Abstract
Antibodies to Streptococcus gallolyticus subspecies gallolyticus (SGG) have been associated with colorectal cancer (CRC). Because SGG may correlate with impaired gut epithelia, we assessed the association of antibodies to bacterial flagellin C (FliC), a measure potentially related to this impairment, with CRC and the CRC-specific interaction with antibodies to SGG proteins. Antibodies to FliC and SGG pilus proteins Gallo2178 and Gallo2179 were measured in two independent studies, a combined study from Nijmegen and Detroit (93 CRC cases, 74 controls) and a replication data set including 576 cases and 576 controls from the Spanish multicenter multicase-control study (MCC-Spain). Logistic regression was applied to assess whether antibodies to FliC were associated with CRC and modified the association of antibodies to SGG proteins with CRC. Antibodies to FliC were associated with those to SGG Gallo2178 among CRC cases, resulting in an interaction in the association of antibodies to Gallo2178 with CRC (p = 0.007). This association was only present among individuals with high antibody responses to FliC (OR: 2.42, 95% CI: 1.45–4.06). In conclusion, our findings suggest that colorectal tumorigenesis could be accompanied by an impaired integrity of the epithelium that could result in associated increased antibody responses to bacterial proteins.
Subject terms: Cancer epidemiology, Diagnostic markers
Introduction
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the fourth most common cancer worldwide with in total 1.36 million newly diagnosed cases in 20121. Risk factors include older age, male sex, certain dietary habits, tobacco and alcohol consumption, obesity, family history of CRC as well as history of inflammatory bowel diseases2. Interest in a potential association of bacteria residing in the gut with CRC development has increased during the past years3,4. In particular, Streptococcus gallolyticus subspecies gallolyticus (SGG) was shown to be associated with CRC in several epidemiological studies but also in some mechanistic studies5–14. Boleij et al. showed that antibody responses to SGG pilus proteins Gallo2178 and Gallo2179, both being hypothesized to be involved in virulence of the bacterium15,16, were selectively detectable in adenoma and CRC cases in two studies from Nijmegen (Netherlands), and Detroit (USA)6. We reproduced this finding in two case-control studies, including a subset of the multicentric multicase-control study MCC-Spain, as well as one prospective study and demonstrated a significant association of antibody responses to Gallo2178 and Gallo2179 with an approximately 2-fold increased risk of developing CRC8,9,12.
SGG is a rare gut microbe in humans and occasionally causes systemic infection, facilitated by increased mucosal permeability, as seen in tumor development, as well as by strain specific virulence4. An impaired gut barrier, however, should also enable other organisms to invade the otherwise well-protected gut epithelium. Bacterial products like lipopolysaccharide (LPS), also called endotoxin, or motility-proteins like flagellin C (FliC) are wide-spread among bacterial species and upon infection are targets of the host immune system17. Several studies assessed the association of these common bacterial products with diseases of the gut, e.g. Crohn’s disease or CRC and its precursors7,18–21. Kang et al. found that individuals with high plasma endotoxin levels had a 1.4-fold increased risk of having adenomas20, and Kong et al. found that high levels of antibody responses to Escherichia coli (E. coli) LPS and FliC were prospectively associated with CRC in men (OR: 1.66, 95% CI: 1.10–2.51)19. In two other studies from the Netherlands and USA, Salmonella FliC was associated with colorectal adenomas (OR 4.71, 95% CI 1.10–20.14) and carcinomas (OR 3.09, 95% CI 1.22–7.79), while endotoxin levels were not7,21.
Using serological data obtained in the CRC and adenoma case-control studies from Nijmegen and Detroit and data obtained in MCC-Spain as a replication study, we here assessed whether antibody responses to FliC were simultaneously associated with CRC and with antibody responses to Gallo2178 and Gallo2179, as suggested by the gut permeability hypothesis.
Results
Association of antibody responses to FliC with CRC
In the Nijmegen/Detroit study, the OR for adenoma/CRC significantly increased with higher FliC quartile (ptrend = 0.011) with a statistically significant association of the fourth versus the first quartile (OR: 2.32, 95% CI: 1.01–5.33) (Table 1, see Supplementary Table S2 for individual studies). In the replication study MCC-Spain, the OR for CRC did not show a positive trend, although the highest risk was found in the highest FliC quartile (Q4 vs Q1, OR: 1.14, 95% CI: 0.81–1.59).
