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Dive into the research topics where Kristin A. Rand is active.

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Featured researches published by Kristin A. Rand.


Nature Genetics | 2016

The contribution of rare variation to prostate cancer heritability

Nicholas Mancuso; Nadin Rohland; Kristin A. Rand; Arti Tandon; Alexander Allen; Dominique Quinque; Swapan Mallick; Heng Li; Alex Stram; Xin Sheng; Zsofia Kote-Jarai; Douglas F. Easton; Rosalind Eeles; Loic Le Marchand; Alex Lubwama; Daniel O. Stram; Stephen Watya; David V. Conti; Brian E. Henderson; Christopher A. Haiman; Bogdan Pasaniuc; David Reich

We report targeted sequencing of 63 known prostate cancer risk regions in a multi-ancestry study of 9,237 men and use the data to explore the contribution of low-frequency variation to disease risk. We show that SNPs with minor allele frequencies (MAFs) of 0.1–1% explain a substantial fraction of prostate cancer risk in men of African ancestry. We estimate that these SNPs account for 0.12 (standard error (s.e.) = 0.05) of variance in risk (∼42% of the variance contributed by SNPs with MAF of 0.1–50%). This contribution is much larger than the fraction of neutral variation due to SNPs in this class, implying that natural selection has driven down the frequency of many prostate cancer risk alleles; we estimate the coupling between selection and allelic effects at 0.48 (95% confidence interval [0.19, 0.78]) under the Eyre-Walker model. Our results indicate that rare variants make a disproportionate contribution to genetic risk for prostate cancer and suggest the possibility that rare variants may also have an outsize effect on other common traits.


Nature Communications | 2014

A meta-analysis of Hodgkin lymphoma reveals 19p13.3 TCF3 as a novel susceptibility locus

Wendy Cozen; Maria Timofeeva; Dalin Li; Arjan Diepstra; Dennis J. Hazelett; Manon Delahaye-Sourdeix; Christopher K. Edlund; Lude Franke; Klaus Rostgaard; D. J. Van Den Berg; Victoria K. Cortessis; Karin E. Smedby; Sally L. Glaser; Harm-Jan Westra; L. L. Robison; Thomas M. Mack; Hervé Ghesquières; Amie Hwang; Alexandra Nieters; S de Sanjosé; Tracy Lightfoot; Nikolaus Becker; Marc Maynadié; Lenka Foretova; Eve Roman; Yolanda Benavente; Kristin A. Rand; Bharat N. Nathwani; Bengt Glimelius; Anthony Staines

Recent genome wide association studies (GWAS) of Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) have identified associations with genetic variation at both HLA and non-HLA loci; however, much of heritable HL susceptibility remains unexplained. Here we perform a meta-analysis of three HL GWAS totaling 1,816 cases and 7,877 controls followed by replication in an independent set of 1,281 cases and 3,218 controls to find novel risk loci. We identify a novel variant at 19p13.3 associated with HL (rs1860661; odds ratio [OR] = 0.81, 95% confidence interval [95% CI] = 0.76–0.86, Pcombined = 3.5 × 10−10), located in intron 2 of TCF3 (also known as E2A), a regulator of B- and T-cell lineage commitment known to be involved in HL pathogenesis. This meta-analysis also notes associations between previously published loci at 2p16.1, 5q31, 6p31.2, 8q24.21 and 10p14 and HL subtypes. We conclude that our data suggest a link between the 19p13.3 locus, including TCF3, and HL risk


Human Molecular Genetics | 2014

A comprehensive examination of breast cancer risk loci in African American women

Ye Feng; Daniel O. Stram; Suhn Kyong Rhie; Robert C. Millikan; Christine B. Ambrosone; Esther M. John; Leslie Bernstein; Wei Zheng; Andrew F. Olshan; Jennifer J. Hu; Regina G. Ziegler; Sarah J. Nyante; Elisa V. Bandera; Sue A. Ingles; Michael F. Press; Sandra L. Deming; Jorge L. Rodriguez-Gil; Julie R. Palmer; Olufunmilayo I. Olopade; Dezheng Huo; Clement Adebamowo; Temidayo O. Ogundiran; Gary K. Chen; Alex Stram; Karen Park; Kristin A. Rand; Stephen J. Chanock; Loic Le Marchand; Laurence N. Kolonel; David V. Conti

