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Dive into the research topics where Kathleen A. Cooney is active.

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Featured researches published by Kathleen A. Cooney.


Cell | 2015

Integrative clinical genomics of advanced prostate cancer

Dan R. Robinson; Eliezer M. Van Allen; Yi Mi Wu; Nikolaus Schultz; Robert J. Lonigro; Juan Miguel Mosquera; Bruce Montgomery; Mary-Ellen Taplin; Colin C. Pritchard; Gerhardt Attard; Himisha Beltran; Wassim Abida; Robert K. Bradley; Jake Vinson; Xuhong Cao; Pankaj Vats; Lakshmi P. Kunju; Maha Hussain; Felix Y. Feng; Scott A. Tomlins; Kathleen A. Cooney; David C. Smith; Christine Brennan; Javed Siddiqui; Rohit Mehra; Yu Chen; Dana E. Rathkopf; Michael J. Morris; Stephen B. Solomon; Jeremy C. Durack

Toward development of a precision medicine framework for metastatic, castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC), we established a multi-institutional clinical sequencing infrastructure to conduct prospective whole-exome and transcriptome sequencing of bone or soft tissue tumor biopsies from a cohort of 150 mCRPC affected individuals. Aberrations of AR, ETS genes, TP53, and PTEN were frequent (40%-60% of cases), with TP53 and AR alterations enriched in mCRPC compared to primary prostate cancer. We identified new genomic alterations in PIK3CA/B, R-spondin, BRAF/RAF1, APC, β-catenin, and ZBTB16/PLZF. Moreover, aberrations of BRCA2, BRCA1, and ATM were observed at substantially higher frequencies (19.3% overall) compared to those in primary prostate cancers. 89% of affected individuals harbored a clinically actionable aberration, including 62.7% with aberrations in AR, 65% in other cancer-related genes, and 8% with actionable pathogenic germline alterations. This cohort study provides clinically actionable information that could impact treatment decisions for these affected individuals.


Nature Genetics | 2006

A common variant associated with prostate cancer in European and African populations

Laufey T Amundadottir; Patrick Sulem; Julius Gudmundsson; Agnar Helgason; Adam Baker; Bjarni A. Agnarsson; Asgeir Sigurdsson; Kristrun R. Benediktsdottir; Jean-Baptiste Cazier; Jesus Sainz; Margret Jakobsdottir; Jelena Kostic; Droplaug N. Magnusdottir; Shyamali Ghosh; Kari Agnarsson; Birgitta Birgisdottir; Louise le Roux; Adalheidur Olafsdottir; Thorarinn Blondal; Margret B. Andresdottir; Olafia Svandis Gretarsdottir; Jon Thor Bergthorsson; Daniel F. Gudbjartsson; Arnaldur Gylfason; Gudmar Thorleifsson; Andrei Manolescu; Kristleifur Kristjansson; Gudmundur Geirsson; Helgi J. Ísaksson; Julie A. Douglas

With the increasing incidence of prostate cancer, identifying common genetic variants that confer risk of the disease is important. Here we report such a variant on chromosome 8q24, a region initially identified through a study of Icelandic families. Allele −8 of the microsatellite DG8S737 was associated with prostate cancer in three case-control series of European ancestry from Iceland, Sweden and the US. The estimated odds ratio (OR) of the allele is 1.62 (P = 2.7 × 10−11). About 19% of affected men and 13% of the general population carry at least one copy, yielding a population attributable risk (PAR) of ∼8%. The association was also replicated in an African American case-control group with a similar OR, in which 41% of affected individuals and 30% of the population are carriers. This leads to a greater estimated PAR (16%) that may contribute to higher incidence of prostate cancer in African American men than in men of European ancestry.


Nature Genetics | 2007

Multiple regions within 8q24 independently affect risk for prostate cancer

Christopher A. Haiman; Nick Patterson; Matthew L. Freedman; Simon Myers; Malcolm C. Pike; Alicja Waliszewska; Julie Neubauer; Arti Tandon; Christine Schirmer; Gavin J. McDonald; Steven C Greenway; Daniel O. Stram; Loic Le Marchand; Laurence N. Kolonel; Melissa A. Frasco; David Wong; Loreall Pooler; Kristin Ardlie; Ingrid Oakley-Girvan; Alice S. Whittemore; Kathleen A. Cooney; Esther M. John; Sue A. Ingles; David Altshuler; Brian E. Henderson; David Reich

