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Dive into the research topics where Silvia Polidoro is active.

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Featured researches published by Silvia Polidoro.


Nature Genetics | 2009

Sequence variants at the TERT-CLPTM1L locus associate with many cancer types

Thorunn Rafnar; Patrick Sulem; Simon N. Stacey; Frank Geller; Julius Gudmundsson; Asgeir Sigurdsson; Margret Jakobsdottir; Hafdis T. Helgadottir; Steinunn Thorlacius; Katja K. Aben; Thorarinn Blondal; Thorgeir E. Thorgeirsson; Gudmar Thorleifsson; Kristleifur Kristjansson; Kristin Thorisdottir; Rafn Ragnarsson; Bardur Sigurgeirsson; Halla Skuladottir; Tomas Gudbjartsson; Helgi J. Ísaksson; Gudmundur V. Einarsson; Kristrun R. Benediktsdottir; Bjarni A. Agnarsson; Karl Olafsson; Anna Salvarsdottir; Hjordis Bjarnason; Margret Asgeirsdottir; Kari T. Kristinsson; Sigurborg Matthiasdottir; Steinunn G Sveinsdottir

The common sequence variants that have recently been associated with cancer risk are particular to a single cancer type or at most two. Following up on our genome-wide scan of basal cell carcinoma, we found that rs401681[C] on chromosome 5p15.33 satisfied our threshold for genome-wide significance (OR = 1.25, P = 3.7 × 10−12). We tested rs401681 for association with 16 additional cancer types in over 30,000 cancer cases and 45,000 controls and found association with lung cancer (OR = 1.15, P = 7.2 × 10−8) and urinary bladder, prostate and cervix cancer (ORs = 1.07−1.31, all P < 4 × 10−4). However, rs401681[C] seems to confer protection against cutaneous melanoma (OR = 0.88, P = 8.0 × 10−4). Notably, most of these cancer types have a strong environmental component to their risk. Investigation of the region led us to rs2736098[A], which showed stronger association with some cancer types. However, neither variant could fully account for the association of the other. rs2736098 corresponds to A305A in the telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) protein and rs401681 is in an intron of the CLPTM1L gene.


Nature Genetics | 2008

Sequence variant on 8q24 confers susceptibility to urinary bladder cancer

Lambertus A. Kiemeney; Steinunn Thorlacius; Patrick Sulem; Frank Geller; Katja K. Aben; Simon N. Stacey; Julius Gudmundsson; Margret Jakobsdottir; Jon Thor Bergthorsson; Asgeir Sigurdsson; Thorarinn Blondal; J. Alfred Witjes; Sita H. Vermeulen; Christina A. Hulsbergen-van de Kaa; Dorine W. Swinkels; Martine Ploeg; Erik B. Cornel; H. Vergunst; Thorgeir E. Thorgeirsson; Daniel F. Gudbjartsson; Sigurjon A. Gudjonsson; Gudmar Thorleifsson; Kari T. Kristinsson; Magali Mouy; Steinunn Snorradottir; Donatella Placidi; Marcello Campagna; Cecilia Arici; Kvetoslava Koppova; Eugene Gurzau

We conducted a genome-wide SNP association study on 1,803 urinary bladder cancer (UBC) cases and 34,336 controls from Iceland and The Netherlands and follow up studies in seven additional case-control groups (2,165 cases and 3,800 controls). The strongest association was observed with allele T of rs9642880 on chromosome 8q24, 30 kb upstream of MYC (allele-specific odds ratio (OR) = 1.22; P = 9.34 × 10−12). Approximately 20% of individuals of European ancestry are homozygous for rs9642880[T], and their estimated risk of developing UBC is 1.49 times that of noncarriers. No association was observed between UBC and the four 8q24 variants previously associated with prostate, colorectal and breast cancers, nor did rs9642880 associate with any of these three cancers. A weaker signal, but nonetheless of genome-wide significance, was captured by rs710521[A] located near TP63 on chromosome 3q28 (allele-specific OR = 1.19; P = 1. 15 × 10−7).