Genome-wide association studies have identified 73 breast cancer risk variants mainly in European populations. Given considerable differences in linkage disequilibrium structure between populations of European and African ancestry, the known risk variants may not be informative for risk in African ancestry populations. In a previous fine-mapping investigation of 19 breast cancer loci, we were able to identify SNPs in four regions that better captured risk associations in African American women. In this study of breast cancer in African American women (3016 cases, 2745 controls), we tested an additional 54 novel breast cancer risk variants. Thirty-eight variants (70%) were found to have an association with breast cancer in the same direction as previously reported, with eight (15%) replicating at P < 0.05. Through fine-mapping, in three regions (1q32, 3p24, 10q25), we identified variants that better captured associations with overall breast cancer or estrogen receptor positive disease. We also observed suggestive associations with variants (at P < 5 × 10(-6)) in three separate regions (6q25, 14q13, 22q12) that may represent novel risk variants. Directional consistency of association observed for ∼65-70% of currently known genetic variants for breast cancer in women of African ancestry implies a shared functional common variant at most loci. To validate and enhance the spectrum of alleles that define associations at the known breast cancer risk loci, as well as genome-wide, will require even larger collaborative efforts in women of African ancestry.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2015

Integration of multiethnic fine-mapping and genomic annotation to prioritize candidate functional SNPs at prostate cancer susceptibility regions

Ying Han; Dennis J. Hazelett; Fredrik Wiklund; Fredrick R. Schumacher; Daniel O. Stram; Sonja I. Berndt; Zhaoming Wang; Kristin A. Rand; Robert N. Hoover; Mitchell J. Machiela; M. Yeager; Laurie Burdette; Charles C. Chung; Amy Hutchinson; Kai Yu; Jianfeng Xu; Ruth C. Travis; Timothy J. Key; Afshan Siddiq; Federico Canzian; Atsushi Takahashi; Michiaki Kubo; Janet L. Stanford; Suzanne Kolb; Susan M. Gapstur; W. Ryan Diver; Victoria L. Stevens; Sara S. Strom; Curtis A. Pettaway; Ali Amin Al Olama

Interpretation of biological mechanisms underlying genetic risk associations for prostate cancer is complicated by the relatively large number of risk variants (n = 100) and the thousands of surrogate SNPs in linkage disequilibrium. Here, we combined three distinct approaches: multiethnic fine-mapping, putative functional annotation (based upon epigenetic data and genome-encoded features), and expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) analyses, in an attempt to reduce this complexity. We examined 67 risk regions using genotyping and imputation-based fine-mapping in populations of European (cases/controls: 8600/6946), African (cases/controls: 5327/5136), Japanese (cases/controls: 2563/4391) and Latino (cases/controls: 1034/1046) ancestry. Markers at 55 regions passed a region-specific significance threshold (P-value cutoff range: 3.9 × 10(-4)-5.6 × 10(-3)) and in 30 regions we identified markers that were more significantly associated with risk than the previously reported variants in the multiethnic sample. Novel secondary signals (P < 5.0 × 10(-6)) were also detected in two regions (rs13062436/3q21 and rs17181170/3p12). Among 666 variants in the 55 regions with P-values within one order of magnitude of the most-associated marker, 193 variants (29%) in 48 regions overlapped with epigenetic or other putative functional marks. In 11 of the 55 regions, cis-eQTLs were detected with nearby genes. For 12 of the 55 regions (22%), the most significant region-specific, prostate-cancer associated variant represented the strongest candidate functional variant based on our annotations; the number of regions increased to 20 (36%) and 27 (49%) when examining the 2 and 3 most significantly associated variants in each region, respectively. These results have prioritized subsets of candidate variants for downstream functional evaluation.


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2016

Prostate cancer susceptibility in men of African ancestry at 8q24

Ying Han; Kristin A. Rand; Dennis J. Hazelett; Sue A. Ingles; Rick A. Kittles; Sara S. Strom; Benjamin A. Rybicki; Barbara Nemesure; William B. Isaacs; Janet L. Stanford; Wei Zheng; Fredrick R. Schumacher; Sonja I. Berndt; Zhaoming Wang; Jianfeng Xu; Nadin Rohland; David Reich; Arti Tandon; Bogdan Pasaniuc; Alex Allen; Dominique Quinque; Swapan Mallick; Dimple Notani; Michael G. Rosenfeld; Ranveer S. Jayani; Suzanne Kolb; Susan M. Gapstur; Victoria L. Stevens; Curtis A. Pettaway; Edward D. Yeboah

