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Dive into the research topics where Zachary C. Fogarty is active.

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Featured researches published by Zachary C. Fogarty.


British Journal of Cancer | 2014

Evidence for a time-dependent association between FOLR1 expression and survival from ovarian carcinoma: implications for clinical testing. An Ovarian Tumour Tissue Analysis consortium study

Martin Köbel; J Madore; Susan J. Ramus; Blaise Clarke; Paul Pharoah; Suha Deen; David Bowtell; Kunle Odunsi; Usha Menon; Carl Morrison; S.B. Lele; Wiam Bshara; Lara Sucheston; Matthias W. Beckmann; Alexander Hein; Falk C. Thiel; Arndt Hartmann; David L. Wachter; Michael S. Anglesio; Estrid Høgdall; Allan Jensen; Claus Høgdall; Kimberly R. Kalli; Brooke L. Fridley; Gary L. Keeney; Zachary C. Fogarty; Robert A. Vierkant; Suzanne Liu; S Cho; Gregg Nelson

Background:Folate receptor 1 (FOLR1) is expressed in the majority of ovarian carcinomas (OvCa), making it an attractive target for therapy. However, clinical trials testing anti-FOLR1 therapies in OvCa show mixed results and require better understanding of the prognostic relevance of FOLR1 expression. We conducted a large study evaluating FOLR1 expression with survival in different histological types of OvCa.Methods:Tissue microarrays composed of tumour samples from 2801 patients in the Ovarian Tumour Tissue Analysis (OTTA) consortium were assessed for FOLR1 expression by centralised immunohistochemistry. We estimated associations for overall (OS) and progression-free (PFS) survival using adjusted Cox regression models. High-grade serous ovarian carcinomas (HGSC) from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) were evaluated independently for association between FOLR1 mRNA upregulation and survival.Results:FOLR1 expression ranged from 76% in HGSC to 11% in mucinous carcinomas in OTTA. For HGSC, the association between FOLR1 expression and OS changed significantly during the years following diagnosis in OTTA (Pinteraction=0.01, N=1422) and TCGA (Pinteraction=0.01, N=485). In OTTA, particularly for FIGO stage I/II tumours, patients with FOLR1-positive HGSC showed increased OS during the first 2 years only (hazard ratio=0.44, 95% confidence interval=0.20–0.96) and patients with FOLR1-positive clear cell carcinomas (CCC) showed decreased PFS independent of follow-up time (HR=1.89, 95% CI=1.10–3.25, N=259). In TCGA, FOLR1 mRNA upregulation in HGSC was also associated with increased OS during the first 2 years following diagnosis irrespective of tumour stage (HR: 0.48, 95% CI: 0.25–0.94).Conclusions:FOLR1-positive HGSC tumours were associated with an increased OS in the first 2 years following diagnosis. Patients with FOLR1-negative, poor prognosis HGSC would be unlikely to benefit from anti-FOLR1 therapies. In contrast, a decreased PFS interval was observed for FOLR1-positive CCC. The clinical efficacy of FOLR1-targeted interventions should therefore be evaluated according to histology, stage and time following diagnosis.


JAMA Oncology | 2017

Dose-Response Association of CD8+ Tumor-Infiltrating Lymphocytes and Survival Time in High-Grade Serous Ovarian Cancer.

Ellen L. Goode; Matthew S. Block; Kimberly R. Kalli; Robert A. Vierkant; Wenqian Chen; Zachary C. Fogarty; Aleksandra Gentry-Maharaj; Aleksandra Tołoczko; Alexander Hein; Aliecia L. Bouligny; Allan Jensen; Ana Osorio; Andreas D. Hartkopf; Andy Ryan; Anita Chudecka-Głaz; Anthony M. Magliocco; Arndt Hartmann; Audrey Y. Jung; Bo Gao; Brenda Y. Hernandez; Brooke L. Fridley; Bryan M. McCauley; Catherine J. Kennedy; Chen Wang; Chloe Karpinskyj; Christiani Bisinoto de Sousa; Daniel Guimarães Tiezzi; David L. Wachter; Esther Herpel; Florin Andrei Taran