Table 1.
Study | FliC | Total n (%) | Controls n (%) | Casesa n (%) | OR (95%CI)b | ptrend |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nijmegen/Detroit studies | Q1 | 38 (23) | 19 (26) | 19 (20) | ref | |
Q2 | 29 (17) | 19 (26) | 10 (11) | 0.53 (0.20–1.43) | ||
Q3 | 37 (22) | 17 (23) | 20 (22) | 1.18 (0.48–2.91) | ||
Q4 | 63 (38) | 19 (26) | 44 (47) | 2.32 (1.01–5.33) | 0.011 | |
MCC-Spain | Q1 | 296 (26) | 145 (25) | 151 (26) | ref | |
Q2 | 254 (22) | 143 (25) | 111 (19) | 0.75 (0.53–1.06) | ||
Q3 | 288 (25) | 144 (25) | 144 (25) | 0.99 (0.70–1.38) | ||
Q4 | 314 (27) | 144 (25) | 170 (30) | 1.14 (0.81–1.59) | 0.247 |
aCases include n = 23 adenoma and n = 70 CRC cases for Nijmegen/Detroit studies, all cases were CRC in MCC Spain; bLogistic regression model, Nijmegen/Detroit study: no further adjustment, MCC-Spain: adjustment for age, sex, province, education, BMI, smoking and family history of CRC; significant associations (p-value < 0.05) are marked in bold font; Q = quartile.
Association of antibody responses to FliC with antibody positivity to SGG pilus proteins Gallo2178 and Gallo2179
We assessed in both studies, Nijmegen/Detroit and MCC-Spain, whether positivity to SGG pilus proteins was associated with antibody responses to FliC. In the total population of the Nijmegen/Detroit study, there was an association between antibody response to FliC and positivity to Gallo2179 (p = 0.040) but not to Gallo2178 (p = 0.072) (Table 2). However, when analyzing cases and controls separately we observed that antibody positivity to Gallo2178 and Gallo2179 were significantly associated with FliC antibody response among cases (p = 0.023 and p = 0.021, respectively) but not among controls (p = 0.658 and p = 0.471, respectively) (see Supplementary Table S3 for individual studies).
Table 2.
FliC quartile | Gallo2178 | p-valueb | Gallo2179 | p-valueb | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
neg n (%) | pos n (%) | neg n (%) | pos n (%) | |||
Nijmegen/Detroit studies | ||||||
Total | 150 (100) | 17 (100) | 151 (100) | 16 (100) | ||
Q1 | 36 (24) | 2 (12) | 35 (23) | 3 (19) | ||
Q2 | 27 (18) | 2 (12) | 28 (19) | 1 (6) | ||
Q3 | 29 (19) | 8 (47) | 29 (19) | 8 (50) | ||
Q4 | 58 (39) | 5 (29) | 0.072 | 59 (39) | 4 (25) | 0.040 |
Controls | 65 (100) | 9 (100) | 66 (100) | 8 (100) | ||
Q1 | 17 (26) | 2 (22) | 16 (24) | 3 (38) | ||
Q2 | 18 (28) | 1 (11) | 18 (27) | 1 (13) | ||
Q3 | 14 (22) | 3 (33) | 14 (21) | 3 (38) | ||
Q4 | 16 (25) | 3 (33) | 0.658 | 18 (27) | 1 (13) | 0.471 |
Cases a | 85 (100) | 8 (100) | 85 (100) | 8 (100) | ||
Q1 | 19 (22) | 0 (0) | 19 (22) | 0 (0) | ||
Q2 | 9 (11) | 1 (13) | 10 (12) | 0 (0) | ||
Q3 | 15 (18) | 5 (63) | 15 (18) | 5 (63) | ||
Q4 | 42 (49) | 2 (25) | 0.023 | 41 (48) | 3 (37) | 0.021 |
MCC-Spain | ||||||
