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. 2014 Apr 17;10(4):e1004285. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1004285

Genetic Predisposition to In Situ and Invasive Lobular Carcinoma of the Breast

Elinor Sawyer 1,*,#, Rebecca Roylance 2,#, Christos Petridis 1, Mark N Brook 3, Salpie Nowinski 1, Efterpi Papouli 4, Olivia Fletcher 5, Sarah Pinder 1, Andrew Hanby 6, Kelly Kohut 2, Patricia Gorman 2, Michele Caneppele 2, Julian Peto 7, Isabel dos Santos Silva 7, Nichola Johnson 5, Ruth Swann 8, Miriam Dwek 8, Katherine-Anne Perkins 8, Cheryl Gillett 1, Richard Houlston 3, Gillian Ross 9, Paolo De Ieso 9, Melissa C Southey 10, John L Hopper 11, Elena Provenzano 12, Carmel Apicella 11, Jelle Wesseling 13, Sten Cornelissen 13, Renske Keeman 13, Peter A Fasching 14,15, Sebastian M Jud 15, Arif B Ekici 16, Matthias W Beckmann 15, Michael J Kerin 17, Federick Marme 18,19, Andreas Schneeweiss 18,19, Christof Sohn 18, Barbara Burwinkel 18,20, Pascal Guénel 21,22, Therese Truong 21,22, Pierre Laurent-Puig 23, Pierre Kerbrat 24, Stig E Bojesen 25, Børge G Nordestgaard 25, Sune F Nielsen 25, Henrik Flyger 26, Roger L Milne 27, Jose Ignacio Arias Perez 28, Primitiva Menéndez 29, Javier Benitez 30, Hermann Brenner 31, Aida Karina Dieffenbach 31, Volker Arndt 31, Christa Stegmaier 32, Alfons Meindl 33, Peter Lichtner 34, Rita K Schmutzler 35, Magdalena Lochmann 33, Hiltrud Brauch 36,37, Hans-Peter Fischer 38, Yon-Dschun Ko 39; The GENICA Network36,37,40,41,42,, Heli Nevanlinna 43, Taru A Muranen 43, Kristiina Aittomäki 44, Carl Blomqvist 45, Natalia V Bogdanova 46, Thilo Dörk 47, Annika Lindblom 48, Sara Margolin 49, Arto Mannermaa 50,51, Vesa Kataja 50,51, Veli-Matti Kosma 50,51, Jaana M Hartikainen 50,51, Georgia Chenevix-Trench 52; KConFab Investigators53,, Diether Lambrechts 54,55, Caroline Weltens 56, Erik Van Limbergen 56, Sigrid Hatse 56, Jenny Chang-Claude 57, Anja Rudolph 57, Petra Seibold 57, Dieter Flesch-Janys 57, Paolo Radice 58,59, Paolo Peterlongo 59, Bernardo Bonanni 60, Sara Volorio 61, Graham G Giles 62,63, Gianluca Severi 62,63, Laura Baglietto 62,63, Catriona A Mclean 64, Christopher A Haiman 65, Brian E Henderson 65, Fredrick Schumacher 65, Loic Le Marchand 66, Jacques Simard 67, Mark S Goldberg 68,69, France Labrèche 70, Martine Dumont 67, Vessela Kristensen 71,72, Robert Winqvist 73, Katri Pylkäs 73, Arja Jukkola-Vuorinen 74, Saila Kauppila 74, Irene L Andrulis 75,76, Julia A Knight 77,78, Gord Glendon 75, Anna Marie Mulligan 79, Peter Devillee 80, Rob A E M Tollenaar 81, Caroline M Seynaeve 82, Mieke Kriege 82, Jonine Figueroa 83, Stephen J Chanock 83, Mark E Sherman 83, Maartje J Hooning 84, Antoinette Hollestelle 84, Ans M W van den Ouweland 85, Carolien H M van Deurzen 86, Jingmei Li 87, Kamila Czene 88, Keith Humphreys 88, Angela Cox 89, Simon S Cross 90, Malcolm W R Reed 89, Mitul Shah 91, Anna Jakubowska 92, Jan Lubinski 92, Katarzyna Jaworska-Bieniek 92,93, Katarzyna Durda 92, Anthony Swerdlow 94, Alan Ashworth 95, Nicholas Orr 95, Minouk Schoemaker 3, Fergus J Couch 96, Emily Hallberg 97, Anna González-Neira 98, Guillermo Pita 98, M Rosario Alonso 98, Daniel C Tessier 99, Daniel Vincent 99, Francois Bacot 99, Manjeet K Bolla 100, Qin Wang 100, Joe Dennis 100, Kyriaki Michailidou 100, Alison M Dunning 91, Per Hall 88, Doug Easton 100, Paul Pharoah 91,100, Marjanka K Schmidt 13, Ian Tomlinson 101, Montserrat Garcia-Closas 3,5
Editor: Greg Gibson102
PMCID: PMC3990493  PMID: 24743323

Abstract

Invasive lobular breast cancer (ILC) accounts for 10–15% of all invasive breast carcinomas. It is generally ER positive (ER+) and often associated with lobular carcinoma in situ (LCIS). Genome-wide association studies have identified more than 70 common polymorphisms that predispose to breast cancer, but these studies included predominantly ductal (IDC) carcinomas. To identify novel common polymorphisms that predispose to ILC and LCIS, we pooled data from 6,023 cases (5,622 ILC, 401 pure LCIS) and 34,271 controls from 36 studies genotyped using the iCOGS chip. Six novel SNPs most strongly associated with ILC/LCIS in the pooled analysis were genotyped in a further 516 lobular cases (482 ILC, 36 LCIS) and 1,467 controls. These analyses identified a lobular-specific SNP at 7q34 (rs11977670, OR (95%CI) for ILC = 1.13 (1.09–1.18), P = 6.0×10−10; P-het for ILC vs IDC ER+ tumors = 1.8×10−4). Of the 75 known breast cancer polymorphisms that were genotyped, 56 were associated with ILC and 15 with LCIS at P<0.05. Two SNPs showed significantly stronger associations for ILC than LCIS (rs2981579/10q26/FGFR2, P-het = 0.04 and rs889312/5q11/MAP3K1, P-het = 0.03); and two showed stronger associations for LCIS than ILC (rs6678914/1q32/LGR6, P-het = 0.001 and rs1752911/6q14, P-het = 0.04). In addition, seven of the 75 known loci showed significant differences between ER+ tumors with IDC and ILC histology, three of these showing stronger associations for ILC (rs11249433/1p11, rs2981579/10q26/FGFR2 and rs10995190/10q21/ZNF365) and four associated only with IDC (5p12/rs10941679; rs2588809/14q24/RAD51L1, rs6472903/8q21 and rs1550623/2q31/CDCA7). In conclusion, we have identified one novel lobular breast cancer specific predisposition polymorphism at 7q34, and shown for the first time that common breast cancer polymorphisms predispose to LCIS. We have shown that many of the ER+ breast cancer predisposition loci also predispose to ILC, although there is some heterogeneity between ER+ lobular and ER+ IDC tumors. These data provide evidence for overlapping, but distinct etiological pathways within ER+ breast cancer between morphological subtypes.

Author Summary

Invasive lobular breast cancer (ILC) accounts for 10–15% of invasive breast cancer and is generally ER positive (ER+). To date, none of the genome-wide association studies that have identified loci that predispose to breast cancer in general or to ER+ or ER-negative breast cancer have focused on lobular breast cancer. In this lobular breast cancer study we identified a new variant that appears to be specific to this morphological subtype. We also ascertained which of the known variants predisposes specifically to lobular breast cancer and show for the first time that some of these loci are also associated with lobular carcinoma in situ, a non-obligate precursor of breast cancer and also a risk factor for contralateral breast cancer. Our study shows that the genetic pathways of invasive lobular cancer and ER+ ductal carcinoma mostly overlap, but there are important differences that are likely to provide insights into the biology of lobular breast tumors.