Importance Cytotoxic CD8+ tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) participate in immune control of epithelial ovarian cancer; however, little is known about prognostic patterns of CD8+ TILs by histotype and in relation to other clinical factors. Objective To define the prognostic role of CD8+ TILs in epithelial ovarian cancer. Design, Setting, and Participants This was a multicenter observational, prospective survival cohort study of the Ovarian Tumor Tissue Analysis Consortium. More than 5500 patients, including 3196 with high-grade serous ovarian carcinomas (HGSOCs), were followed prospectively for over 24 650 person-years. Exposures Following immunohistochemical analysis, CD8+ TILs were identified within the epithelial components of tumor islets. Patients were grouped based on the estimated number of CD8+ TILs per high-powered field: negative (none), low (1-2), moderate (3-19), and high (≥20). CD8+ TILs in a subset of patients were also assessed in a quantitative, uncategorized manner, and the functional form of associations with survival was assessed using penalized B-splines. Main Outcomes and Measures Overall survival time. Results The final sample included 5577 women; mean age at diagnosis was 58.4 years (median, 58.2 years). Among the 5 major invasive histotypes, HGSOCs showed the most infiltration. CD8+ TILs in HGSOCs were significantly associated with longer overall survival; median survival was 2.8 years for patients with no CD8+ TILs and 3.0 years, 3.8 years, and 5.1 years for patients with low, moderate, or high levels of CD8+ TILs, respectively (P value for trend = 4.2 × 10−16). A survival benefit was also observed among women with endometrioid and mucinous carcinomas, but not for those with the other histotypes. Among HGSOCs, CD8+ TILs were favorable regardless of extent of residual disease following cytoreduction, known standard treatment, and germline BRCA1 pathogenic mutation, but were not prognostic for BRCA2 mutation carriers. Evaluation of uncategorized CD8+ TIL counts showed a near-log-linear functional form. Conclusions and Relevance This study demonstrates the histotype-specific nature of immune infiltration and provides definitive evidence for a dose-response relationship between CD8+ TILs and HGSOC survival. That the extent of infiltration is prognostic, not merely its presence or absence, suggests that understanding factors that drive infiltration will be the key to unraveling outcome heterogeneity in this cancer.


Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 2013

Analysis of Over 10,000 Cases Finds No Association between Previously Reported Candidate Polymorphisms and Ovarian Cancer Outcome

Kristin L. White; Robert A. Vierkant; Zachary C. Fogarty; Bridget Charbonneau; Matthew S. Block; Paul Pharoah; Georgia Chenevix-Trench; Mary Anne Rossing; Daniel W. Cramer; Celeste Leigh Pearce; Joellen M. Schildkraut; Usha Menon; Susanne K. Kjaer; Douglas A. Levine; Jacek Gronwald; Hoda Anton Culver; Alice S. Whittemore; Beth Y. Karlan; Diether Lambrechts; Nicolas Wentzensen; Jolanta Kupryjanczyk; Jenny Chang-Claude; Elisa V. Bandera; Estrid Høgdall; Florian Heitz; Stanley B. Kaye; Peter A. Fasching; Ian G. Campbell; Marc T. Goodman; Tanja Pejovic

Background: Ovarian cancer is a leading cause of cancer-related death among women. In an effort to understand contributors to disease outcome, we evaluated single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) previously associated with ovarian cancer recurrence or survival, specifically in angiogenesis, inflammation, mitosis, and drug disposition genes. Methods: Twenty-seven SNPs in VHL, HGF, IL18, PRKACB, ABCB1, CYP2C8, ERCC2, and ERCC1 previously associated with ovarian cancer outcome were genotyped in 10,084 invasive cases from 28 studies from the Ovarian Cancer Association Consortium with over 37,000-observed person-years and 4,478 deaths. Cox proportional hazards models were used to examine the association between candidate SNPs and ovarian cancer recurrence or survival with and without adjustment for key covariates. Results: We observed no association between genotype and ovarian cancer recurrence or survival for any of the SNPs examined. Conclusions: These results refute prior associations between these SNPs and ovarian cancer outcome and underscore the importance of maximally powered genetic association studies. Impact: These variants should not be used in prognostic models. Alternate approaches to uncovering inherited prognostic factors, if they exist, are needed. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev; 22(5); 987–. ©2013 AACR.


