孟德尔随机化
医学
观察研究
饮酒量
内科学
酒
随机化
癌症
随机对照试验
肿瘤科
遗传学
生物
基因
基因型
生物化学
遗传变异
作者
Mark Gormley,Tom Dudding,Eleanor Sanderson,Richard M. Martin,Steven J. Thomas,Jessica Tyrrell,Andy Ness,Paul Brennan,Marcus R. Munafò,Miranda Pring,Stefania Boccia,Andrew F. Olshan,Brenda Diergaarde,Rayjean J. Hung,Geoffrey Liu,George Davey Smith,Rebecca C. Richmond
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41467-020-19822-6
摘要
Abstract The independent effects of smoking and alcohol in head and neck cancer are not clear, given the strong association between these risk factors. Their apparent synergistic effect reported in previous observational studies may also underestimate independent effects. Here we report multivariable Mendelian randomization performed in a two-sample approach using summary data on 6,034 oral/oropharyngeal cases and 6,585 controls from a recent genome-wide association study. Our results demonstrate strong evidence for an independent causal effect of smoking on oral/oropharyngeal cancer (IVW OR 2.6, 95% CI = 1.7, 3.9 per standard deviation increase in lifetime smoking behaviour) and an independent causal effect of alcohol consumption when controlling for smoking (IVW OR 2.1, 95% CI = 1.1, 3.8 per standard deviation increase in drinks consumed per week). This suggests the possibility that the causal effect of alcohol may have been underestimated. However, the extent to which alcohol is modified by smoking requires further investigation.
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