Introduction

Invasive lobular breast cancer (ILC) accounts for 10–15% of all invasive breast carcinomas and it has distinct etiological, clinical and biological characteristics compared with the more common invasive ductal/no special type carcinoma (IDC) [1]. Lobular cancers show stronger associations with the use of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) than IDC, [2] and its incidence follows a similar temporal pattern as the use of combined HRT [3]. ILC is characterized by E-cadherin loss and the malignant cells therefore infiltrate the breast stroma in single files with little associated stromal reaction. This makes it difficult to detect these tumors by palpation or mammography, and they are often larger at presentation than IDCs [4]. ILCs are generally of histological grade 2 and estrogen receptor positive (ER+), with the exception of the pleomorphic subgroup. They typically have a different pattern of metastatic spread to IDCs, tending to infiltrate the peritoneum, ovary and gastrointestinal system. There is some evidence that they are less chemo-sensitive than IDC and that the 10-year survival rate of women with ILC is lower than that of ER+ IDCs [5], [6].

ILC is often associated with lobular carcinoma in situ (LCIS), a form of non-invasive breast cancer that is difficult to detect clinically and typically found incidentally on biopsy. The increased breast biopsy rate associated with screening mammography has led to an increase in the diagnosis of LCIS. LCIS shares many of the same genetic aberrations as ILC, suggesting that it is a precursor lesion in an analogous manner to ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) and IDC [7]. Women who have had LCIS are 2.4 times more likely to develop invasive breast cancer compared to the general population, with an excess of ILC (23–80% of cases) [8], [9]. However only 50–70% of invasive cancers associated with LCIS have lobular morphology [10, unpublished data from GLACIER study]. The remaining cancers have a IDC or mixed ductal-lobular appearance, but again are generally ER+ (95% of IDC and mixed ductal-lobular cancers associated with LCIS in the GLACIER study were ER+). Unlike DCIS, LCIS is also a risk factor for developing invasive cancer in the contralateral breast [8].

Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) in breast cancer have identified loci that predispose to invasive breast cancer in general, or specifically to ER+ or ER-negative disease [11][25]. However, no previous study has focused specifically on lobular carcinomas. Only one common single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP; rs11249433 at 1p11.2) has been shown to be more strongly associated with lobular than ductal histology [26]. For the remaining SNPs predisposing to ER+ tumors, it is unclear whether the studies have lacked statistical power to identify differential associations by histology, or whether associations tend to be non-differential by morphology after accounting for ER status.

The aim of this study was to identify new breast cancer susceptibility loci specific to lobular carcinoma, and to evaluate the heterogeneity of associations of known loci by morphology. This involved pooling genotyping data from over 6,000 cases of lobular carcinoma (ILC and/or LCIS) and over 34,000 controls genotyped using the iCOGS chip, a custom SNP array that comprises 211,155 SNPs enriched at predisposition loci for breast and other cancers [24].

Results

In a phase I analysis, we evaluated risk associations between SNPs on the iCOGS chip and risk of ILC and LCIS using 1,782 lobular cases (1,470 ILC with or without LCIS, 312 pure LCIS) from GLACIER, a UK study of lobular breast cancer, and 4,755 UK controls from the Breast Cancer Association Consortium, BCAC (Figure 1). There was little evidence for systematic inflation of the test statistics, based on 37,544 uncorrelated SNPs that had not been selected on the basis of breast cancer risk (λ = 1.04; Figure S1). Data were combined by meta-analysis with a further 4,241 cases (4,152 ILC, 89 LCIS) and 29,519 controls of European ancestry, derived from 34 studies in BCAC, and previously typed on the iCOGS chip (Tables S1 and S2). This resulted in a total of 6,023 cases (5,622 ILC, 401 LCIS) and 34,271 controls with data on 199,961 iCOGS SNPs (after quality control exclusions and with minor allele frequency (MAF) >0.01) included in the meta-analysis.

Figure 1. Lobular cancer study design.

Figure 1

Search for new lobular breast cancer predisposition loci

All SNPs reaching genome-wide significance (P<5×10−8) in the meta-analysis were correlated with one of the known breast cancer predisposition loci. In order to identify new loci that predispose to lobular carcinoma, we selected six uncorrelated SNPs (rs11977670, rs2121783, rs2747652, rs3909680, rs9948182, rs7034265) that were only weakly correlated (r2<0.25) with known loci and that showed the best evidence of association (P between 5×10−8 and 5×10−5) in the overall lobular case-control analysis (ILC and LCIS). These SNPs were genotyped in a Phase II including 516 cases (481 ILC, 35 LCIS) and 1,467 controls, all from white European donors (Figure 1).

One of the six SNPs, rs11977670 at 7q34, reached genome-wide significance in a pooled analysis of phase I and II ILC cases and controls (OR = 1.13, 95%CI = 1.09–1.18, P = 6.0×10−10, Table 1, Figure 2). rs11977670 showed a similar association with LCIS (P-het for ILC vs LCIS = 0.198), and a very weak or no association with IDC (OR = 1.02, 95%CI = 1.00–1.05, P = 0.070; P-het for ILC vs IDC = 1.3×10−5), indicating that this is a lobular specific predisposition locus (Table 2). The risk allele appeared to act in a dominant rather than additive manner: ORAG = 1.21, 95%CI = 1.14–1.30; ORAA = 1.27, 95%CI = 1.17–1.38; P for departure from log-additivity = 0.009; Table S3. rs11977670 was not significantly associated with age at onset of ILC (Ptrend = 0.16) and risk alleles were not significantly over-represented in cases with a positive family history (FH) (P = 0.90, FH+ vs FH−). None of the other 5 SNPs genotyped were associated with lobular breast cancer at a genome-wide significance level, with the strongest association being for rs2121783 at 3p13 (OR = 1.11, 95%CI = 1.07–1.15, P = 4.5×10−7; Table S4).

Table 1. rs11977670, chromosome 7:139942304 G>A, and association ILC in populations of European ancestry.

Study/Consortia N Studies Cases Controls MAF OR (95% CI)* P
Phase I
GLACIER 1 1,470 4,755 0.437 1.16 (1.07, 1.26) 6.1×10−4
BCAC 34 4,150 29,488 0.429 1.10 (1.05, 1.16) 4.0×10−5
Combined 35 5,620 34,243 0.430 1.12 (1.07, 1.16) 1.4×10−7
Phase II
UK PHASE II 1 479 1,452 0.426 1.38 (1.19, 1.60) 2.9×10−5
Phase I+II 36 6,099 5,695 0.430 1.13 (1.09, 1.18) 6.0×10−10

* per allele.

Figure 2. Forest plot for rs11977670.

Figure 2

Table 2. Association with risk of breast cancer for rs11977670 stratified by breast cancer tumour subtypes (Pooled analysis, BCAC, GLACIER, UK PHASE II).