Total | 1012 (100) | 140 (100) | 1015 (100) | 137 (100) | ||
Q1 | 268 (26) | 28 (20) | 269 (27) | 27 (20) | ||
Q2 | 226 (22) | 28 (20) | 225 (22) | 29 (21) | ||
Q3 | 247 (24) | 41 (29) | 250 (25) | 38 (28) | ||
Q4 | 271 (27) | 43 (31) | 0.242 | 271 (27) | 43 (31) | 0.300 |
Controls | 519 (100) | 57 (100) | 520 (100) | 56 (100) | ||
Q1 | 130 (25) | 15 (26) | 135 (26) | 10 (18) | ||
Q2 | 126 (24) | 17 (30) | 127 (24) | 16 (29) | ||
Q3 | 132 (25) | 12 (21) | 126 (24) | 18 (32) | ||
Q4 | 131 (25) | 13 (23) | 0.757 | 132 (25) | 12 (21) | 0.354 |
Cases a | 493 (100) | 83 (100) | 495 (100) | 81 (100) | ||
Q1 | 138 (28) | 13 (16) | 134 (27) | 17 (21) | ||
Q2 | 100 (20) | 11 (13) | 98 (20) | 13 (16) | ||
Q3 | 115 (23) | 29 (35) | 124 (25) | 20 (25) | ||
Q4 | 140 (28) | 30 (36) | 0.011 | 139 (28) | 31 (38) | 0.268 |
aCases include n = 23 adenoma and n = 70 CRC cases for Nijmegen/Detroit studies, all cases were CRC in MCC Spain; bChi-Square test; significant associations (p-value < 0.05) are marked in bold font.
In the replication study MCC-Spain, we partly reproduced the findings observed in the Nijmegen/Detroit study (Table 2): While there was no association between FliC quartile and positivity to neither Gallo2178 nor to Gallo2179 in the whole population, antibody positivity to Gallo2178 was significantly associated with FliC antibody response among cases (p = 0.011). The majority of cases positive for Gallo2178 (88% in the Nijmegen/Detroit study and 71% in MCC-Spain) had simultaneously antibody responses to FliC in the upper quartiles 3 and 4 (>379.5 MFI).
Association of antibody responses to SGG Gallo2178 and Gallo2179 with CRC stratified by FliC antibody response in MCC-Spain
The abovementioned analysis revealed a significant association between antibody positivity to SGG proteins with high antibody responses to FliC only among CRC cases. We performed an analysis of the association between antibody responses to SGG pilus proteins and CRC stratified by median MFI to FliC. The analysis was performed in the MCC-Spain study only since the sample size of the Nijmegen/Detroit study did not allow analysis with sufficient statistical power.
Among individuals with antibody responses to FliC below the median MFI, the association between antibody responses to SGG pilus proteins and CRC was absent (Gallo2178: OR: 0.85, 95%CI: 0.48–1.49; Gallo2179: OR: 1.26, 95% CI: 0.72–2.20) (Table 3). However, among individuals with an antibody response to FliC above the median MFI, the OR for CRC with antibody positivity to Gallo2178 and Gallo2179 was increased and reached statistical significance for Gallo2178 (Gallo2178: OR: 2.42, 95%CI: 1.45–4.06; Gallo2179: OR: 1.63, 95% CI: 0.99–2.68). This interaction was significant for Gallo2178 (pinteraction = 0.007).
Table 3.
