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Aim: Recent genome-wide association studies of European populations have identified rs16906115, a single-nucleotide polymorphism in the interleukin-7 gene, as a predictor of immune-related adverse events (irAEs) and the therapeutic efficacy of immune checkpoint inhibitors. We evaluated this single-nucleotide polymorphism in a Japanese population.
Methods: From January 2021, we stored host DNA from individuals who received various types of immune checkpoint inhibitors. From this population, we categorized 510 participants into cases (grade ≥2 irAEs) and controls (received ≥3 immune checkpoint inhibitor doses, follow-up ≥12 weeks, no irAEs), and divided 339 hepatocellular carcinoma patients treated with atezolizumab/bevacizumab into responders and non-responders, evaluated using the modified response evaluation criteria in solid tumors. We compared the minor allele frequencies of rs16906115 between cases and controls, and responders and non-responders.
Results: In the irAE prediction analysis of 234 cases and 276 controls, the minor allele frequency was 0.244 in the case group and 0.265 in the control group. This difference is not significant. In the analysis predicting the therapeutic efficacy for hepatocellular carcinoma patients, the responders had a significantly lower minor allele frequency of 0.220, compared with 0.300 for the non-responders (p = 0.022). Univariate and multivariate analyses identified the minor allele homozygosity as a significant predictor of treatment response, with odds ratios of 0.292 (p = 0.015) in the univariate analysis and 0.315 (p = 0.023) in the multivariate analysis.
Conclusions: In our Japanese cohort, no association was found between the rs16906115 minor allele and irAEs or treatment efficacy. The minor allele homozygosity may be associated with a negative therapeutic outcome.
Clinical Trial Registration: UMIN Clinical Trials Registry with the number UMIN000043798.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/hepr.14092 | DOI Listing |
Biomol Biomed
September 2025
Clinical Research Directorate, Ignacio Chávez National Institute of Cardiology, Mexico City, Mexico.
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic autoimmune disease in which dysregulated interferon regulatory factor 5 (IRF5) may amplify pro-inflammatory pathways; prior genetic studies of IRF5 single-nucleotide variants (SNVs) in RA are inconsistent across populations and have not included mestizo Mexicans or evaluated rs59110799 in RA. We aimed to test whether four IRF5 SNVs (rs2004640G/T, rs2070197T/C, rs10954213G/A, rs59110799G/T) confer susceptibility to RA in women from Central Mexico. In a case-control study of 239 women with RA and 231 female controls (all self-identified Mexican-Mestizos, ≥3 generations), genotyping was performed by real-time PCR with TaqMan® probes; 80% of samples were duplicated (100% concordance) and control genotypes conformed to Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProg Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry
September 2025
Department of Women's and Children's Health, SciLifeLab, Uppsala University, Sweden. Electronic address:
Estrogens are suggested to affect mood by binding to widespread estrogen receptors in the brain and therewith modulating a variety of neurosignaling pathways. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the genes encoding estrogen receptors might influence these actions and thereby play a role in the genetic foundation of mood disorders. Several SNPs in the estrogen receptor 1 (ESR1) gene have been studied in relation to anxiety and depression, while confounders and interaction with psychosocial factors have largely been overlooked.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Hum Genet
August 2025
Big Data Institute, Li Ka Shing Centre for Health Information and Discovery, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK; Centre for Human Genetics, Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK; Nuffield Department of Women's and Reproductive Health, Medical Sciences Division, University o
Overall adiposity and body fat distribution are heritable traits associated with altered risk of cardiometabolic disease and mortality. Performing rare-variant (minor allele frequency <1%) association testing using exome-sequencing data from 402,375 participants of European ancestry in the UK Biobank for nine overall and tissue-specific fat distribution traits, we identified 19 genes where putatively damaging rare variation associated with at least one trait (Bonferroni-adjusted p < 1.58 × 10) and 50 additional genes at false discovery rate (FDR) ≤1% (p ≤ 4.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Pain
October 2025
Headache Science and Neurorehabilitation Unit, IRCCS Mondino Foundation, Pavia, Italy.
Background: Although robust genetic markers for episodic migraine (EM) have been identified, variants associated with chronic migraine (CM) are still unknown. Given the potential pathophysiologic overlap between EM and CM, we investigated whether six single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), robustly associated with EM susceptibility (LRP1 rs11172113, PRDM16 rs10797381, FHL5 rs7775721, TRPM8 rs10166942, near TSPAN2 rs2078371 and MEF2D rs1925950) also play a role in the risk of developing CM.
Methods: A total of 200 EM and 202 CM participants were prospectively included.
Missing genotypes reduce statistical power and hinder genome-wide association studies. While reference-based methods are popular, they struggle in complex regions and under population mismatch. Existing reference-free deep learning models show promise in addressing this issue but often fail to impute rare variants in small datasets.
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