After the recent discovery that common genetic variation in 8q24 influences inherited risk of prostate cancer, we genotyped 2,973 SNPs in up to 7,518 men with and without prostate cancer from five populations. We identified seven risk variants, five of them previously undescribed, spanning 430 kb and each independently predicting risk for prostate cancer (P = 7.9 × 10−19 for the strongest association, and P < 1.5 × 10−4 for five of the variants, after controlling for each of the others). The variants define common genotypes that span a more than fivefold range of susceptibility to cancer in some populations. None of the prostate cancer risk variants aligns to a known gene or alters the coding sequence of an encoded protein.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Admixture mapping identifies 8q24 as a prostate cancer risk locus in African-American men

Matthew L. Freedman; Christopher A. Haiman; Nick Patterson; Gavin J. McDonald; Arti Tandon; Alicja Waliszewska; Kathryn L. Penney; Robert Steen; Kristin Ardlie; Esther M. John; Ingrid Oakley-Girvan; Alice S. Whittemore; Kathleen A. Cooney; Sue A. Ingles; David Altshuler; Brian E. Henderson; David Reich

A whole-genome admixture scan in 1,597 African Americans identified a 3.8 Mb interval on chromosome 8q24 as significantly associated with susceptibility to prostate cancer [logarithm of odds (LOD) = 7.1]. The increased risk because of inheriting African ancestry is greater in men diagnosed before 72 years of age (P < 0.00032) and may contribute to the epidemiological observation that the higher risk for prostate cancer in African Americans is greatest in younger men (and attenuates with older age). The same region was recently identified through linkage analysis of prostate cancer, followed by fine-mapping. We strongly replicated this association (P < 4.2 × 10−9) but find that the previously described alleles do not explain more than a fraction of the admixture signal. Thus, admixture mapping indicates a major, still-unidentified risk gene for prostate cancer at 8q24, motivating intense work to find it.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2012

Germline Mutations in HOXB13 and Prostate-Cancer Risk

Charles M. Ewing; Anna M. Ray; Ethan M. Lange; Kimberly A. Zuhlke; Christiane M. Robbins; Waibhav Tembe; Kathleen E. Wiley; Sarah D. Isaacs; Dorhyun Johng; Yunfei Wang; Chris Bizon; Guifang Yan; Marta Gielzak; Alan W. Partin; Vijayalakshmi Shanmugam; Tyler Izatt; Shripad Sinari; David Craig; S. Lilly Zheng; Patrick C. Walsh; James E. Montie; Jianfeng Xu; John D. Carpten; William B. Isaacs; Kathleen A. Cooney

BACKGROUND Family history is a significant risk factor for prostate cancer, although the molecular basis for this association is poorly understood. Linkage studies have implicated chromosome 17q21-22 as a possible location of a prostate-cancer susceptibility gene. METHODS We screened more than 200 genes in the 17q21-22 region by sequencing germline DNA from 94 unrelated patients with prostate cancer from families selected for linkage to the candidate region. We tested family members, additional case subjects, and control subjects to characterize the frequency of the identified mutations. RESULTS Probands from four families were discovered to have a rare but recurrent mutation (G84E) in HOXB13 (rs138213197), a homeobox transcription factor gene that is important in prostate development. All 18 men with prostate cancer and available DNA in these four families carried the mutation. The carrier rate of the G84E mutation was increased by a factor of approximately 20 in 5083 unrelated subjects of European descent who had prostate cancer, with the mutation found in 72 subjects (1.4%), as compared with 1 in 1401 control subjects (0.1%) (P=8.5x10(-7)). The mutation was significantly more common in men with early-onset, familial prostate cancer (3.1%) than in those with late-onset, nonfamilial prostate cancer (0.6%) (P=2.0x10(-6)). CONCLUSIONS The novel HOXB13 G84E variant is associated with a significantly increased risk of hereditary prostate cancer. Although the variant accounts for a small fraction of all prostate cancers, this finding has implications for prostate-cancer risk assessment and may provide new mechanistic insights into this common cancer. (Funded by the National Institutes of Health and others.).


Urology | 1999

Androgen deprivation therapy for prostate cancer results in significant loss of bone density

John T. Wei; Milton D. Gross; Craig A. Jaffe; Katherine Gravlin; Marcia Lahaie; Gary J. Faerber; Kathleen A. Cooney