Human Molecular Genetics | 2013

Epigenome-wide association study in the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC-Turin) identifies novel genetic loci associated with smoking

Natalie S. Shenker; Silvia Polidoro; Karin van Veldhoven; Carlotta Sacerdote; Fulvio Ricceri; Mark A. Birrell; Maria G. Belvisi; Robert Brown; Paolo Vineis; James M. Flanagan

A single cytosine-guanine dinucleotide (CpG) site within coagulation factor II (thrombin) receptor-like 3 (F2RL3) was recently found to be hypomethylated in peripheral blood genomic DNA from smokers compared with former and non-smokers. We performed two epigenome-wide association studies (EWAS) nested in a prospective healthy cohort using the Illumina 450K Methylation Beadchip. The two populations consisted of matched pairs of healthy individuals (n = 374), of which half went on to develop breast or colon cancer. The association was analysed between methylation and smoking status, as well as cancer risk. In addition to the same locus in F2RL3, we report several loci that are hypomethylated in smokers compared with former and non-smokers, including an intragenic region of the aryl hydrocarbon receptor repressor gene (AHRR; cg05575921, P = 2.31 × 10(-15); effect size = 14-17%), an intergenic CpG island on 2q37.1 (cg21566642, P = 3.73 × 10(-13); effect size = 12%) and a further intergenic region at 6p21.33 (cg06126421, P = 4.96 × 10(-11), effect size = 7-8%). Bisulphite pyrosequencing validated six loci in a further independent population of healthy individuals (n = 180). Methylation levels in AHRR were also significantly decreased (P < 0.001) and expression increased (P = 0.0047) in the lung tissue of current smokers compared with non-smokers. This was further validated in a mouse model of smoke exposure. We observed an association with breast cancer risk for the 2q37.1 locus (P = 0.003, adjusted for the smoking status), but not for the other loci associated with smoking. These data show that smoking has a direct effect on the epigenome in lung tissue, which is also detectable in peripheral blood DNA and may contribute to cancer risk.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2013

Type I and II Endometrial Cancers: Have They Different Risk Factors?

Veronica Wendy Setiawan; Hannah P. Yang; Malcolm C. Pike; Susan E. McCann; Herbert Yu; Yong Bing Xiang; Alicja Wolk; Nicolas Wentzensen; Noel S. Weiss; Penelope M. Webb; Piet A. van den Brandt; Koen van de Vijver; Pamela J. Thompson; Brian L. Strom; Amanda B. Spurdle; Robert A. Soslow; Xiao-Ou Shu; Catherine Schairer; Carlotta Sacerdote; Thomas E. Rohan; Kim Robien; Harvey A. Risch; Fulvio Ricceri; Timothy R. Rebbeck; Radhai Rastogi; Jennifer Prescott; Silvia Polidoro; Yikyung Park; Sara H. Olson; Kirsten B. Moysich

PURPOSE Endometrial cancers have long been divided into estrogen-dependent type I and the less common clinically aggressive estrogen-independent type II. Little is known about risk factors for type II tumors because most studies lack sufficient cases to study these much less common tumors separately. We examined whether so-called classical endometrial cancer risk factors also influence the risk of type II tumors. PATIENTS AND METHODS Individual-level data from 10 cohort and 14 case-control studies from the Epidemiology of Endometrial Cancer Consortium were pooled. A total of 14,069 endometrial cancer cases and 35,312 controls were included. We classified endometrioid (n = 7,246), adenocarcinoma not otherwise specified (n = 4,830), and adenocarcinoma with squamous differentiation (n = 777) as type I tumors and serous (n = 508) and mixed cell (n = 346) as type II tumors. RESULTS Parity, oral contraceptive use, cigarette smoking, age at menarche, and diabetes were associated with type I and type II tumors to similar extents. Body mass index, however, had a greater effect on type I tumors than on type II tumors: odds ratio (OR) per 2 kg/m(2) increase was 1.20 (95% CI, 1.19 to 1.21) for type I and 1.12 (95% CI, 1.09 to 1.14) for type II tumors (P heterogeneity < .0001). Risk factor patterns for high-grade endometrioid tumors and type II tumors were similar. CONCLUSION The results of this pooled analysis suggest that the two endometrial cancer types share many common etiologic factors. The etiology of type II tumors may, therefore, not be completely estrogen independent, as previously believed.


