantly associated with cancer risk (OR = 1.35, 95% CI = 1.14–1.60), compared with longer telomeres. In the stratified analysis by tumor type, the association remained significant in subgroups of bladder cancer (OR = 1.84, 95% CI = 1.38–2.44), lung cancer (OR = 2.39, 95% CI = 1.18–4.88), smoking-related cancers (OR = 2.25, 95% CI = 1.83–2.78), cancers in the digestive system (OR = 1.69, 95% CI = 1.53–1.87) and the urogenital system (OR = 1.73, 95% CI = 1.12–2.67). Furthermore, the results also indicated that the association between the relative telomere length and overall cancer risk was statistically significant in studies of Caucasian subjects, Asian subjects, retrospective designs, hospital-based controls and smaller sample sizes. Funnel plot and Eggers test suggested that there was no publication bias in the current meta-analysis (P = 0.532). Conclusions The results of this meta-analysis suggest that the presence of shortened telomeres may be a marker for susceptibility to human cancer, but single larger, well-design prospective studies are warranted to confirm these findings.


Nature Genetics | 2014

POT1 loss-of-function variants predispose to familial melanoma

Carla Daniela Robles-Espinoza; Mark Harland; Andrew J. Ramsay; Lauren G. Aoude; Zhihao Ding; Karen A. Pooley; Antonia L. Pritchard; Jessamy Tiffen; Mia Petljak; Jane M. Palmer; Judith Symmons; Peter Johansson; Mitchell S. Stark; Michael Gartside; Helen Snowden; Grant W. Montgomery; Nicholas G. Martin; Jimmy Z. Liu; Jiyeon Choi; Matthew Makowski; Kevin M. Brown; Alison M. Dunning; Thomas M. Keane; Carlos López-Otín; Nelleke A. Gruis; Nicholas K. Hayward; D. Timothy Bishop; Julia Newton-Bishop; David J. Adams

Deleterious germline variants in CDKN2A account for around 40% of familial melanoma cases, and rare variants in CDK4, BRCA2, BAP1 and the promoter of TERT have also been linked to the disease. Here we set out to identify new high-penetrance susceptibility genes by sequencing 184 melanoma cases from 105 pedigrees recruited in the UK, The Netherlands and Australia that were negative for variants in known predisposition genes. We identified families where melanoma cosegregates with loss-of-function variants in the protection of telomeres 1 gene (POT1), with a proportion of family members presenting with an early age of onset and multiple primary tumors. We show that these variants either affect POT1 mRNA splicing or alter key residues in the highly conserved oligonucleotide/oligosaccharide-binding (OB) domains of POT1, disrupting protein-telomere binding and leading to increased telomere length. These findings suggest that POT1 variants predispose to melanoma formation via a direct effect on telomeres.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2009

FGFR2 variants and breast cancer risk: fine-scale mapping using African American studies and analysis of chromatin conformation

Miriam S. Udler; Kerstin B. Meyer; Karen A. Pooley; Eric Karlins; Jeffery P. Struewing; Jinghui Zhang; David R. Doody; Stewart MacArthur; Jonathan Tyrer; Paul Pharoah; Robert Luben; Leslie Bernstein; Laurence N. Kolonel; Brian E. Henderson; Loic Le Marchand; Giske Ursin; Michael F. Press; Paul Brennan; Suleeporn Sangrajrang; Valerie Gaborieau; Fabrice Odefrey; Chen-Yang Shen; Pei-Ei Wu; Hui-Chun Wang; Daehee Kang; Keun-Young Yoo; Dong-Young Noh; Sei-Hyun Ahn; Bruce A.J. Ponder; Christopher A. Haiman

Genome-wide association studies have identified FGFR2 as a breast cancer (BC) susceptibility gene in populations of European and Asian descent, but a causative variant has not yet been conclusively identified. We hypothesized that the weaker linkage disequilibrium across this associated region in populations of African ancestry might help refine the set of candidate-causal single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) previously identified by our group. Eight candidate-causal SNPs were evaluated in 1253 African American invasive BC cases and 1245 controls. A significant association with BC risk was found with SNP rs2981578 (unadjusted per-allele odds ratio = 1.20, 95% confidence interval 1.03-1.41, P(trend) = 0.02), with the odds ratio estimate similar to that reported in European and Asian subjects. To extend the fine-mapping, genotype data from the African American studies were analyzed jointly with data from European (n = 7196 cases, 7275 controls) and Asian (n = 3901 cases, 3205 controls) studies. In the combined analysis, SNP rs2981578 was the most strongly associated. Five other SNPs were too strongly correlated to be excluded at a likelihood ratio of < 1/100 relative to rs2981578. Analysis of DNase I hypersensitive sites indicated that only two of these map to highly accessible chromatin, one of which, SNP rs2981578, has previously been implicated in up-regulating FGFR2 expression. Our results demonstrate that the association of SNPs in FGFR2 with BC risk extends to women of African American ethnicity, and illustrate the utility of combining association analysis in datasets of diverse ethnic groups with functional experiments to identify disease susceptibility variants.


International Journal of Epidemiology | 2015

Reproducibility of telomere length assessment: an international collaborative study.