Tumour type N Studies Cases Controls OR (95% CI) P P het
All tumours combined 43 48,286 43,776 1.05 (1.03, 1.07) 5.1×10−7
Ductal invasive 34 23,549 29,488 1.02 (1.00, 1.05) 0.070
ER pos 32 15,010 29,250 1.03 (1.00, 1.06) 0.047
ER neg 33 4,266 29,068 0.97 (0.93, 1.02) 0.208
DCIS 22 847 23,372 1.06 (0.96, 1.17) 0.231 0.900 ai
Lobular invasive 36 6,099 35,695 1.13 (1.09, 1.18) 6.0×10−10 1.3×10−5 bi
ER pos 34 4,135 35,457 1.13 (1.08, 1.19) 2.1×10−7 1.8×10−4 bii
ER neg 32 268 33,791 1.22 (1.03, 1.45) 0.022 0.009 biii
LCIS 16 437 25,488 1.10 (0.96, 1.26) 0.179 0.198 c
Lobular (invasive+LCIS) 36 6,536 35,695 1.13 (1.09, 1.18) 4.2×10−10
ER pos 34 4,202 35,457 1.13 (1.08, 1.18) 3.1×10−7
ER neg 32 278 33,791 1.20 (1.01, 1.42) 0.035
ai

Ductal (invasive) vs Ductal (in situ) in subjects where ER status exists, adjusted for ER status.

bi

Ductal (invasive) vs Lobular (invasive) in subjects where ER status exists adjusted for ER status, UK population-based studies grouped together.

bii

Ductal (invasive) vs Lobular (invasive), ER positive only.

biii

Ductal (invasive) vs Lobular (invasive), ER negative only.

c

Lobular (Invasive) vs Lobular (in situ) in subjects where ER status exists, adjusted for ER status.

rs11977670 at 7q34 (position:139942304, GRCh Build 37) is intergenic, 65 kb from the nearest gene, JHDM1D, a histone demethylase and 500 kb from BRAF, a gene frequently mutated in melanoma. It is also in close proximity to a predicted novel U1 spliceosomal RNA that contains two U1 specific promoter motifs (Figure S2). ENCODE data on normal human mammary epithelial cells (HMEC), and breast carcinoma (MCF-7), were used to establish chromatin states in the region and showed that rs11977670 lies in region marked by H3K27 acetylation, Figure S3.

Using expression data from the Cancer Genome Atlas Network (TCGA database) [27], we assessed expression of the nine genes within 0.5 Mb of rs11977670 by breast cancer subtype (ER+ ILC, 40 cases; ER+ IDC, 341 cases; and ER-negative IDC, 108 cases; Figure S4). Three genes showed differential expression in ER+ ILC compared to ER+ IDC (BRAF, P = 0.006; NDUFB2, P = 0.02, SLC37A3, P = 0.05), however none reached statistical significance when correcting for multiple testing. Another two genes, JHDM1D and ADCK2, showed a difference in expression between ER-negative and ER+ cancers, but this was not lobular-specific. To further investigate which genes may be influenced by SNPs tagged by rs11977670, germline genotype data for rs13225058 (A/G), a surrogate for rs11977670 (G/A) (r2 = 0.79) was taken from the TCGA database (SNP6.0 Affymetrix array) and compared to expression of these genes, correcting for copy number variation, in 335 ER+ primary breast cancers where both genotype and expression data was available. A significant difference, after correcting for multiple testing, was found in expression between the AA and GG genotype for two genes JHDM1D (P = 0.0005) and SLC37A3 (P = 0.004), Figure S5a. Confining the analysis to the 36 ILC cases with data in TCGA showed no significant genotype specific expression due small numbers although there was the suggestion of a trend towards overexpression with the GG genotype (2 cases), Figure S5b. 48 of the cases also had expression data on adjacent normal breast tissue, but due to the small numbers no significant genotype specific expression changes were detected, Figure S6. There was no evidence of copy number variation around rs11977670 and no evidence of an excess of somatic mutations in JHDM1D, SLC37A3 or BRAF in ILC.

Assessment of the 75 known breast cancer susceptibility loci for association with ILC and LCIS

Most (56 of 75) known common breast cancer susceptibility loci were associated with ILC at P<0.05 with the effect in the same direction as previously reported (Table S5), and 13 of these reached genome-wide significance (P<5×10−8, Table 3). The strongest associations were with SNPs close to FGFR2 (rs2981579, OR = 1.38, P = 5.1×10−52), TOX3 (rs3803662, OR = 1.33, P = 1.1×10−35), at 1p11.2 (rs11249433, OR = 1.25, P = 2.7×10−25) and 11q13.3 (rs554219, OR = 1.33, P = 1.6×10−22). All 13 loci had previously been shown to be associated with ER+ breast cancer and one locus, rs11249433 (1p11.2), with lobular histology in subgroup analysis. Of the remaining 19 SNPs with P≥0.05, 18 had ORs in the same direction as previously reported for overall breast cancer (Sign test P = 0.0001), suggesting that these SNPs are also likely to predispose to LCIS. Only one of the seven ER-negative specific loci on the iCOGS array showed a significant association with ILC (rs12710696, P = 0.037). In case-only analyses, no SNP showed an association with family history of breast cancer or young age at onset of ILC.

Table 3. SNPs associated with ILC (P<5×10−8) or LCIS (P<0.05) in a pooled lobular analysis (GLACIER and BCAC).

MAF ILC vs Controls* LCIS vs Controls** P-het
Cytoband Gene RS number Controls OR (95% CI) P OR (95% CI) P ILC vs LCIS
10q26.13 FGFR2 rs2981579 0.40 1.38 (1.32, 1.44) 5.1×10−52 1.19 (1.03, 1.37) 0.019 0.04
16q12.1 TOX3 rs3803662 0.26 1.33 (1.27, 1.39) 1.1×10−35 1.35 (1.16, 1.57) 1.2×10−4 0.99
1p11.2 rs11249433 0.40 1.25 (1.20, 1.30) 2.7×10−25 1.15 (1.00, 1.33) 0.050 0.94
11q13.3 rs554219 0.12 1.33 (1.26, 1.41) 1.6×10−22 1.31 (1.08, 1.60) 0.007 0.80
9q31.2 rs865686 0.38 0.83 (0.79, 0.86) 1.0×10−17 0.72 (0.61, 0.84) 2.2×10−5 0.12
2q35 rs13387042 0.49 0.84 (0.80, 0.87) 5.7×10−17 0.90 (0.78, 1.04) 0.145 0.21
11q13.3 rs75915166 0.06 1.40 (1.29, 1.51 1.2×10−16 1.55 (1.20, 2.01) 7.8×10−4 0.54
11q13.3 rs614367 0.14 1.24 (1.18, 1.31) 7.2×10−15 1.32 (1.10, 1.58) 0.003 0.46
10q21.2 ZNF365 rs10995190 0.16 0.80 (0.75, 0.85) 1.7×10−13 0.69 (0.55, 0.87) 0.002 0.10
5q11.2 MAP3K1 rs889312 0.28 1.18 (1.13, 1.23) 9.1×10−13 1.05 (0.89, 1.22) 0.576 0.03
10q22.3 ZMIZ1 rs704010 0.38 1.14 (1.10, 1.19) 3.7×10−10 1.15 (0.99, 1.33) 0.063 0.49
10p12.31 MLLT10 rs1243182 0.32 1.14 (1.09, 1.19) 6.1×10−9 1.29 (1.11, 1.49) 7.8×10−4 0.49
4q34.1 ADAM29 rs6828523 0.12 0.82 (0.77, 0.88) 1.6×10−8 0.96 (0.77, 1.21) 0.751 0.21
8q24.21 rs13281615 0.41 1.13 (1.08, 1.18) 2.1×10−8 1.13 (0.97, 1.30) 0.116 0.86
2q35 DIRC3 rs16857609 0.26 1.10 (1.05, 1.15) 3.5×10−5 1.25 (1.07, 1.46) 0.006 0.625
2q14.2 rs4849887 0.10 0.91 (0.84, 0.97) 0.007 0.71 (0.54, 0.93) 0.012 0.11
6q14.1 rs17529111 0.22 1.06 (1.01, 1.11) 0.020 1.25 (1.06, 1.48) 0.009 0.04
2p24.1 rs12710696 0.36 1.05 (1.00, 1.09) 0.037 1.17 (1.01, 1.35 0.034 0.10
5p15.33 TERT,hTERT rs7726159 0.34 1.03 (0.99, 1.07) 0.195 1.22 (1.05, 1.42) 0.008 0.254
1q32.1 LGR6 rs6678914 0.41 1.02 (0.98, 1.06 0.415 0.77 (0.67, 0.90) 8.0×10−4 0.0007
8q21.11 rs6472903 0.18 0.98 (0.93, 1.03) 0.459 0.81 (0.66, 0.99) 0.036 0.11
5p15.33 TERT rs10069690 0.26 1.01 (0.97, 1.06) 0.615 1.18 (1.01, 1.38) 0.040 0.19

*5622 cases, 34272 controls.