The 8q24 region harbors multiple risk variants for distinct cancers, including >8 for prostate cancer. In this study, we conducted fine mapping of the 8q24 risk region (127.8-128.8Mb) in search of novel associations with common and rare variation in 4853 prostate cancer case patients and 4678 control subjects of African ancestry. All statistical tests were two-sided. We identified three independent associations at P values of less than 5.00×10(-8), all of which were replicated in studies from Ghana and Uganda (combined sample = 5869 case patients, 5615 control subjects; rs114798100: risk allele frequency [RAF] = 0.04, per-allele odds ratio [OR] = 2.31, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 2.04 to 2.61, P = 2.38×10(-40); rs72725879: RAF = 0.33, OR = 1.37, 95% CI = 1.30 to 1.45, P = 3.04×10(-27); and rs111906932: RAF = 0.03, OR = 1.79, 95% CI = 1.53 to 2.08, P = 1.39×10(-13)). Risk variants rs114798100 and rs111906923 are only found in men of African ancestry, with rs111906923 representing a novel association signal. The three variants are located within or near a number of prostate cancer-associated long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs), including PRNCR1, PCAT1, and PCAT2. These findings highlight ancestry-specific risk variation and implicate prostate-specific lncRNAs at the 8q24 prostate cancer susceptibility region.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2016

Whole-exome sequencing of over 4100 men of African ancestry and prostate cancer risk

Kristin A. Rand; Nadin Rohland; Arti Tandon; Alex Stram; Xin Sheng; Ron Do; Bogdan Pasaniuc; Alex Allen; Dominique Quinque; Swapan Mallick; Loic Le Marchand; Sam Kaggwa; Alex Lubwama; Daniel O. Stram; Stephen Watya; Brian E. Henderson; David V. Conti; David Reich; Christopher A. Haiman; Sara S. Strom; Rick A. Kittles; Benjamin A. Rybicki; Janet L. Stanford; Phyllis J. Goodman; Sonja I. Berndt; John D. Carpten; Graham Casey; Lisa Chu; Ryan W. Diver; Anselm Hennis

Prostate cancer is the most common non-skin cancer in males, with a ∼1.5-2-fold higher incidence in African American men when compared with whites. Epidemiologic evidence supports a large heritable contribution to prostate cancer, with over 100 susceptibility loci identified to date that can explain ∼33% of the familial risk. To explore the contribution of both rare and common variation in coding regions to prostate cancer risk, we sequenced the exomes of 2165 prostate cancer cases and 2034 controls of African ancestry at a mean coverage of 10.1×. We identified 395 220 coding variants down to 0.05% frequency [57% non-synonymous (NS), 42% synonymous and 1% gain or loss of stop codon or splice site variant] in 16 751 genes with the strongest associations observed in SPARCL1 on 4q22.1 (rs13051, Ala49Asp, OR = 0.78, P = 1.8 × 10(-6)) and PTPRR on 12q15 (rs73341069, Val239Ile, OR = 1.62, P = 2.5 × 10(-5)). In gene-level testing, the two most significant genes were C1orf100 (P = 2.2 × 10(-4)) and GORAB (P = 2.3 × 10(-4)). We did not observe exome-wide significant associations (after correcting for multiple hypothesis testing) in single variant or gene-level testing in the overall case-control or case-case analyses of disease aggressiveness. In this first whole-exome sequencing study of prostate cancer, our findings do not provide strong support for the hypothesis that NS coding variants down to 0.5-1.0% frequency have large effects on prostate cancer risk in men of African ancestry. Higher-coverage sequencing efforts in larger samples will be needed to study rarer variants with smaller effect sizes associated with prostate cancer risk.