Nature Genetics | 2009

Genetic variation in the prostate stem cell antigen gene PSCA confers susceptibility to urinary bladder cancer

Xifeng Wu; Yuanqing Ye; Lambertus A. Kiemeney; Patrick Sulem; Thorunn Rafnar; Giuseppe Matullo; Daniela Seminara; Teruhiko Yoshida; Norihisa Saeki; Angeline S. Andrew; Colin P. Dinney; Bogdan Czerniak; Zuo-Feng Zhang; Anne E. Kiltie; D. Timothy Bishop; Paolo Vineis; Stefano Porru; Frank Buntinx; Eliane Kellen; Maurice P. Zeegers; Rajiv Kumar; Peter Rudnai; Eugene Gurzau; Kvetoslava Koppova; Jose I. Mayordomo; Manuel Sanchez; Berta Saez; Annika Lindblom; Petra J. de Verdier; Gunnar Steineck

We conducted a genome-wide association study on 969 bladder cancer cases and 957 controls from Texas. For fast-track validation, we evaluated 60 SNPs in three additional US populations and validated the top SNP in nine European populations. A missense variant (rs2294008) in the PSCA gene showed consistent association with bladder cancer in US and European populations. Combining all subjects (6,667 cases, 39,590 controls), the overall P-value was 2.14 × 10−10 and the allelic odds ratio was 1.15 (95% confidence interval 1.10–1.20). rs2294008 alters the start codon and is predicted to cause truncation of nine amino acids from the N-terminal signal sequence of the primary PSCA translation product. In vitro reporter gene assay showed that the variant allele significantly reduced promoter activity. Resequencing of the PSCA genomic region showed that rs2294008 is the only common missense SNP in PSCA. Our data identify rs2294008 as a new bladder cancer susceptibility locus.


Nature Genetics | 2010

A sequence variant at 4p16.3 confers susceptibility to urinary bladder cancer

Lambertus A. Kiemeney; Patrick Sulem; Søren Besenbacher; Sita H. Vermeulen; Asgeir Sigurdsson; Gudmar Thorleifsson; Daniel F. Gudbjartsson; Simon N. Stacey; Julius Gudmundsson; Carlo Zanon; Jelena Kostic; Gisli Masson; Hjordis Bjarnason; Stefan Palsson; Oskar B Skarphedinsson; Sigurjon A. Gudjonsson; J. Alfred Witjes; Anne J. Grotenhuis; Gerald W. Verhaegh; D. Timothy Bishop; Sei C. Sak; Ananya Choudhury; Faye Elliott; Jennifer H. Barrett; Carolyn D. Hurst; Petra J. de Verdier; Charlotta Ryk; Peter Rudnai; Eugene Gurzau; Kvetoslava Koppova

Previously, we reported germline DNA variants associated with risk of urinary bladder cancer (UBC) in Dutch and Icelandic subjects. Here we expanded the Icelandic sample set and tested the top 20 markers from the combined analysis in several European case-control sample sets, with a total of 4,739 cases and 45,549 controls. The T allele of rs798766 on 4p16.3 was found to associate with UBC (odds ratio = 1.24, P = 9.9 × 10−12). rs798766 is located in an intron of TACC3, 70 kb from FGFR3, which often harbors activating somatic mutations in low-grade, noninvasive UBC. Notably, rs798766[T] shows stronger association with low-grade and low-stage UBC than with more aggressive forms of the disease and is associated with higher risk of recurrence in low-grade stage Ta tumors. The frequency of rs798766[T] is higher in Ta tumors that carry an activating mutation in FGFR3 than in Ta tumors with wild-type FGFR3. Our results show a link between germline variants, somatic mutations of FGFR3 and risk of UBC.


The Lancet | 2017

Socioeconomic status and the 25 × 25 risk factors as determinants of premature mortality: A multicohort study and meta-analysis of 1·7 million men and women

Silvia Stringhini; Cristian Carmeli; Markus Jokela; Mauricio Avendano; Peter A. Muennig; Florence Guida; Fulvio Ricceri; Angelo d'Errico; Henrique Barros; Murielle Bochud; Marc Chadeau-Hyam; Françoise Clavel-Chapelon; Giuseppe Costa; Cyrille Delpierre; Sílvia Fraga; Marcel Goldberg; Graham G. Giles; Vittorio Krogh; Michelle Kelly-Irving; Richard Layte; Aurélie M. Lasserre; Michael Marmot; Martin Preisig; Martin J. Shipley; Peter Vollenweider; Marie Zins; Ichiro Kawachi; Andrew Steptoe; Johan P. Mackenbach; Paolo Vineis