**401 cases, 24045 controls.

For the 75 known breast cancer susceptibility loci, case-control analysis for the 401 cases of pure LCIS (without invasion) and 24,045 controls, revealed 15 out of 75 SNPs associated with LCIS at P<0.05 (Table 3). The strongest associations were for rs865686 (9q31.2, P = 2.2×10−5); rs3803662 (TOX3, P = 1.2×10−4), c11_pos69088342/rs75915166 (11q13.3, P = 7.8×10−4) and rs1243482 (MLLT10, 10p12.31, P = 7.8×10−4) that is partially correlated (r2 = 0.69) with rs7072776, a recently identified ER+ breast cancer predisposition locus that showed a weaker association with LCIS (OR = 1.17, 95%CI = 1.00–1.36, P = 0.05; Table S5). Forty-seven of the remaining 60 SNPs at P>0.05 had ORs in the same direction as for ILC. This is greater than one would expect by chance (Sign Test P = 1.2×10−5) suggesting many of these SNPs predispose to LCIS, but the study did not have enough power to detect these associations with the small sample size.

A global test in case-only analysis (ILC vs LCIS) indicated no significant differences in associations of the 75 SNPs between LCIS and ILC (likelihood ratio test (75 df) = 0.438). However, individual SNP analyses suggested some differences. Two loci showed stronger associations with ILC than pure LCIS: rs2981579, FGFR2 (P-het = 0.02); and rs889312, 5q11.2 (P-het = 0.03). Case-only analysis also suggested that two ER-negative specific SNPs [23], [25] were more strongly associated with LCIS than ILC: rs6678914, 1q32.1 (P-het = 0.0007) and rs17529111, 6q14.1 (P-het = 0.04) Table 3. The remaining SNPs showed no significant heterogeneity between ILC and LCIS.

Assessment of the 75 known susceptibility SNPs for differential effects on ILC and IDC

In order to identify lobular specific SNPs, we performed a case-only analysis of 3,201 ER+ ILC cases and 15,024 ER+ IDC cases from BCAC. Analysis was confined to ER+ cases since 94% of ILC cases were ER+ (compared to 78% of IDC in BCAC). A global test indicated significant differences in SNP associations between ILC and IDC (likelihood ratio test (75 df) P = 5.9×10−6). The SNP showing the largest difference between ILC and IDC was rs11249433 at chr 1p11.2 (P-het = 2.7×10−8; Table 4), a SNP previously associated with lobular histology. At P<0.05, a further two loci were associated more strongly with ILC than IDC: rs2981579, FGFR2 (P-het = 5.3×10−3) and rs10995190, 10q21.2 (P-het = 0.002). This analysis also identified four IDC-specific SNPs at P<0.05: rs10941679, 5p12 (P-het = 1.5×10−4); rs2588809, RAD51L1 (P-het = 0.001); rs6472903, 8q21.11 (P-het = 0.004); rs1550623, CDCA7 (P-het = 0.031) Table S6.

Table 4. SNPs showing differential lobular and ductal associations with breast cancer risk in BCAC subjects (ER+ tumours only).

IDC vs Controls* ILC vs Controls** P-het
Cytoband Genes RS number MAF OR (95% CI) P OR (95% CI) P Ductal vs Lobular
1p11.2 rs11249433 0.400 1.09 (1.06, 1.13) 2.3×10−9 1.28 (1.22, 1.35) 7.1×10−20 2.7×10−8
5p12 rs10941679 0.254 1.17 (1.13, 1.21) 4.0×10−21 1.03 (0.97, 1.10) 0.318 1.5×10−4
10q26.13 FGFR2 rs2981579 0.404 1.31 (1.27, 1.35) 1.2×10−71 1.42 (1.35, 1.50) 3.4×10−38 5.3×10−3
14q24.1 RAD51L1 rs2588809 0.158 1.12 (1.08, 1.17) 8.7×10−9 0.99 (0.92, 1.07) 0.870 0.001
10q21.2 ZNF365 rs10995190 0.158 0.87 (0.84, 0.91) 4.1×10−11 0.76 (0.71, 0.83) 1.2×10−11 0.002
8q21.11 rs6472903 0.178 0.89 (0.85, 0.92) 2.9×10−9 1.00 (0.93, 1.07) 0.895 0.004
2q31.1 CDCA7 rs1550623 0.156 0.93 (0.89, 0.96) 2.1×10−4 1.01 (0.94, 1.08) 0.839 0.031

*15023 cases, 29273 controls.

**3201 cases, 29273 controls.

Assessment of the 75 known susceptibility SNPs for effects on mixed ILC-IDC cancer predisposition

Case-control analysis of 690 mixed ductal–lobular carcinomas revealed 25 loci that showed an association with these mixed cancers at P<0.05. The top hits were at FGFR2 (rs2981579, OR = 1.37, P = 1.6×10−7), rs941764 (CCDC88C, OR = 1.25, P = 3.6×10−4) and rs10995190 (ZNF365, OR = 0.74, P = 3.9×10−4). The case-only analysis above showed that two of these SNPs are more strongly associated with ILC than IDC (rs2981579, rs10995190). rs941764 showed no association with ILC and only weak association with ER+ IDC, Table S6.

Discussion

Our analyses of a total of 6,539 lobular cancers (including 436 cases of pure LCIS) and 35,710 controls has identified for the first time a lobular-specific SNP, rs11977670 (JHDM1D; OR = 1.13 P = 4.2×10−10, that showed little evidence of association with IDC (P = 0.07) or DCIS (P = 0.23). Identification of the target of this association will require fine mapping of the region, followed by functional assays to determine which gene(s) the key SNPs regulate. The preliminary in silico functional analysis suggests that SNPs in this region may be influencing expression of JHDM1D (a histone demethylase) and SLC37A3 (a sugar-phosphate exchanger). For JHDM1D this appears to be a recessive effect, in contrast to the susceptibility data, which suggests a dominant effect. There are little data on the role of these genes in cancer. There is some evidence that increased expression of JHDM1D can suppress tumor growth by regulating angiogenesis [28] and decreased expression promotes invasiveness, which is contrary to what one would expect from the risk data [29]. This inconsistency does shed some doubt on these results and further analysis of the region is required before any firm conclusion can be made. Studies of syndecan-1-deficient breast cancer cells, which show increased cell motility and invasiveness, demonstrate decreased expression of both JHDM1D and E-cadherin [29], suggesting the two genes may interact. Somatic mutations in CDH1 (E-Cadherin) are frequent in ILC and rare germline frameshift mutations in CDH1 have been described in ILC, particularly in families with hereditary diffuse gastric cancer (HDGC), but also in cases of familial ILC with no HDGC [30], [31]. However, none of the 56 SNPs in CDH1 that were typed on the iCOGS chip showed any association with lobular cancer at P<0.05.

It should also be noted that this study is not a true genome wide association study for lobular breast cancer as the SNPs on the iCOGS chips were chosen on the basis of some prior evidence of association with breast cancer as a whole. Although ILC would have been a small proportion of the samples in the discovery sets for these SNPs it is possible that other lobular specific loci exist that have not been included on the iCOGS chip. This is particularly true for LCIS, which would only have been included in the discovery set as a parallel phenotype when associated with invasive disease.