American Journal of Epidemiology | 2013

Childhood Infections and Adult Height in Monozygotic Twin Pairs

Amie E. Hwang; Thomas M. Mack; Ann S. Hamilton; W. James Gauderman; Leslie Bernstein; Myles Cockburn; John Zadnick; Kristin A. Rand; John L. Hopper; Wendy Cozen

Adult height is determined by genetics and childhood nutrition, but childhood infections may also play a role. Monozygotic twins are genetically matched and offer an advantage when identifying environmental determinants. In 2005-2007, we examined the association of childhood infections with adult height in 140 height-discordant monozygotic twin pairs from the California Twin Program. To obtain information on childhood infections and growth, we interviewed the mothers of monozygotic twins who differed in self-reported adult height by at least 1-inch (2.5 cm). Within-pair differences in the relative frequency of childhood infections were highly correlated, especially within age groups. A conditional logistic regression analysis demonstrated that more reported episodes of febrile illness occurred in the twin with shorter stature (odds ratio = 2.00, 95% confidence interval: 1.18, 3.40). The association was strongest for differences in the relative frequency of infection during the toddler years (ages 1-5: odds ratio = 3.34, 95% confidence interval: 1.47, 7.59) and was similar when restricted to twin pairs of equal birth length. The association was not explained by differential nutritional status. Measures of childhood infection were associated with height difference in monozygotic twin pairs, independent of genome, birth length, and available measures of diet.


Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 2017

Quantifying the Genetic Correlation between Multiple Cancer Types

Sara Lindström; Hilary Finucane; Brendan Bulik-Sullivan; Fredrick R. Schumacher; Christopher I. Amos; Rayjean J. Hung; Kristin A. Rand; Stephen B. Gruber; David V. Conti; Jennifer B. Permuth; Hui-Yi Lin; Ellen L. Goode; Thomas A. Sellers; Laufey Amundadottir; Rachael Z. Stolzenberg-Solomon; Alison P. Klein; Gloria M. Petersen; Harvey A. Risch; Brian M. Wolpin; Li Hsu; Jeroen R. Huyghe; Jenny Chang-Claude; Andrew T. Chan; Sonja I. Berndt; Rosalind Eeles; Douglas F. Easton; Christopher A. Haiman; David J. Hunter; Benjamin M. Neale; Alkes L. Price

Background: Many cancers share specific genetic risk factors, including both rare high-penetrance mutations and common SNPs identified through genome-wide association studies (GWAS). However, little is known about the overall shared heritability across cancers. Quantifying the extent to which two distinct cancers share genetic origin will give insights to shared biological mechanisms underlying cancer and inform design for future genetic association studies. Methods: In this study, we estimated the pair-wise genetic correlation between six cancer types (breast, colorectal, lung, ovarian, pancreatic, and prostate) using cancer-specific GWAS summary statistics data based on 66,958 case and 70,665 control subjects of European ancestry. We also estimated genetic correlations between cancers and 14 noncancer diseases and traits. Results: After adjusting for 15 pair-wise genetic correlation tests between cancers, we found significant (P < 0.003) genetic correlations between pancreatic and colorectal cancer (rg = 0.55, P = 0.003), lung and colorectal cancer (rg = 0.31, P = 0.001). We also found suggestive genetic correlations between lung and breast cancer (rg = 0.27, P = 0.009), and colorectal and breast cancer (rg = 0.22, P = 0.01). In contrast, we found no evidence that prostate cancer shared an appreciable proportion of heritability with other cancers. After adjusting for 84 tests studying genetic correlations between cancer types and other traits (Bonferroni-corrected P value: 0.0006), only the genetic correlation between lung cancer and smoking remained significant (rg = 0.41, P = 1.03 × 10−6). We also observed nominally significant genetic correlations between body mass index and all cancers except ovarian cancer. Conclusions: Our results highlight novel genetic correlations and lend support to previous observational studies that have observed links between cancers and risk factors. Impact: This study demonstrates modest genetic correlations between cancers; in particular, breast, colorectal, and lung cancer share some degree of genetic basis. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev; 26(9); 1427–35. ©2017 AACR.


Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine | 2018

Evaluation of 71 Coronary Artery Disease Risk Variants in a Multiethnic Cohort

Wangjing Ke; Kristin A. Rand; David V. Conti; Veronica Wendy Setiawan; Daniel O. Stram; Lynne R. Wilkens; Loic Le Marchand; Themistocles L. Assimes; Christopher A. Haiman