OBJECTIVES Advanced prostate cancer is a frequently diagnosed condition in the aging male population, and many men will ultimately be treated with androgen deprivation therapy (ADT). Long-term consequences of ADT on bone mineral density (BMD) have not been systematically studied. We performed a pilot study to test the hypothesis that ADT in patients with prostate cancer results in the measurable loss of BMD. METHODS A cross-sectional study of 32 men with prostate cancer who were about to begin ADT or who had been receiving ADT for more than 1 year was conducted. BMD was measured by single and dual energy x-ray absorptiometry in the lumbar spine, hip, and forearm. Linear regression analysis was used to estimate the time necessary to develop significant BMD loss in the spine, hip, and forearm regions. RESULTS Five (63%) of 8 men who had not received ADT and 21 (88%) of 24 men who had received ADT for more than 1 year fulfilled the BMD criteria for osteopenia or osteoporosis at one or more sites. When BMD was compared at each site, men who received ADT for more than 1 year had significantly lower BMD in the lumbar spine than men who had not started treatment (P<0.05). On the basis of regression analysis, an estimated 48 months of ADT would be necessary to develop BMD criteria for osteopenia in the lumbar spine for a man with average BMD at the initiation of therapy. CONCLUSIONS Pre-existing osteopenia and osteoporosis were common in men with prostate cancer before initiating ADT. Both ADT and the duration of ADT were significantly associated with the loss of BMD in men with prostate cancer.


Nature Genetics | 2011

Genome-wide association study of prostate cancer in men of African ancestry identifies a susceptibility locus at 17q21

Christopher A. Haiman; Gary K. Chen; William J. Blot; Sara S. Strom; Sonja I. Berndt; Rick A. Kittles; Benjamin A. Rybicki; William B. Isaacs; Sue A. Ingles; Janet L. Stanford; W. Ryan Diver; John S. Witte; Ann W. Hsing; Barbara Nemesure; Timothy R. Rebbeck; Kathleen A. Cooney; Jianfeng Xu; Adam S. Kibel; Jennifer J. Hu; Esther M. John; Serigne M. Gueye; Stephen Watya; Lisa B. Signorello; Richard B. Hayes; Zhaoming Wang; Edward D. Yeboah; Yao Tettey; Qiuyin Cai; Suzanne Kolb; Elaine A. Ostrander

In search of common risk alleles for prostate cancer that could contribute to high rates of the disease in men of African ancestry, we conducted a genome-wide association study, with 1,047,986 SNP markers examined in 3,425 African-Americans with prostate cancer (cases) and 3,290 African-American male controls. We followed up the most significant 17 new associations from stage 1 in 1,844 cases and 3,269 controls of African ancestry. We identified a new risk variant on chromosome 17q21 (rs7210100, odds ratio per allele = 1.51, P = 3.4 × 10−13). The frequency of the risk allele is ∼5% in men of African descent, whereas it is rare in other populations (<1%). Further studies are needed to investigate the biological contribution of this allele to prostate cancer risk. These findings emphasize the importance of conducting genome-wide association studies in diverse populations.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2016

REVEL: An Ensemble Method for Predicting the Pathogenicity of Rare Missense Variants

Nilah M. Ioannidis; Joseph H. Rothstein; Vikas Pejaver; Sumit Middha; Shannon K. McDonnell; Saurabh Baheti; Anthony M. Musolf; Qing Li; Emily Rose Holzinger; Danielle M. Karyadi; Lisa A. Cannon-Albright; Craig Teerlink; Janet L. Stanford; William B. Isaacs; Jianfeng F. Xu; Kathleen A. Cooney; Ethan M. Lange; Johanna Schleutker; John D. Carpten; Isaac J. Powell; Olivier Cussenot; Geraldine Cancel-Tassin; Graham G. Giles; Robert J. MacInnis; Christiane Maier; Chih-Lin Hsieh; Fredrik Wiklund; William J. Catalona; William D. Foulkes; Diptasri Mandal

The vast majority of coding variants are rare, and assessment of the contribution of rare variants to complex traits is hampered by low statistical power and limited functional data. Improved methods for predicting the pathogenicity of rare coding variants are needed to facilitate the discovery of disease variants from exome sequencing studies. We developed REVEL (rare exome variant ensemble learner), an ensemble method for predicting the pathogenicity of missense variants on the basis of individual tools: MutPred, FATHMM, VEST, PolyPhen, SIFT, PROVEAN, MutationAssessor, MutationTaster, LRT, GERP, SiPhy, phyloP, and phastCons. REVEL was trained with recently discovered pathogenic and rare neutral missense variants, excluding those previously used to train its constituent tools. When applied to two independent test sets, REVEL had the best overall performance (p < 10-12) as compared to any individual tool and seven ensemble methods: MetaSVM, MetaLR, KGGSeq, Condel, CADD, DANN, and Eigen. Importantly, REVEL also had the best performance for distinguishing pathogenic from rare neutral variants with allele frequencies <0.5%. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) for REVEL was 0.046-0.182 higher in an independent test set of 935 recent SwissVar disease variants and 123,935 putatively neutral exome sequencing variants and 0.027-0.143 higher in an independent test set of 1,953 pathogenic and 2,406 benign variants recently reported in ClinVar than the AUCs for other ensemble methods. We provide pre-computed REVEL scores for all possible human missense variants to facilitate the identification of pathogenic variants in the sea of rare variants discovered as sequencing studies expand in scale.