Antigen | Controls n (%) | Cases n (%) | OR (95%CI)a | p-valuea | pinteraction | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Overall | Gallo2178 | Neg | 519 (90) | 493 (86) | |||
Pos | 57 (10) | 83 (14) | 1.57 (1.09–2.27) | 0.016 | |||
FliC Q1/Q2 | Gallo2178 | Neg | 256 (89) | 238 (91) | |||
Pos | 32 (11) | 24 (9) | 0.85 (0.48–1.49) | 0.564 | |||
FliC Q3/Q4 | Gallo2178 | Neg | 263 (91) | 255 (81) | |||
Pos | 25 (9) | 59 (19) | 2.42 (1.45–4.06) | 0.0007 | 0.007 | ||
Overall | Gallo2179 | Neg | 520 (90) | 495 (86) | |||
Pos | 56 (10) | 81 (14) | 1.46 (1.01–2.11) | 0.045 | |||
FliC Q1/Q2 | Gallo2179 | Neg | 262 (91) | 232 (89) | |||
Pos | 26 (9) | 30 (11) | 1.26 (0.72–2.20) | 0.427 | |||
FliC Q3/Q4 | Gallo2179 | Neg | 258 (90) | 263 (84) | |||
Pos | 30 (10) | 51 (16) | 1.63 (0.99–2.68) | 0.056 | 0.499 |
aLogistic regression model with adjustment for age, sex, province, education, BMI, smoking and family history of CRC; significant associations (p-value < 0.05) are marked in bold font.
Discussion
In this study we assessed the association of antibody responses to FliC with CRC as well as a potential interaction with antibody responses to SGG pilus proteins Gallo2178 and Gallo2179. We found a significant trend for higher antibody responses to FliC in CRC cases compared to controls in the Nijmegen/Detroit study, which could not be reproduced in the replication study MCC-Spain. However, antibody responses to FliC were associated with antibody responses to SGG pilus protein Gallo2178 in CRC cases of both studies resulting in a significantly stronger association of CRC with antibody positivity to Gallo2178 among individuals with high antibody responses to FliC compared to those exhibiting low responses to FliC.
FliC is a motility protein conserved among several gram-negative bacteria including Salmonella and Escherichia coli. It is recognized by the host immune system, specifically by TLR5, when it crosses the gut epithelium as it might be given in the case of a disturbed gut epithelial integrity as a result of a developing tumor22. We hypothesize that increased gut permeability in CRC development is related to an increased immune response to certain gut bacteria and that therefore antibody responses to FliC and CRC-related SGG Gallo2178 and Gallo2179 will be increased and correlated in CRC cases in contrast to controls. Our results support this hypothesis since antibody responses to SGG Gallo2178 were specifically associated with CRC in the presence of those to FliC, suggesting increased antigen sampling by the immune system. In this respect, the association of CRC with antibodies to bacterial proteins could be attributed to a complex interplay of several bacteria rather than to a single bacterial species, either invading colorectal tissue simultaneously or consecutively dependent on tumor development as proposed in the bacteria-driver passenger model4. Certain bacteria might simply be bystanders without influence on CRC development, while others might contribute to progression, e.g. by induction of inflammation.
SGG has previously been shown to promote tumor growth, in vitro using cell lines but also in vivo in mouse models. SGG may benefit from cancer metabolites in the tumor environment, and may shape its own niche environment in the developing tumor11,13–15. The effects on cell proliferation are correlated with adherence abilities of the respective SGG strains to the epithelium and can depend on the encoded pili, i.e. those expressed from loci pil1 (Gallo2178 and Gallo2179), pil2 and pil316. Furthermore, certain strain dependencies within SGG might relate to unidentified virulence factors besides pil1–3 to adhere to and colonize colon epithelia of CRC patients13. Comparative genomics of eight SGG strains from human blood and feces recently revealed that complete pil1-3 loci are only present in SGG causing bacteremia and/or endocarditis, while the fecal SGG may carry truncated versions of the pil1-3 loci23,24. This could also explain the fact that not every patient with a high FliC-titer also expresses measurable antibody responses towards both, Gallo2178 and Gallo2179.
A major strength of this work is the analysis of two separate studies, the Nijmegen/Detroit study as well as MCC-Spain as a replication study, which allowed us to assess reproducibility of the results in studies that were independently conducted. Their differences in study design and serological methodology applied, however, could also have led to the observed association of antibody responses to FliC with adenoma/CRC being present in the Nijmegen/Detroit study only. The Nijmegen/Detroit study included adenoma patients and stage I and II CRC cases whereas MCC-Spain comprised only CRC cases, including all stages. We performed an analysis separately by stage (stage I/II versus stage III/IV) in MCC-Spain and found no difference in the association of antibody responses to FliC with CRC by stage (data not shown). However, it still remains to be elucidated whether these bacteria have a role primarily in adenoma development. Furthermore, as described above, different SGG strains exhibit a distinct virulence potential by differential expression of pilus loci. In addition, the natural history of antibody responses raised against different proteins of SGG is unknown. Longitudinal studies are needed to give further insight when in relation to CRC development sero-conversion to the respective bacterial proteins appears and whether this could even differ in time for proteins of the same pilus loci. The effect on the reported associations of using ELISA in the Nijmegen/Detroit study as opposed to multiplex serology in MCC-Spain cannot be determined from the given data since direct comparisons with both assays in the same samples were not available. We therefore cannot exclude that the applied serological method further may have affected the observed differences in results between studies.