Background Coronary heart disease (CHD) is the most common cause of death worldwide. Previous studies have identified numerous common CHD susceptibility loci, with the vast majority identified in populations of European ancestry. How well these findings transfer to other racial/ethnic populations remains unclear. Methods and Results We examined the generalizability of the associations with 71 known CHD loci in African American, Latino and Japanese men and women in the Multiethnic Cohort (6,035 cases and 11,251 controls). In the combined multiethnic sample, 78% of the loci demonstrated odds ratios that were directionally consistent with those previously reported (p = 2 × 10−6), with this fraction ranging from 59% in Japanese to 70% in Latinos. The number of nominally significant associations across all susceptibility regions ranged from only 1 in Japanese to 11 in African Americans with the most statistically significant association observed through locus fine-mapping noted for rs3832016 (OR = 1.16, p = 2.5×10−5) in the SORT1 region on chromosome 1p13. Lastly, we examined the cumulative predictive effect of CHD SNPs across populations with improved power by creating genetic risk scores (GRSs) that summarize an individual’s aggregated exposure to risk variants. We found the GRSs to be significantly associated with risk in African Americans (OR = 1.03 per allele; p = 4.1×10−5) and Latinos (OR = 1.03; p = 2.2 × 10−8), but not in Japanese (OR = 1.01; p = 0.11). Conclusions While a sizable fraction of the known CHD loci appear to generalize in these populations, larger fine-mapping studies will be needed to localize the functional alleles and better define their contribution to CHD risk in these populations.


Cancer Research | 2015

Abstract 4629: Multiple myeloma susceptibility loci examined in African and European ancestry populations

Kristin A. Rand; Chi Song; Eric Dean; Daniel J. Serie; Karen Curtin; Dennis J. Hazelett; Amie E. Hwang; Xin Sheng; Alex Stram; David Van Den Berg; Carol Ann Huff; Leon Bernal-Mizrachi; Michael H. Tomasson; Sikander Ailawadhi; Anneclaire J. De Roos; Seema Singhal; Karen Pawlish; Edward Peters; Catherine Bock; David V. Conti; Graham A. Colditz; Todd M. Zimmerman; Scott Huntsman; John J. Graff; Stephen J. Chanock; Michael R. Lieber; Jayesh Mehta; Eric A. Klein; Nalini Janakiraman; Richard K. Severson

Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of multiple myeloma (MM) in Northern Europeans have identified seven novel risk loci (2p23.3, 3p22.1, 3q26.2, 6p21.33, 7p15.3, 17p11.2, 22q13.1). We performed a multiethnic meta-analysis of these regions in 1,274 MM patients and 1,486 controls of European ancestry (EA) and 1,049 MM patients and 7,080 controls of African ancestry (AA), leveraging the differential linkage-disequilibrium of these populations in order to better localize the putative functional variants. We observed directionally consistent effects for all seven index SNPs in both populations, with four significantly associated (p Citation Format: Kristin A. Rand, Chi Song, Eric Dean, Daniel Serie, Karen Curtin, Dennis Hazelett, Amie E. Hwang, Xin Sheng, Alex Stram, David J. Van Den Berg, Carol Ann Huff, Leon Bernal-Mizrachi, Michael H. Tomasson, Sikander Ailawadhi, Anneclaire De Roos, Seema Singhal, Karen Pawlish, Edward Peters, Catherine Bock, David V. Conti, Graham Colditz, Todd Zimmerman, Scott Huntsman, John Graff, African Ancestry Prostate Cancer GWAS Consortium,African Ancestry Breast Cancer GWAS Consortium, Stephen J. Chanock, Michael Lieber, Jayesh Mehta, Eric A. Klein, Nalini Janakiraman, Richard K. Severson, Angela R. Brooks-Wilson, Vincent Rajkumar, Elizabeth E. Brown, Laurence Kolonel, Susan Slager, Brian E. Henderson, Graham G. Giles, John J. Spinelli, Brian Chiu, Kenneth C. Anderson, Jeffrey Zonder, Robert Z. Orlowski, Sagar Lonial, Nicola Camp, Celine Vachon, Elad Ziv, Dan O. Stram, Christopher A. Haiman, Wendy Cozen. Multiple myeloma susceptibility loci examined in African and European ancestry populations. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 106th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2015 Apr 18-22; Philadelphia, PA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2015;75(15 Suppl):Abstract nr 4629. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2015-4629

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David V. Conti

University of Southern California

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Christopher A. Haiman

University of Southern California

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Daniel O. Stram

University of Southern California

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Sonja I. Berndt

National Institutes of Health

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David Van Den Berg

University of Southern California

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Graham A. Colditz

Washington University in St. Louis

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Sara S. Strom

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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