Nature Communications | 2015

Identification of candidate genes for prostate cancer-risk SNPs utilizing a normal prostate tissue eQTL data set.

Stephen N. Thibodeau; Amy J. French; Shannon K. McDonnell; John Cheville; Sumit Middha; Lori S. Tillmans; Shaun M. Riska; Saurabh Baheti; Melissa C. Larson; Zachary C. Fogarty; Yuji Zhang; Nicholas B. Larson; Asha Nair; D. O'Brien; Liang Wang; Daniel J. Schaid

Multiple studies have identified loci associated with the risk of developing prostate cancer but the associated genes are not well studied. Here we create a normal prostate tissue-specific eQTL data set and apply this data set to previously identified prostate cancer (PrCa)-risk SNPs in an effort to identify candidate target genes. The eQTL data set is constructed by the genotyping and RNA sequencing of 471 samples. We focus on 146 PrCa-risk SNPs, including all SNPs in linkage disequilibrium with each risk SNP, resulting in 100 unique risk intervals. We analyse cis-acting associations where the transcript is located within 2 Mb (±1 Mb) of the risk SNP interval. Of all SNP–gene combinations tested, 41.7% of SNPs demonstrate a significant eQTL signal after adjustment for sample histology and 14 expression principal component covariates. Of the 100 PrCa-risk intervals, 51 have a significant eQTL signal and these are associated with 88 genes. This study provides a rich resource to study biological mechanisms underlying genetic risk to PrCa.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2015

Genome-wide Analysis Identifies Novel Loci Associated with Ovarian Cancer Outcomes: Findings from the Ovarian Cancer Association Consortium

Sharon E. Johnatty; Jonathan Tyrer; Siddhartha Kar; Jonathan Beesley; Yi Lu; Bo Gao; Peter A. Fasching; Alexander Hein; Arif B. Ekici; Matthias W. Beckmann; Diether Lambrechts; Els Van Nieuwenhuysen; Ignace Vergote; Sandrina Lambrechts; Mary Anne Rossing; Jennifer A. Doherty; Jenny Chang-Claude; Francesmary Modugno; Roberta B. Ness; Kirsten B. Moysich; Douglas A. Levine; Lambertus A. Kiemeney; Leon F.A.G. Massuger; Jacek Gronwald; Jan Lubinski; Louise A. Brinton; Jolanta Lissowska; Nicolas Wentzensen; Honglin Song; Valerie Rhenius

Purpose: Chemotherapy resistance remains a major challenge in the treatment of ovarian cancer. We hypothesize that germline polymorphisms might be associated with clinical outcome. Experimental Design: We analyzed approximately 2.8 million genotyped and imputed SNPs from the iCOGS experiment for progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) in 2,901 European epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) patients who underwent first-line treatment of cytoreductive surgery and chemotherapy regardless of regimen, and in a subset of 1,098 patients treated with ≥4 cycles of paclitaxel and carboplatin at standard doses. We evaluated the top SNPs in 4,434 EOC patients, including patients from The Cancer Genome Atlas. In addition, we conducted pathway analysis of all intragenic SNPs and tested their association with PFS and OS using gene set enrichment analysis. Results: Five SNPs were significantly associated (P ≤ 1.0 × 10−5) with poorer outcomes in at least one of the four analyses, three of which, rs4910232 (11p15.3), rs2549714 (16q23), and rs6674079 (1q22), were located in long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) RP11-179A10.1, RP11-314O13.1, and RP11-284F21.8, respectively (P ≤ 7.1 × 10−6). ENCODE ChIP-seq data at 1q22 for normal ovary show evidence of histone modification around RP11-284F21.8, and rs6674079 is perfectly correlated with another SNP within the super-enhancer MEF2D, expression levels of which were reportedly associated with prognosis in another solid tumor. YAP1- and WWTR1 (TAZ)-stimulated gene expression and high-density lipoprotein (HDL)-mediated lipid transport pathways were associated with PFS and OS, respectively, in the cohort who had standard chemotherapy (pGSEA ≤6 × 10−3). Conclusions: We have identified SNPs in three lncRNAs that might be important targets for novel EOC therapies. Clin Cancer Res; 21(23); 5264–76. ©2015 AACR.


Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 2014

Variation in NF-κB Signaling Pathways and Survival in Invasive Epithelial Ovarian Cancer

Matthew S. Block; Bridget Charbonneau; Robert A. Vierkant; Zachary C. Fogarty; William R. Bamlet; Paul Pharoah; Georgia Chenevix-Trench; Mary Anne Rossing; Daniel W. Cramer; Celeste Leigh Pearce; Joellen M. Schildkraut; Usha Menon; Susanne K. Kjaer; Douglas A. Levine; Jacek Gronwald; Hoda Anton Culver; Alice S. Whittemore; Beth Y. Karlan; Diether Lambrechts; Nicolas Wentzensen; Jolanta Kupryjanczyk; Jenny Chang-Claude; Elisa V. Bandera; Estrid Høgdall; Florian Heitz; Stanley B. Kaye; Peter A. Fasching; Ian G. Campbell; Marc T. Goodman; Tanja Pejovic

Survival in epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) is influenced by the host immune response, yet the key genetic determinants of inflammation and immunity that affect prognosis are not known. The nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) transcription factor family plays an important role in many immune and inflammatory responses, including the response to cancer. We studied common inherited variation in 210 genes in the NF-κB family in 10,084 patients with invasive EOC (5,248 high-grade serous, 1,452 endometrioid, 795 clear cell, and 661 mucinous) from the Ovarian Cancer Association Consortium. Associations between genotype and overall survival were assessed using Cox regression for all patients and by major histology, adjusting for known prognostic factors and correcting for multiple testing (threshold for statistical significance, P < 2.5 × 10−5). Results were statistically significant when assessed for patients of a single histology. Key associations were with caspase recruitment domain family, member 11 (CARD11) rs41324349 in patients with mucinous EOC [HR, 1.82; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.41–2.35; P = 4.13 × 10−6] and tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily, member 13B (TNFRSF13B) rs7501462 in patients with endometrioid EOC (HR, 0.68; 95% CI, 0.56–0.82; P = 2.33 × 10−5). Other associations of note included TNF receptor–associated factor 2 (TRAF2) rs17250239 in patients with high-grade serous EOC (HR, 0.84; 95% CI, 0.77–0.92; P = 6.49 × 10−5) and phospholipase C, gamma 1 (PLCG1) rs11696662 in patients with clear cell EOC (HR, 0.43; 95% CI, 0.26–0.73; P = 4.56 × 10−4). These associations highlight the potential importance of genes associated with host inflammation and immunity in modulating clinical outcomes in distinct EOC histologies. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev; 23(7); 1421–7. ©2014 AACR.


Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 2016

Investigation of Exomic Variants Associated with Overall Survival in Ovarian Cancer

Stacey J. Winham; Ailith Pirie; Yian Ann Chen; Melissa C. Larson; Zachary C. Fogarty; Madalene Earp; Hoda Anton-Culver; Elisa V. Bandera; Daniel W. Cramer; Jennifer A. Doherty; Marc T. Goodman; Jacek Gronwald; Beth Y. Karlan; Susanne K. Kjaer; Douglas A. Levine; Usha Menon; Roberta B. Ness; Celeste Leigh Pearce; Tanja Pejovic; Mary Anne Rossing; Nicolas Wentzensen; Yukie Bean; Maria Bisogna; Louise A. Brinton; Michael E. Carney; Julie M. Cunningham; Cezary Cybulski; Anna deFazio; Ed Dicks; Robert P. Edwards