75 of the known common breast cancer susceptibility loci were assessed for association with ILC and LCIS. As cases of ILC were included in the discovery sets that generated these susceptibility loci and lobular breast cancer is generally ER+ (94% of the ILC cases in this study were ER+) with the majority of ILCs classified as luminal tumors [32], it is not surprising that the majority of SNPs that we found to be associated with ILC were known to also predispose to ER+ breast cancer. However, some loci were only associated with ER+ IDC and not with ILC, particularly rs10941679 at 5p12, previously shown to predispose more strongly to ER-positive, lower-grade cancers [33], P-het = 2.7×10−8. Others showed a much stronger association with ILC than IDC, particularly rs11249433 at 1p11.2, as previously described [26]. These data suggest specific etiological pathways for the development of different histological subtypes of breast cancer, in addition to common pathways that predispose to multiple tumor subtypes.

Despite the small number of pure LCIS cases without invasive disease, our analyses have shown for the first time that many of the SNPs that predispose to ILC also predispose to LCIS. Although only 15 of the known breast cancer SNPs were associated with LCIS risk at P<0.05, 47 of the remaining 60 SNPs at P>0.05 had ORs in the same direction as for ILC (Sign Test P = 1.2×10−5) suggesting that many more SNPs are likely to be associated with pure LCIS but did not reach statistical significance individually because of the relatively few LCIS cases without associated ILC in our sample set. This is not unexpected if LCIS is an intermediate phenotype for ILC. However, a small number of SNPs had differential effects on LCIS or ILC risk. Specifically, rs6678914 at 1q32.1 (LGR6), known to be an ER-negative specific SNP [25], that appeared to be associated with LCIS but not ILC (P-het = 0.0007), and rs17529111 at 6q14 preferentially associated with ER-negative tumors [23] that had a stronger association with LCIS than ILC (P-het = 0.04). We also identified SNPs in FGFR2 and at 5q11.2 (MAP3K1) that appear only to predispose to ILC, but have little effect on LCIS suggesting that SNPs affect different parts of the lobular carcinoma pathway. These findings are surprising and as based on small numbers need confirmation in future studies.

Some of the SNPs associated with both ILC and LCIS showed a stronger effect size in LCIS compared to ILC (for example SNPs at TOX3, 9q31.2, 11q13.3, ZNF365 and MLLT10). It is possible that the SNPs that showed an association with both LCIS and ILC predispose to the development of LCIS rather than ILC, and that the effect size is smaller in ILC as not all cases of LCIS will become invasive cancer. SNPs that predispose strongly to LCIS were also associated with ER+ IDCs but again with stronger effect sizes in LCIS, consistent with the fact that 30–40% of invasive tumors associated with LCIS will not be ILC but will be IDC, mixed ductal-lobular or other morphology.

One SNP, rs1243182 (MLLT10), that showed a strong association with LCIS (LCIS: P = 7.8×10−4, OR = 1.29; ILC: P = 6.1×10−9,OR = 1.14; ILC+LCIS: P = 3×10−10,OR = 1.15, IDC: P = 1.4×10−5,OR = 1.07, is partially correlated (r2 = 0.69) with rs7072776, a recently identified ER+ breast cancer predisposition locus, which showed no association with LCIS in this study. It is also strongly correlated with rs1243180 (r2 = 0.80), an ovarian cancer predisposition variant [34] and rs11012732 (r2 = 0.57), which predisposes to meningioma [35]. The ovarian SNP, rs1243180, also showed a strong association with lobular cancer (ILC+LCIS: P = 5.54×10−10; OR = 1.13). Conditional analysis confirmed that this was not independent of rs1243182. rs11012732 was not genotyped on the iCOGS chip. The increased risk of ovarian carcinoma after breast cancer is well documented in epidemiological studies [36]. Of note, there are also reports suggesting an association between breast cancer and meningioma [37].

In conclusion, we have identified a novel lobular-specific predisposition SNP at 7q34 close to JHDM1D that does not appear to be associated with IDC. Most known breast cancer predisposition SNPs also predispose to ILC, with some differential effects between ILC and IDC. In addition, many SNPs predisposing to invasive cancer are also likely to increase the risk for LCIS. Overall, our analyses show that genetic predisposition to IDC and lobular lesions (both ILC and LCIS) overlap to a large extent, but there are important differences that are likely to provide insights into the biology of lobular breast tumors.

Methods

Ethics statement

All studies were performed with ethical committee approval, Table S7, and subjects participated in the studies after providing informed consent.

Study populations

Phase I

Cases and controls came from 34 studies forming part of the Breast Cancer Association Consortium (BCAC) included in the COGS Project [13] (Table S1), and GLACIER (A study to investigate the Genetics of LobulAr Carcinoma In situ in EuRope MREC 06/Q1702/64), a UK case-only study of lobular breast cancer. BCAC studies recruited all types of breast cancer. Pathological information in BCAC was collected by the studies individually but combined and checked through standardized data control in a central database. A total of 4,152 ILC and 89 LCIS cases were identified by the central BCAC pathology database (see Table S2 for number of cases by study).

The GLACIER study recruited patients from participating centers throughout the UK with the aim of identifying predisposition genes for LCIS and/or ILC. Any patients aged 60 or less at the time of diagnosis, with a current or past history of LCIS (with or without invasive disease of any histological subtype) were eligible. A total of 2,539 cases were recruited: 2,167 were identified from local pathology reports in 97 UK hospitals, 346 cases were identified through the British Breast Cancer Study (BBCS) using UK Cancer Registry data and 26 cases from the Royal Marsden Breast Tissue Bank. Cryptic relatedness analysis showed no evidence of overlap between these samples and the BCAC samples. All these cases were genotyped with the iCOGS chip and compared to 5,000 UK controls selected from four UK studies participating in BCAC and already typed on the iCOGS chip. Controls were randomly selected prior to analysis so that each of these UK studies, including GLACIER, had a case∶control ratio of at least 1∶2 (Table S8). These controls were excluded from case-control comparisons with BCAC cases from the originating study. This report includes only cases of pure LCIS or ILC with or without LCIS. Cases of LCIS with IDC or mixed lobular and ductal carcinoma in GLACIER were excluded in order to perform meta-analyses with the BCAC studies which do not have information on the presence or absence of LCIS associated with an invasive cancer. After excluding individuals based on genotyping quality (see Genotyping and Analysis) and non-European ancestry, data for the GLACIER study available for analyses included 1,782 cases (1,470 ILC (with or without LCIS), 312 pure LCIS) and 4,755 controls.

Phase II

A further 516 cases (481 ILC, 35 LCIS) and 1,465 controls were analyzed as part of Phase II. Controls were recruited through the GLACIER study, but were not genotyped in Phase I on the iCOGS chip to reduce costs, and were all white West European. Cases came from the following studies: 232 cases from GLACIER, 176 from BBCS, 71 from DietCompLyf [38], 39 from King's Health Partners Cancer Biobank (KHP-CB). All cases were white West European, apart from the 39 samples from the KHP-CB where there were no associated ethnicity data. For studies that had also participated in Phase I, we selected samples so there was no overlap with the samples in Phase I.

Genotyping and analysis

Phase I

After DNA extraction from peripheral blood, GLACIER samples were genotyped on the iCOGS custom Illumina iSelect, which contains 211,155 SNPs, at King's College, London. The remaining cases and controls were genotyped as part of the COGS project described in detail elsewhere [13]. The GLACIER cases were analyzed using the same QC criteria as the COGS project. Briefly, genotypes were called using Illumina's proprietary GenCall algorithm and 10,000 SNPs were manually inspected to verify the algorithm calling. Individuals were excluded if genotypically not female, had overall call rate <95% or were ethnic outliers (248 cases) as identified by multi-dimensional scaling, combining the genotyping data with the three Hapmap2 populations. SNPs with a Gencall rate of <0.25, call rate <95% (call rate <99% if MAF <0.1) and HWE<10−7 or evidence of poor clustering on inspection of cluster plots were excluded. All SNPs with MAF <0.01 were excluded for this analysis. A cryptic relatedness analysis of the whole dataset was performed using 46,918 uncorrelated SNPs and there was no evidence of any duplicates.