Summary Background In 2011, WHO member states signed up to the 25 × 25 initiative, a plan to cut mortality due to non-communicable diseases by 25% by 2025. However, socioeconomic factors influencing non-communicable diseases have not been included in the plan. In this study, we aimed to compare the contribution of socioeconomic status to mortality and years-of-life-lost with that of the 25 × 25 conventional risk factors. Methods We did a multicohort study and meta-analysis with individual-level data from 48 independent prospective cohort studies with information about socioeconomic status, indexed by occupational position, 25 × 25 risk factors (high alcohol intake, physical inactivity, current smoking, hypertension, diabetes, and obesity), and mortality, for a total population of 1 751 479 (54% women) from seven high-income WHO member countries. We estimated the association of socioeconomic status and the 25 × 25 risk factors with all-cause mortality and cause-specific mortality by calculating minimally adjusted and mutually adjusted hazard ratios [HR] and 95% CIs. We also estimated the population attributable fraction and the years of life lost due to suboptimal risk factors. Findings During 26·6 million person-years at risk (mean follow-up 13·3 years [SD 6·4 years]), 310 277 participants died. HR for the 25 × 25 risk factors and mortality varied between 1·04 (95% CI 0·98–1·11) for obesity in men and 2 ·17 (2·06–2·29) for current smoking in men. Participants with low socioeconomic status had greater mortality compared with those with high socioeconomic status (HR 1·42, 95% CI 1·38–1·45 for men; 1·34, 1·28–1·39 for women); this association remained significant in mutually adjusted models that included the 25 × 25 factors (HR 1·26, 1·21–1·32, men and women combined). The population attributable fraction was highest for smoking, followed by physical inactivity then socioeconomic status. Low socioeconomic status was associated with a 2·1-year reduction in life expectancy between ages 40 and 85 years, the corresponding years-of-life-lost were 0·5 years for high alcohol intake, 0·7 years for obesity, 3·9 years for diabetes, 1·6 years for hypertension, 2·4 years for physical inactivity, and 4·8 years for current smoking. Interpretation Socioeconomic circumstances, in addition to the 25 × 25 factors, should be targeted by local and global health strategies and health risk surveillance to reduce mortality. Funding European Commission, Swiss State Secretariat for Education, Swiss National Science Foundation, the Medical Research Council, NordForsk, Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology.


Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 2005

Polymorphisms/Haplotypes in DNA Repair Genes and Smoking: A Bladder Cancer Case-Control Study

Giuseppe Matullo; Simonetta Guarrera; Carlotta Sacerdote; Silvia Polidoro; Laura Davico; Sara Gamberini; Margaret R. Karagas; Giovanni Casetta; Luigi Rolle; Alberto Piazza; Paolo Vineis

Bladder cancer is associated with tobacco smoking and occupational exposure. The repair of DNA damage has a key role in protecting the genome from the insults of cancer-causing agents. We analyzed 13 polymorphisms in seven DNA repair genes belonging to different repair pathways [X-ray repair cross-complementing group 1 (XRCC1): 26304C>T, 26651A>G, 28152A>G; xeroderma pigmentosum-D (XPD): 23591A>G, 35931A>C; excision repair complementing defective in Chinese hamster, group 1 (ERCC1): 19007C>T; XRCC3: 4541T>C, 17893A>G, 18067C>T; proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA): 6084G>C; ERCC4: 30028C>T, 30147A>G; and XRCC2-31479A>G] in 317 incident bladder cancer patients and 317 controls. After adjustment for age and smoking, the PCNA-6084C variant was significantly associated with an increased risk of bladder cancer [CC + CG versus GG, odds ratio (OR), 1.61; 95% confidence interval (95% CI), 1.00-2.61], as well as the XRCC1-26651G variant (GG+AG versus AA: OR, 1.73; 95% CI, 1.17-2.56). After stratifying by smoking habits, an elevated risk for carriers of the XRCC3-18067T allele was detected both in current (TT versus CC: OR, 2.65; 95% CI, 1.21-5.80; CT versus CC: OR, 1.96; 95% CI, 1.09-3.52) and never smokers (TT versus CC: OR, 4.34; 95% CI, 1.14-16.46; CT versus CC: OR, 2.02; 95% CI, 0.72-5.66), whereas an opposite and slightly weaker effect was associated to the XRCC3-17893G allele in current smokers (GG versus AA: OR, 0.30; 95%CI, 0.11-0.82; AG versus AA: OR, 0.73; 95% CI, 0.42-1.27). XRCC3,XRCC1, ERCC4, and XPD-ERCC1 haplotype frequencies were estimated by the maximum likelihood method. The XRCC3-TAT haplotype was associated with an enhanced risk in the current smokers group (OR, 1.62; 95% CI, 1.15-2.29), whereas a reduction of the risk in the overall sample was observed in the presence of the XRCC3-TAC (OR, 0.69; 95% CI, 0.50-0.97). A significant protective effect of the XPD-ERCC1-ACC haplotype was observed among never smokers (OR, 0.16; 95% CI, 0.03-0.81). Our results suggest that polymorphisms and/or haplotypes in XRCC3, XRCC1, and PCNA genes and spanning XPD-ERCC1 region may modulate bladder cancer risk and that some of these effects may preferentially affect current smokers.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2015