BACKGROUND:While numerous susceptibility loci for epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) have been identified, few associations have been reported with overall survival. In the absence of common prognostic genetic markers, we hypothesize that rare coding variants may be associated with overall EOC survival and assessed their contribution in two exome-based genotyping projects of the Ovarian Cancer Association Consortium (OCAC). METHODS:The primary patient set (Set 1) included 14 independent EOC studies (4,293 patients) and 227,892 variants, and a secondary patient set (Set 2) included six additional EOC studies (1,744 patients) and 114,620 variants. Because power to detect rare variants individually is reduced, gene-level tests were conducted. Sets were analyzed separately at individual variants and by gene, and then combined with meta-analyses (73,203 variants and 13,163 genes overlapped). RESULTS:No individual variant reached genome-wide statistical significance. A SNP previously implicated to be associated with EOC risk and, to a lesser extent, survival, rs8170, showed the strongest evidence of association with survival and similar effect size estimates across sets (Pmeta = 1.1E-6, HRSet1 = 1.17, HRSet2 = 1.14). Rare variants in ATG2B, an autophagy gene important for apoptosis, were significantly associated with survival after multiple testing correction (Pmeta = 1.1E-6; Pcorrected = 0.01). CONCLUSIONS:Common variant rs8170 and rare variants in ATG2B may be associated with EOC overall survival, although further study is needed. IMPACT:This study represents the first exome-wide association study of EOC survival to include rare variant analyses, and suggests that complementary single variant and gene-level analyses in large studies are needed to identify rare variants that warrant follow-up study. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev; 25(3); 446-54. ©2016 AACR.Background: While numerous susceptibility loci for epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) have been identified, few associations have been reported with overall survival. In the absence of common prognostic genetic markers, we hypothesize that rare coding variants may be associated with overall EOC survival and assessed their contribution in two exome-based genotyping projects of the Ovarian Cancer Association Consortium (OCAC). Methods: The primary patient set (Set 1) included 14 independent EOC studies (4,293 patients) and 227,892 variants, and a secondary patient set (Set 2) included six additional EOC studies (1,744 patients) and 114,620 variants. Because power to detect rare variants individually is reduced, gene-level tests were conducted. Sets were analyzed separately at individual variants and by gene, and then combined with meta-analyses (73,203 variants and 13,163 genes overlapped). Results: No individual variant reached genome-wide statistical significance. A SNP previously implicated to be associated with EOC risk and, to a lesser extent, survival, rs8170, showed the strongest evidence of association with survival and similar effect size estimates across sets (Pmeta = 1.1E−6, HRSet1 = 1.17, HRSet2 = 1.14). Rare variants in ATG2B, an autophagy gene important for apoptosis, were significantly associated with survival after multiple testing correction (Pmeta = 1.1E−6; Pcorrected = 0.01). Conclusions: Common variant rs8170 and rare variants in ATG2B may be associated with EOC overall survival, although further study is needed. Impact: This study represents the first exome-wide association study of EOC survival to include rare variant analyses, and suggests that complementary single variant and gene-level analyses in large studies are needed to identify rare variants that warrant follow-up study. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev; 25(3); 446–54. ©2016 AACR.


Molecular Genetics & Genomic Medicine | 2017

Targeted sequencing of 36 known or putative colorectal cancer susceptibility genes

Melissa S. DeRycke; Shanaka R. Gunawardena; Jessica R. Balcom; Angela M. Pickart; Lindsey A. Waltman; Amy J. French; Shannon K. McDonnell; Shaun M. Riska; Zachary C. Fogarty; Melissa C. Larson; Sumit Middha; Bruce W. Eckloff; Yan W. Asmann; Matthew J. Ferber; Robert W. Haile; Steven Gallinger; Mark Clendenning; Christophe Rosty; Aung Ko Win; Daniel D. Buchanan; John L. Hopper; Polly A. Newcomb; Loic Le Marchand; Ellen L. Goode; Noralane M. Lindor; Stephen N. Thibodeau

Mutations in several genes predispose to colorectal cancer. Genetic testing for hereditary colorectal cancer syndromes was previously limited to single gene tests; thus, only a very limited number of genes were tested, and rarely those infrequently mutated in colorectal cancer. Next‐generation sequencing technologies have made it possible to sequencing panels of genes known and suspected to influence colorectal cancer susceptibility.