Neoplasia | 2015

Development and Validation of a Scalable Next-Generation Sequencing System for Assessing Relevant Somatic Variants in Solid Tumors

Daniel H. Hovelson; Andrew S. McDaniel; Andi K. Cani; Bryan Johnson; Kate Rhodes; Paul D. Williams; Santhoshi Bandla; Geoffrey Bien; Paul Choppa; Fiona Hyland; Rajesh Gottimukkala; Guoying Liu; Manimozhi Manivannan; Jeoffrey Schageman; Efren Ballesteros-Villagrana; Catherine S. Grasso; Michael J. Quist; Venkata Yadati; Anmol Amin; Javed Siddiqui; Bryan L. Betz; Karen E. Knudsen; Kathleen A. Cooney; Felix Y. Feng; Michael H. Roh; Peter S. Nelson; Chia Jen Liu; David G. Beer; Peter Wyngaard; Arul M. Chinnaiyan

Next-generation sequencing (NGS) has enabled genome-wide personalized oncology efforts at centers and companies with the specialty expertise and infrastructure required to identify and prioritize actionable variants. Such approaches are not scalable, preventing widespread adoption. Likewise, most targeted NGS approaches fail to assess key relevant genomic alteration classes. To address these challenges, we predefined the catalog of relevant solid tumor somatic genome variants (gain-of-function or loss-of-function mutations, high-level copy number alterations, and gene fusions) through comprehensive bioinformatics analysis of >700,000 samples. To detect these variants, we developed the Oncomine Comprehensive Panel (OCP), an integrative NGS-based assay [compatible with < 20 ng of DNA/RNA from formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissues], coupled with an informatics pipeline to specifically identify relevant predefined variants and created a knowledge base of related potential treatments, current practice guidelines, and open clinical trials. We validated OCP using molecular standards and more than 300 FFPE tumor samples, achieving >95% accuracy for KRAS, epidermal growth factor receptor, and BRAF mutation detection as well as for ALK and TMPRSS2:ERG gene fusions. Associating positive variants with potential targeted treatments demonstrated that 6% to 42% of profiled samples (depending on cancer type) harbored alterations beyond routine molecular testing that were associated with approved or guideline-referenced therapies. As a translational research tool, OCP identified adaptive CTNNB1 amplifications/mutations in treated prostate cancers. Through predefining somatic variants in solid tumors and compiling associated potential treatment strategies, OCP represents a simplified, broadly applicable targeted NGS system with the potential to advance precision oncology efforts.


Urology | 2003

Comparison of lower urinary tract symptom severity and associated bother between community-dwelling black and white men: the Olmsted County Study of Urinary Symptoms and Health Status and the Flint Men’s Health Study

Aruna V. Sarma; John T. Wei; Debra J. Jacobson; Rodney L. Dunn; Rosebud O. Roberts; Cynthia J. Girman; Michael M. Lieber; Kathleen A. Cooney; David Schottenfeld; James E. Montie; Steven J. Jacobsen

OBJECTIVES To determine the magnitude of racial disparity in lower urinary tract symptom (LUTS) severity and bother by combining two large comparable epidemiologic studies of community-dwelling white and black men, thereby avoiding many of the referral biases present in previous studies. Prior studies evaluating racial differences in benign prostatic hyperplasia have been hampered by selection bias, because nearly all have used surgical treatment as a marker for benign prostatic hyperplasia. METHODS Data from the Olmsted County Study of Urinary Symptoms and Health Status and the Flint Mens Health Study were combined for a total study sample of 2480 men. We examined LUTS severity and associated bother as measured by the self-administered American Urological Association Symptom Index and Symptom Problem Index. RESULTS Overall 34% of white men reported moderate/severe LUTS compared with 41% of black men (P <0.001). These patterns were consistent across age and persisted after adjustment for age and other sociodemographic factors. The relationship between LUTS severity and bother differed by race in that black men reported less bother for each unit increase in LUTS (P <0.001). CONCLUSIONS In contrast to studies based on clinical populations, our community-based study demonstrated greater LUTS severity in black men compared with white men but black men reported less bother for any given level of LUTS severity. Although these findings suggest a racial disparity in benign prostatic hyperplasia, additional studies of anatomic, physiologic, and molecular factors may clarify whether these racial differences are real or due to sociocultural differences in reporting symptom morbidity.

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Ethan M. Lange

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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William B. Isaacs

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Anna M. Ray

University of Michigan

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Elaine A. Ostrander

National Institutes of Health

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