Dynamics of Smoking-Induced Genome-Wide Methylation Changes with Time Since Smoking Cessation

Florence Guida; Torkjel M. Sandanger; Raphaële Castagné; Gianluca Campanella; Silvia Polidoro; Domenico Palli; Vittorio Krogh; Rosario Tumino; Carlotta Sacerdote; Salvatore Panico; Gianluca Severi; Soterios A. Kyrtopoulos; Panagiotis Georgiadis; Roel Vermeulen; Eiliv Lund; Paolo Vineis; Marc Chadeau-Hyam

Several studies have recently identified strong epigenetic signals related to tobacco smoking. However, an aspect that did not receive much attention is the evolution of epigenetic changes with time since smoking cessation. We conducted a series of epigenome-wide association studies to capture the dynamics of smoking-induced epigenetic changes after smoking cessation, using genome-wide methylation profiles obtained from blood samples in 745 women from 2 European populations. Two distinct classes of CpG sites were identified: sites whose methylation reverts to levels typical of never smokers within decades after smoking cessation, and sites remaining differentially methylated, even more than 35 years after smoking cessation. Our results suggest that the dynamics of methylation changes following smoking cessation are driven by a differential and site-specific magnitude of the smoking-induced alterations (with persistent sites being most affected) irrespective of the intensity and duration of smoking. Analyses of the link between methylation and expression levels revealed that methylation predominantly and remotely down-regulates gene expression. Among genes whose expression was associated with our candidate CpG sites, LRRN3 appeared to be particularly interesting as it was one of the few genes whose methylation and expression were directly associated, and the only gene in which both methylation and gene expression were found associated with smoking. Our study highlights persistent epigenetic markers of smoking, which can potentially be detected decades after cessation. Such historical signatures are promising biomarkers to refine individual risk profiling of smoking-induced chronic disease such as lung cancer.


Human Heredity | 2008

DNA Repair Polymorphisms Modify Bladder Cancer Risk: A Multi-factor Analytic Strategy

Angeline S. Andrew; Margaret R. Karagas; Heather H. Nelson; Simonetta Guarrera; Silvia Polidoro; Sara Gamberini; Carlotta Sacerdote; Jason H. Moore; Karl T. Kelsey; Eugene Demidenko; Paolo Vineis; Giuseppe Matullo

Objectives: A number of common non-synonymous single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in DNA repair genes have been reported to modify bladder cancer risk. These include: APE1-Asn148Gln, XRCC1-Arg399Gln and XRCC1-Arg194Trp in the BER pathway, XPD-Gln751Lys in the NER pathway and XRCC3-Thr241Met in the DSB repair pathway. Methods: To examine the independent and interacting effects of these SNPs in a large study group, we analyzed these genotypes in 1,029 cases and 1,281 controls enrolled in two case-control studies of incident bladder cancer, one conducted in New Hampshire, USA and the other in Turin, Italy. Results: The odds ratio among current smokers with the variant XRCC3-241 (TT) genotype was 1.7 (95% CI 1.0–2.7) compared to wild-type. We evaluated gene-environment and gene-gene interactions using four analytic approaches: logistic regression, Multifactor Dimensionality Reduction (MDR), hierarchical interaction graphs, classification and regression trees (CART), and logic regression analyses. All five methods supported a gene-gene interaction between XRCC1-399/XRCC3-241 (p = 0.001) (adjusted OR for XRCC1-399 GG, XRCC3-241 TT vs. wild-type 2.0 (95% CI 1.4–3.0)). Three methods predicted an interaction between XRCC1-399/XPD-751 (p = 0.008) (adjusted OR for XRCC1-399 GA or AA, XRCC3-241 AA vs. wild-type 1.4 (95% CI 1.1–2.0)). Conclusions: These results support the hypothesis that common polymorphisms in DNA repair genes modify bladder cancer risk and highlight the value of using multiple complementary analytic approaches to identify multi-factor interactions.

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Paolo Vineis

International Agency for Research on Cancer

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Giuseppe Matullo

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Salvatore Panico

International Agency for Research on Cancer

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Fulvio Ricceri

Institute for Scientific Interchange

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Vittorio Krogh

University of Naples Federico II

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Antonia Trichopoulou

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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