Carmen Martin-Ruiz; Duncan Martin Baird; Laureline Roger; Petra Boukamp; Damir Krunic; Richard M. Cawthon; Martin M Dokter; Pim van der Harst; Sofie Bekaert; Tim de Meyer; Göran Roos; Ulrika Svenson; Veryan Codd; Nilesh J. Samani; Liane McGlynn; Paul G. Shiels; Karen A. Pooley; Alison M. Dunning; Rachel Cooper; Andrew Wong; Andrew Kingston; Thomas von Zglinicki

Background: Telomere length is a putative biomarker of ageing, morbidity and mortality. Its application is hampered by lack of widely applicable reference ranges and uncertainty regarding the present limits of measurement reproducibility within and between laboratories. Methods: We instigated an international collaborative study of telomere length assessment: 10 different laboratories, employing 3 different techniques [Southern blotting, single telomere length analysis (STELA) and real-time quantitative PCR (qPCR)] performed two rounds of fully blinded measurements on 10 human DNA samples per round to enable unbiased assessment of intra- and inter-batch variation between laboratories and techniques. Results: Absolute results from different laboratories differed widely and could thus not be compared directly, but rankings of relative telomere lengths were highly correlated (correlation coefficients of 0.63–0.99). Intra-technique correlations were similar for Southern blotting and qPCR and were stronger than inter-technique ones. However, inter-laboratory coefficients of variation (CVs) averaged about 10% for Southern blotting and STELA and more than 20% for qPCR. This difference was compensated for by a higher dynamic range for the qPCR method as shown by equal variance after z-scoring. Technical variation per laboratory, measured as median of intra- and inter-batch CVs, ranged from 1.4% to 9.5%, with differences between laboratories only marginally significant (P = 0.06). Gel-based and PCR-based techniques were not different in accuracy. Conclusions: Intra- and inter-laboratory technical variation severely limits the usefulness of data pooling and excludes sharing of reference ranges between laboratories. We propose to establish a common set of physical telomere length standards to improve comparability of telomere length estimates between laboratories.


Breast Cancer Research | 2007

Common variants in the ATM, BRCA1, BRCA2, CHEK2 and TP53 cancer susceptibility genes are unlikely to increase breast cancer risk

Caroline Baynes; Catherine S. Healey; Karen A. Pooley; Serena Scollen; Robert Luben; Deborah Thompson; Paul Pharoah; Douglas F. Easton; Bruce Ponder; Alison M. Dunning

IntroductionCertain rare, familial mutations in the ATM, BRCA1, BRCA2, CHEK2 or TP53 genes increase susceptibility to breast cancer but it has not, until now, been clear whether common polymorphic variants in the same genes also increase risk.MethodsWe have attempted a comprehensive, single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)- and haplotype-tagging association study on each of these five genes in up to 4,474 breast cancer cases from the British, East Anglian SEARCH study and 4,560 controls from the EPIC-Norfolk study, using a two-stage study design. Nine tag SNPs were genotyped in ATM, together with five in BRCA1, sixteen in BRCA2, ten in CHEK2 and five in TP53, with the aim of tagging all other known, common variants. SNPs generating the common amino acid substitutions were specifically forced into the tagging set for each gene.ResultsNo significant breast cancer associations were detected with any individual or combination of tag SNPs.ConclusionIt is unlikely that there are any other common variants in these genes conferring measurably increased risks of breast cancer in our study population.


Nature Genetics | 2015

Genome-wide meta-analysis identifies five new susceptibility loci for cutaneous malignant melanoma

Matthew H. Law; D. Timothy Bishop; Jeffrey E. Lee; Myriam Brossard; Nicholas G. Martin; Eric K. Moses; Fengju Song; Jennifer H. Barrett; Rajiv Kumar; Douglas F. Easton; Paul Pharoah; Anthony J. Swerdlow; Katerina P. Kypreou; John C. Taylor; Mark Harland; Juliette Randerson-Moor; Lars A. Akslen; Per Arne Andresen; M.-F. Avril; Esther Azizi; Giovanna Bianchi Scarrà; Kevin M. Brown; Tadeusz Dębniak; David L. Duffy; David E. Elder; Shenying Fang; Eitan Friedman; Pilar Galan; Paola Ghiorzo; Elizabeth M. Gillanders

Thirteen common susceptibility loci have been reproducibly associated with cutaneous malignant melanoma (CMM). We report the results of an international 2-stage meta-analysis of CMM genome-wide association studies (GWAS). This meta-analysis combines 11 GWAS (5 previously unpublished) and a further three stage 2 data sets, totaling 15,990 CMM cases and 26,409 controls. Five loci not previously associated with CMM risk reached genome-wide significance (P < 5 × 10−8), as did 2 previously reported but unreplicated loci and all 13 established loci. Newly associated SNPs fall within putative melanocyte regulatory elements, and bioinformatic and expression quantitative trait locus (eQTL) data highlight candidate genes in the associated regions, including one involved in telomere biology.


Journals of Gerontology Series A-biological Sciences and Medical Sciences | 2011

Life Stress, Emotional Health, and Mean Telomere Length in the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer (EPIC)-Norfolk Population Study

Paul G. Surtees; Nicholas W.J. Wainwright; Karen A. Pooley; Robert Luben; Kay-Tee Khaw; Douglas F. Easton; Alison M. Dunning

We investigated the association between psychological stress, emotional health, and relative mean telomere length in an ethnically homogeneous population of 4,441 women, aged 41-80 years. Mean telomere length was measured using high-throughput quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction. Social adversity exposure and emotional health were assessed through questionnaire and covariates through direct measurement and questionnaire. This study found evidence that adverse experiences during childhood may be associated with shorter telomere length. This finding remained after covariate adjustment and showed evidence of a dose-response relationship with increasing number of reported childhood difficulties associated with decreasing relative mean telomere length. No associations were observed for any of the other summary measures of social adversity and emotional health considered. These results extend and provide support for some previous findings concerning the association of adverse experience and emotional health histories with shorter telomere length in adulthood. Replication of these findings in longitudinal studies is now essential.

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Paul Pharoah

University of Cambridge

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Robert Luben

University of Cambridge

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Jamie Allen

University of Cambridge

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