Genes, Chromosomes and Cancer | 2017

Germline miRNA DNA variants and the risk of colorectal cancer by subtype

Noralane M. Lindor; Melissa C. Larson; Melissa S. DeRycke; Shannon K. McDonnell; Saurabh Baheti; Zachary C. Fogarty; Aung Ko Win; John D. Potter; Daniel D. Buchanan; Mark Clendenning; Polly A. Newcomb; Graham Casey; Steven Gallinger; Loic Le Marchand; John L. Hopper; Mark A. Jenkins; Ellen L. Goode; Stephen N. Thibodeau

MicroRNAs (miRNAs) regulate up to one‐third of all protein‐coding genes including genes relevant to cancer. Variants within miRNAs have been reported to be associated with prognosis, survival, response to chemotherapy across cancer types, in vitro parameters of cell growth, and altered risks for development of cancer. Five miRNA variants have been reported to be associated with risk for development of colorectal cancer (CRC). In this study, we evaluated germline genetic variation in 1,123 miRNAs in 899 individuals with CRCs categorized by clinical subtypes and in 204 controls. The role of common miRNA variation in CRC was investigated using single variant and miRNA‐level association tests. Twenty‐nine miRNAs and 30 variants exhibited some marginal association with CRC in at least one subtype of CRC. Previously reported associations were not confirmed (n = 4) or could not be evaluated (n = 1). The variants noted for the CRCs with deficient mismatch repair showed little overlap with the variants noted for CRCs with proficient mismatch repair, consistent with our evolving understanding of the distinct biology underlying these two groups.


Oncotarget | 2016

A targeted genetic association study of epithelial ovarian cancer susceptibility

Madalene Earp; Stacey J. Winham; Nicholas B. Larson; Jennifer B. Permuth; Hugues Sicotte; Jeremy Chien; Hoda Anton-Culver; Elisa V. Bandera; Andrew Berchuck; Linda S. Cook; Daniel W. Cramer; Jennifer A. Doherty; Marc T. Goodman; Douglas A. Levine; Alvaro N.A. Monteiro; Roberta B. Ness; Celeste Leigh Pearce; Mary Anne Rossing; Shelley S. Tworoger; Nicolas Wentzensen; Maria Bisogna; Louise A. Brinton; Angela Brooks-Wilson; Michael E. Carney; Julie M. Cunningham; Robert P. Edwards; Zachary C. Fogarty; Edwin S. Iversen; Peter Kraft; Melissa C. Larson

Background Genome-wide association studies have identified several common susceptibility alleles for epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC). To further understand EOC susceptibility, we examined previously ungenotyped candidate variants, including uncommon variants and those residing within known susceptibility loci. Results At nine of eleven previously published EOC susceptibility regions (2q31, 3q25, 5p15, 8q21, 8q24, 10p12, 17q12, 17q21.31, and 19p13), novel variants were identified that were more strongly associated with risk than previously reported variants. Beyond known susceptibility regions, no variants were found to be associated with EOC risk at genome-wide statistical significance (p <5×10−8), nor were any significant after Bonferroni correction for 17,000 variants (p< 3×10-6). Methods A customized genotyping array was used to assess over 17,000 variants in coding, non-coding, regulatory, and known susceptibility regions in 4,973 EOC cases and 5,640 controls from 13 independent studies. Susceptibility for EOC overall and for select histotypes was evaluated using logistic regression adjusted for age, study site, and population substructure. Conclusion Given the novel variants identified within the 2q31, 3q25, 5p15, 8q21, 8q24, 10p12, 17q12, 17q21.31, and 19p13 regions, larger follow-up genotyping studies, using imputation where necessary, are needed for fine-mapping and confirmation of low frequency variants that fall below statistical significance.

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Mary Anne Rossing

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Nicolas Wentzensen

National Institutes of Health

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