For GLACIER cases and controls, principal component analysis (PCA) was carried out on a subset of 46,918 uncorrelated SNPs and used to exclude individuals or groups distinct from the main cluster using the first five principal components (PCs), Figure S7. Following removal of outliers (166 cases and 245 controls), the PCA was repeated and the first five PCs included as covariates in the analysis. The adequacy of the case-control matching was evaluated using quantile-quantile plots of test statistics and the inflation factor (λ) calculated using only uncorrelated SNPs that were not selected by BCAC and were not within one of the four common fine-mapping regions, to minimize selection for SNPs associated with breast cancer, Figure S1. As the majority of the SNPs on the iCOGS array were selected from GWAS of breast, ovarian and prostate cancer the SNPs selected for this analysis were taken from the set of SNPs selected by the prostate consortium, with the assumption that these SNPs were more likely to be representative of common SNPs in terms of population structure in our study than those selected by the breast or ovarian consortia.

For each SNP, we estimated a per-allele log-odds ratio (OR) and standard error by logistic regression, including the 5 PCs as covariates, using PLINK v1.07 (http://pngu.mgh.harvard.edu/purcell/plink/).

Genotyping and analysis of BCAC studies is described in detail elsewhere [24], in brief data were analyzed using the Genotype Library and Utilities (GLU) package to estimate per-allele ORs and standard errors for each SNP using unconditional logistic regression. All analyses were performed in subjects of European ancestry (determined by PC analyses) and adjusted for study and seven principal components.

Case-control odds ratio (OR) for ILC or LCIS cases vs controls from BCAC and GLACIER were combined using inverse variance-weighted fixed-effects meta-analysis, as implemented in METAL [39]. Case-only analyses were also carried out to compare genotype frequencies for ILC vs LCIS (GLACIER and BCAC) and ILC vs IDC (BCAC studies only), and were used as a test for heterogeneity of ORs by tumor subtype. Any study without data on both histological subtypes was dropped from the case-only analysis.

Phase II

SNPs showing the strongest evidence for association with lobular tumors (P<5×10−5) in the meta-analysis (after excluding previously reported loci) were genotyped at LGC Genomics (formerly KBiosciences) in Phase II samples. Duplicate samples genotyped on the iCOGS chip were included to assess the concordance of the two genotyping methods. Cluster plots for rs11977670 are shown in Figure S8.

A pooled analysis of ILC including Phase I (GLACIER and BCAC) and Phase II data was performed. Data were analyzed using STATA v.12 to estimate per-allele ORs and standard errors for each SNP using unconditional logistic regression. Differences in the strength of the associations with ILC, IDC and LCIS were assessed using case-only analyses. A sign test was used to test whether the number of SNPs showing associations in the same direction in two different subtypes (i.e. LCIS vs ILC, and IDC vs ILC) was significantly grater than expected by chance. A likelihood ratio test was used as a global test of the null hypothesis of no differences between subtypes for any of the ORs of the 75 known loci evaluated. Stratum-specific estimates of per-allele OR by categories of age and family history of disease were obtained from logistic regression models and differences in ORs across strata were tested using an interaction term.

Bioinformatics

In order to establish the SNP's functional role, a window of 10 kb both up and downstream was formed around the marker and pairwise r2 values calculated using 1000 genome CEU population data. Three SNPs were identified as being in LD (r2>0.5) with rs11977670 and were compared to next generation sequence technologies to elucidate the overlap between chromatin states (ENCODE Project). Two cell lines, normal human mammary epithelial (HMEC), and breast carcinoma (MCF-7), were used to establish these chromatin states, i.e. active or engaged enhancers (H3K27ac), nucleosome-depleted regions (DNase I and FAIRE), and RNA polymerase linked regions (Pol II). Expression data from the Cancer Genome Atlas Network for each gene within a 1 Mb window of rs11977670 was analyzed looking for differential expression in each breast cancer subtype (ER+ ILC, 40 cases; ER+ IDC, 341 cases; and ER-negative IDC, 108 cases). Allele data for surrogate SNP rs13225058 was obtained for all ER+ cases from TCGA. These 335 cases were used to produce genotype specific gene expression data in R. Differences in gene expression between the three genotypes were tested for using one-way-anova, verified by t-test and visually by boxplot. Linear regression was performed across all three genotypes using copy number variation as a co-variate. Level 3 copy number variation data (hg19 build) was obtained from the TCGA data portal.

Supporting Information

Figure S1

Quantile-quantile plot for GLACIER. A: QQ plot based on the 37544 uncorrelated SNPs not selected on the basis of breast cancer risk (λ = 1.04). B:QQ plot for all SNPs in dataset (λ = 1.09).

(PPTX)

Figure S2

LD block containing rs1197790.

(PPTX)

Figure S3

rs1197790 falls in a high H3K27ac region using ENCODE data from normal human mammary epithelial (HMEC), and breast carcinoma (MCF-7) cell lines to establish chromatin states in the region.

(PPTX)

Figure S4

Gene expression data taken from TCGA for genes in a 1 Mb window of rs11977670. Three genes showed differential expression in ER+ ILC compared to ER+ IDC (BRAF, P = 0.006; NDUFB2, P = 0.02, SLC37A3, P = 0.05).

(PPTX)

Figure S5

a: Genotype specific gene expression In ER+ Breast Cancers. Gene expression and genotype data was taken from TCGA and compared using a surrogate for rs11977670, rs13225058 (r2 = 0.79) for 335 ER+ cancers. A significant difference between the AA and GG genotype was only found for two genes, JHDM1D and SLC37A3. b: Genotype specific gene expression in 36 Invasive Lobular Cancers. Gene expression and genotype data was taken from TCGA and compared using a surrogate for rs11977670, rs13225058 (r2 = 0.79).

(PPTX)

Figure S6

Genotype specific gene expression in 48 cases of normal breast tissue associated with ER+ breast cancer. Gene expression and genotype data was taken from TCGA and compared using a surrogate for rs11977670, rs13225058 (r2 = 0.79) for 48 cases with normal breast tissue.

(PPTX)

Figure S7

Results of principal components analysis (PCA) – GLACIER cohort. A: PCA with the 3 HapMap populations. B: PCA after exclusion of outliers (414 cases and 245 controls).

(PPTX)

Figure S8

Cluster plots for rs11977670 is on chromosome 7 (139942304). A: Phase I – iCOGS Array – GLACIER (Illumina). B: Phase I – iCOGS Array – BCAC (Illumina). C: Phase II- KASPAR (LGC Genomics).

(PPTX)

Table S1

Participating studies from the BCAC.

(DOCX)

Table S2

Number of lobular breast cancer cases per study.

(DOCX)

Table S3

Genotype-specific odds ratios for rs11977670 and risk of lobular-specific breast cancer (based on pooled analysis of phase I and II).

(DOCX)

Table S4

Results for borderline SNPs not reaching GWS after Phase II.

(XLSX)

Table S5

Pooled lobular analysis of known SNPs (BCAC and GLACIER).

(XLSX)

Table S6

Lobular and ductal associations with breast cancer risk in BCAC subjects (ER pos only).

(XLSX)

Table S7

Details of ethical approval boards for each study.

(DOCX)

Table S8

Lobular cases and controls from UK BCAC studies. Controls from each of these studies were randomly selected to obtain a control group for GLACIER cases in a 1∶2 case to control ratio.

(DOCX)

Acknowledgments

The in silico functional results published here in whole or part based upon data generated by The Cancer Genome Atlas pilot project established by the NCI and NHGRI (Information about TCGA and the investigators and institutions who constitute the TCGA research network can be found at http://cancergenome.nih.gov) and the ENCODE Project Consortium, (Myers RM, Stamatoyannopoulos J, Snyder M, Dunham I, Hardison RC, Bernstein BE, Gingeras TR, Kent WJ, Birney E et al. A user's guide to the encyclopedia of DNA elements (ENCODE). PLoS Biol. 2011 Apr;9(4):e1001046. Epub 2011 Apr 19. PMID: 21526222; PMCID: PMC3079585)

We thank all the individuals who took part in these studies and all the researchers, clinicians, technicians and administrative staff who have enabled this work to be carried out.

