Evaluating the effect of metabolic traits on oral and oropharyngeal cancer risk using Mendelian randomization

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Abstract

A recent World Health Organization report states that at least 40% of all cancer cases may be preventable, with smoking, alcohol consumption and obesity identified as three of the most important modifiable lifestyle factors. Given the significant decline in smoking rates, particularly within developing countries, other potentially modifiable risk factors for head and neck cancer warrant investigation. Obesity and related metabolic disorders such as type 2 diabetes and hypertension have been associated with head and neck cancer risk in multiple observational studies. However, obesity has also been correlated with smoking, with bias, confounding or reverse causality possibly explaining these findings. To overcome the challenges of observational studies, we conducted two-sample Mendelian randomization (inverse variance weighted (IVW) method) using genetic variants which were robustly associated with obesity, T2D and hypertension in genome-wide association studies (GWAS). Outcome data was taken from the largest available GWAS of 6,034 oral and oropharyngeal cases, with 6,585 controls. We found limited evidence of a causal effect of genetically proxied body mass index (OR IVW = 0.89, 95%CI 0.72–1.09, p = 0.26 per 1 SD in BMI (4.81 kg/m2)) on oral and oropharyngeal cancer risk. Similarly, there was limited evidence for related traits including type 2 diabetes and hypertension. Smoking appears to act as a mediator in the relationship between obesity and head and neck cancer.

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