Contributors

In particular, we thank: Maria Troy, Maggie Angelakos, Judi Maskiell, Gillian Dite, Annegien Broeks, Frans Hogervorst, Senno Verhoef, Emiel Rutgers, Ellen van der Schoot, Femke Atsma, Eileen Williams, Elaine Ryder-Mills, Kara Sargus, Niall McInerney, Gabrielle Colleran, Andrew Rowan, Angela Jones, Peter Bugert, Medical Faculty Mannheim, staff and participants of the Copenhagen General Population Study, Dorthe Uldall Andersen, Maria Birna Arnadottir, Anne Bank, Dorthe Kjeldgård Hansen, Charo Alonso, Guillermo Pita, Nuria Álvarez, Daniel Herrero, Primitiva Menendez, José Ignacio Arias Pérez, Pilar Zamora, the Human Genotyping-CEGEN Unit (CNIO), Hartwig Ziegler, Sonja Wolf, Volker Hermann, Heide Hellebrand, Stefanie Engert, GC-HBOC (Supported by Deutsche Krebshilfe), Karl von Smitten, Tuomas Heikkinen, Dario Greco, Irja Erkkilä, Peter Hillemanns, Hans Christiansen and Johann H. Karstens, Eija Myöhänen, Helena Kemiläinen, Heather Thorne, Eveline Niedermayr, the AOCS Management Group (D Bowtell, G Chenevix-Trench, A deFazio, D Gertig, A Green, P Webb), the ACS Management Group (A Green, P Parsons, N Hayward, P Webb, D Whiteman), Sabine Behrens, Ursula Eilber, Muhabbet Celik, Janet Olson, Susan Slager, Celine Vachon, Siranoush Manoukian, Bernad Peissel, Daniela Zaffaroni of the Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori (INT), Monica Barile, Irene Feroce of the Istituto Europeo di Oncologia (IEO), the personnel of the Cogentech Cancer Genetic Test Laboratory, Lesley Richardson, Marie-Claire Goulet, Mervi Grip, Meeri Otsukka, Kari Mononen, Teresa Selander, Nayana Weerasooriya, E. Krol-Warmerdam, J. Blom, Dr. J. Molenaar, Louise Brinton Stephen Chanock, Neonila Szeszenia-Dabrowska, Beata Peplonska, Witold Zatonski, Pei Chao, Michael Stagner, Petra Bos, Jannet Blom, Ellen Crepin, Anja Nieuwlaat, Annette Heemskerk, the Erasmus MC Family Cancer Clinic, Sue Higham, Helen Cramp, and Dan Connley, the SEARCH and EPIC teams, Breakthrough Breast Cancer and the Institute of Cancer Research for support and funding of the Breakthrough Generations Study, and the study participants, study staff, and the doctors, nurses and other health care providers and health information sources who have contributed to the studies.

Consortia members

GENICA Network. Hiltrud Brauch, Wing-Yee Lo, Christina Justenhoven: Dr. Margarete Fischer-Bosch-Institute of Clinical Pharmacology, Stuttgart, and University of Tübingen, Germany.

Yon-Dschun Ko, Christian Baisch: Department of Internal Medicine, Evangelische Kliniken Bonn gGmbH, Johanniter Krankenhaus, Bonn.

Hans-Peter Fischer: Germany Institute of Pathology, University of Bonn, Bonn.

Ute Hamann; Germany Molecular Genetics of Breast Cancer, DKFZ, Heidelberg, Germany.

Thomas Bruening, Beate Pesch, Sylvia Rabstein, Anne Lotz: Institute for Prevention and Occupational Medicine of the German Social Accident Insurance (IPA), Bochum, Germany Volker Harth: Institute for Occupational Medicine and Maritime Medicine, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Germany.

kConFab Investigators. See http://www.kconfab.org/Organisation/Members.aspx

Funding Statement

GLACIER: Genotyping was funded by the Breast Cancer Campaign (grant number 2010NovPR61, www.breastcancercampaign.org). Sample and data collection by Cancer Research UK. Core funding came from the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Centre based at Guy's and St. Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust and King's College London and the Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics (provided by the Wellcome Trust, 090532/Z/09/Z). The views expressed are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the NHS, NIHR or the Department of Health. iCOGs was partly supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research for the “CIHR Team in Familial Risks of Breast Cancer” program (JS & DE), and the Ministry of Economic Development, Innovation and Export Trade of Quebec – grant # PSR-SIIRI-701 (JS, DE, PH). JS is chair holder of the Canada Research Chair in Oncogenetics. Part of this work was supported by the European Community's Seventh Framework Programme under grant agreement number 223175 (grant number HEALTH-F2-2009-223175) (COGS). The ABCFS, NC-BCFR and OFBCR work was supported by the United States National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health (NIH) under RFA-CA-06-503 and through cooperative agreements with members of the Breast Cancer Family Registry (BCFR) and Principal Investigators, including Cancer Care Ontario (U01 CA69467), Northern California Cancer Center (U01 CA69417), University of Melbourne (U01 CA69638). Samples from the NC-BCFR were processed and distributed by the Coriell Institute for Medical Research. The content of this manuscript does not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the National Cancer Institute or any of the collaborating centers in the BCFR, nor does mention of trade names, commercial products, or organizations imply endorsement by the US Government or the BCFR. The ABCFS was also supported by the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia, the New South Wales Cancer Council, the Victorian Health Promotion Foundation (Australia) and the Victorian Breast Cancer Research Consortium. JLH is a National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Australia Fellow and a Victorian Breast Cancer Research Consortium Group Leader. MCS is a NHMRC Senior Research Fellow and a Victorian Breast Cancer Research Consortium Group Leader. The ABCS study was supported by the Dutch Cancer Society grants number NKI 2007-3839 and 2009-4363. The work of the BBCC was partly funded by ELAN-Fond of the University Hospital of Erlangen. The BBCS is funded by Cancer Research UK and Breakthrough Breast Cancer and acknowledges NHS funding to the NIHR Biomedical Research Centre, and the National Cancer Research Network (NCRN). The BCAC is funded by CR-UK (C1287/A10118 and C1287/A12014). Meetings of the BCAC have been funded by the European Union COST programme (BM0606). DE is a Principal Research Fellow of CR-UK. BIGGS: IT is supported by the Oxford Biomedical Research Centre. The BSUCH study was supported by the Dietmar-Hopp Foundation, the Helmholtz Society and the German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ). The CECILE study was funded by Fondation de France, Institut National du Cancer (INCa), Ligue Nationale contre le Cancer, Ligue contre le Cancer Grand Ouest, Agence Nationale de Sécurité Sanitaire (ANSES), Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR). The CGPS was supported by the Chief Physician Johan Boserup and Lise Boserup Fund, the Danish Medical Research Council and Herlev Hospital. The CNIO-BCS was supported by the Genome Spain Foundation, the Red Temática de Investigación Cooperativa en Cáncer and grants from the Asociación Española Contra el Cáncer and the Fondo de Investigación Sanitario (PI11/00923 and PI081120). DietCompLyf: The University of Westminster's ABC Research Unit acknowledges funding from the charity Against Breast Cancer (Registered Charity Number 1121258). The ESTHER study was supported by a grant from the Baden Württemberg Ministry of Science, Research and Arts. Additional cases were recruited in the context of the VERDI study, which was supported by a grant from the German Cancer Aid (Deutsche Krebshilfe). The GC-HBOC was supported by Deutsche Krebshilfe (107 352). The GENICA was funded by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) Germany grants 01KW9975/5, 01KW9976/8, 01KW9977/0 and 01KW0114, the Robert Bosch Foundation, Stuttgart, Deutsches Krebsforschungszentrum (DKFZ), Heidelberg, Institute for Prevention and Occupational Medicine of the German Social Accident Insurance (IPA), Bochum, as well as the Department of Internal Medicine, Evangelische Kliniken Bonn gGmbH, Johanniter Krankenhaus, Bonn, Germany. The HEBCS was financially supported by the Helsinki University Central Hospital Research Fund, Academy of Finland (132473), the Finnish Cancer Society, The Nordic Cancer Union and the Sigrid Juselius Foundation. The HMBCS was supported by a grant from the Friends of Hannover Medical School and by the Rudolf Bartling Foundation. Financial support for KARBAC was provided through the regional agreement on medical training and clinical research (ALF) between Stockholm County Council and Karolinska Institutet, The Swedish Cancer Society and Bert von Kantzow foundation. The KBCP was financially supported by the special Government Funding (EVO) of Kuopio University Hospital grants, Cancer Fund of North Savo, the Finnish Cancer Organizations, the Academy of Finland and by the strategic funding of the University of Eastern Finland. kConFab is supported by grants from the National Breast Cancer Foundation, the NHMRC, the Queensland Cancer Fund, the Cancer Councils of New South Wales, Victoria, Tasmania and South Australia and the Cancer Foundation of Western Australia. The kConFab Clinical Follow Up Study was funded by the NHMRC [145684, 288704, 454508]. Financial support for the AOCS was provided by the United States Army Medical Research and Materiel Command [DAMD17-01-1-0729], the Cancer Council of Tasmania and Cancer Foundation of Western Australia and the NHMRC [199600]. GCT is supported by the NHMRC. LMBC is supported by the ‘Stichting tegen Kanker’ (232-2008 and 196-2010). DL is supported by the FWO and the KULPFV/10/016-SymBioSysII. The MARIE study was supported by the Deutsche Krebshilfe e.V. [70-2892-BR I], the Hamburg Cancer Society, the German Cancer Research Center and the genotype work in part by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) Germany [01KH0402]. MBCSG is supported by grants from the Italian Association for Cancer Research (AIRC) and by funds from the Italian citizens who allocated the 5/1000 share of their tax payment in support of the Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Nazionale Tumori, according to Italian laws (INT-Institutional strategic projects “5×1000”). MCBCS investigators were supported by the NIH grant CA128978, an NIH Specialized Program of Research Excellence (SPORE) in Breast Cancer [CA116201] and the Breast Cancer Research Foundation, and generous gifts from the David F. and Margaret T. Grohne Family Foundation and the Ting Tsung and Wei Fong Chao Foundation. MCCS cohort recruitment was funded by VicHealth and Cancer Council Victoria. The MCCS was further supported by Australian NHMRC grants 209057, 251553 and 504711 and by infrastructure provided by Cancer Council Victoria. The MEC was supported by NIH grants CA63464, CA54281, CA098758 and CA132839. MTLGEBCS: The Quebec Breast Cancer Foundation supported the case–control study. The NBCS was supported by grants from the Norwegian Research council FUGE-NFR 181600/V11 to VK. The OBCS was supported by the Finnish Cancer Foundation, the Academy of Finland, the University of Oulu, and the Oulu University Hospital. OFBCR: This work was supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research “CIHR Team in Familial Risks of Breast Cancer” program, and grant UM1 CA164920 from the National Cancer Institute/NIH (USA). The content of this manuscript does not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the National Cancer Institute or any of the collaborating centers in the Breast Cancer Family Registry (BCFR), nor does mention of trade names, commercial products, or organizations imply endorsement by the US Government or the BCFR. The ORIGO study was supported by the Dutch Cancer Society (RUL 1997-1505) and the Biobanking and Biomolecular Resources Research Infrastructure (BBMRI-NL CP16). The PBCS was funded by Intramural Research Funds of the National Cancer Institute, Department of Health and Human Services, USA. The RBCS was funded by the Dutch Cancer Society (DDHK 2004-3124, DDHK 2009-4318). The SASBAC study was supported by funding from the Agency for Science, Technology and Research of Singapore (A*STAR),the US National Institute of Health (NIH) and the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation. The SBCS was supported by Yorkshire Cancer Research S295, S299, S305PA. SEARCH is funded by a programme grant from Cancer Research UK [C490/A10124] and supported by the UK National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Centre at the University of Cambridge. SKKDKFZS is supported by the DKFZ, Heidelberg, Germany. SZBCS: KJB is a fellow of International PhD program, Postgraduate School of Molecular Medicine, Warsaw Medical University, supported by the Polish Foundation of Science. The UKBGS is funded by Breakthrough Breast Cancer and the Institute of Cancer Research (ICR). ICR acknowledges NHS funding to the NIHR Biomedical Research Centre. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

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Associated Data

This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.

Supplementary Materials

Figure S1

Quantile-quantile plot for GLACIER. A: QQ plot based on the 37544 uncorrelated SNPs not selected on the basis of breast cancer risk (λ = 1.04). B:QQ plot for all SNPs in dataset (λ = 1.09).

(PPTX)

Figure S2

LD block containing rs1197790.

(PPTX)

Figure S3

rs1197790 falls in a high H3K27ac region using ENCODE data from normal human mammary epithelial (HMEC), and breast carcinoma (MCF-7) cell lines to establish chromatin states in the region.

(PPTX)

Figure S4

Gene expression data taken from TCGA for genes in a 1 Mb window of rs11977670. Three genes showed differential expression in ER+ ILC compared to ER+ IDC (BRAF, P = 0.006; NDUFB2, P = 0.02, SLC37A3, P = 0.05).

(PPTX)

Figure S5

a: Genotype specific gene expression In ER+ Breast Cancers. Gene expression and genotype data was taken from TCGA and compared using a surrogate for rs11977670, rs13225058 (r2 = 0.79) for 335 ER+ cancers. A significant difference between the AA and GG genotype was only found for two genes, JHDM1D and SLC37A3. b: Genotype specific gene expression in 36 Invasive Lobular Cancers. Gene expression and genotype data was taken from TCGA and compared using a surrogate for rs11977670, rs13225058 (r2 = 0.79).

(PPTX)

Figure S6

Genotype specific gene expression in 48 cases of normal breast tissue associated with ER+ breast cancer. Gene expression and genotype data was taken from TCGA and compared using a surrogate for rs11977670, rs13225058 (r2 = 0.79) for 48 cases with normal breast tissue.

(PPTX)

Figure S7

Results of principal components analysis (PCA) – GLACIER cohort. A: PCA with the 3 HapMap populations. B: PCA after exclusion of outliers (414 cases and 245 controls).

(PPTX)

Figure S8

Cluster plots for rs11977670 is on chromosome 7 (139942304). A: Phase I – iCOGS Array – GLACIER (Illumina). B: Phase I – iCOGS Array – BCAC (Illumina). C: Phase II- KASPAR (LGC Genomics).

(PPTX)

Table S1

Participating studies from the BCAC.

(DOCX)

Table S2

Number of lobular breast cancer cases per study.

(DOCX)

Table S3

Genotype-specific odds ratios for rs11977670 and risk of lobular-specific breast cancer (based on pooled analysis of phase I and II).

(DOCX)

Table S4

Results for borderline SNPs not reaching GWS after Phase II.

(XLSX)

Table S5

Pooled lobular analysis of known SNPs (BCAC and GLACIER).

(XLSX)

Table S6

Lobular and ductal associations with breast cancer risk in BCAC subjects (ER pos only).

(XLSX)

Table S7

Details of ethical approval boards for each study.

(DOCX)

Table S8

Lobular cases and controls from UK BCAC studies. Controls from each of these studies were randomly selected to obtain a control group for GLACIER cases in a 1∶2 case to control ratio.

(DOCX)


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