A further limitation of this study was the design and small sample size of the Nijmegen/Detroit study. We combined two independent small studies, one from Nijmegen and one from Detroit (Supplementary Tables S2 and S3). Additionally, adjusting for potential confounders was only possible in the replication study MCC-Spain. The low number of sero-positives (e.g. n = 83 Gallo2178 and n = 81 Gallo2179 sero-positive cases in MCC-Spain) further refrained us from analyzing the antibody responses to Gallo2178 and Gallo2179 in quartiles in relation to FliC quartiles. This analysis of a correlation between antibody level to FliC and Gallo2189 and Gallo2179 would further strengthen the reported results but needs larger datasets for sufficient statistical power. In addition, reverse causality cannot be excluded in a case-control study and the results presented here need to be verified in prospective studies.
In conclusion, we demonstrated that antibody responses to SGG pilus protein Gallo2178 were associated with antibody responses to FliC specifically in CRC cases. This finding suggests that CRC development may be associated with increased gut permeability and concomitant antibody responses to specific CRC-associated bacteria, like SGG.
Methods
Study population
Nijmegen and detroit studies
The study populations have been described previously6,7,21. Serum samples from 37 stage I/II CRC and 12 adenoma patients, who had been admitted to the Radboud University Medical Center (Nijmegen, the Netherlands) were collected. Serum from 27 healthy blood donors >50 years of age were used as controls. Plasma samples from patients who participated in a population-based case-control study in Metropolitan Detroit (USA) were included in the study comprising 26 stage I/II CRC patients, 7 CRC patients with unknown stage, 11 adenoma patients and 47 healthy controls. The use of the samples was approved by the local medical ethical committees (CMO Nijmegen/Arnhem #2006/078 and Wayne State University Human Investigation Committee #0409000504). Serum and plasma samples were stored at −80 °C until use.
MCC-Spain study
MCC-Spain is a multicentric multicase-control study assessing the impact of environmental exposures and their interaction with genetic factors on five cancers in Spain8,25. Individuals with histologically confirmed malignant disease were recruited between 2008 and 2013 in hospitals of 12 Spanish provinces. Controls free of these cancers were randomly sampled from general practitioner’s lists at primary health centers located in the catchment areas of the hospitals where cases were recruited and frequency-matched to cases by age, sex and province. Participants completed a questionnaire through personal interview and donated a blood sample. For the present study, 576 CRC cases and 576 controls were analyzed. Population characteristics are shown in Supplementary Table S1.
The protocol of MCC-Spain was approved by the Clinical Research Ethic Committee of the Clínico San Carlos Hospital, the Clinical Research Ethic Committee of the Ramón y Cajal Hospital, the Clinical Research Ethic Committee of the Municipal Healthcare Institute of Barcelona, the Clinical Research Ethic Committee of Navarra, and the Research and Animal Well-being Ethic Committee of the Carlos III Health Institute. All the procedures contributing to this work comply with the ethical standards of the relevant national and institutional committees on human experimentation and with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2008. All participants signed an informed consent.
Gallo2178, Gallo2179 and FliC ELISA
The ELISA assays for Gallo2178, Gallo2179 and FliC have been described previously6,7,21. In short, ELISA-plates were coated with FliC (InvivoGen, San Diego, CA, USA), or nickel-affinity purified recombinant expressed proteins Gallo2178 or Gallo2179 (antigen, Ag)6. For each antigen-coated well, a second well on the same plate was incubated with coating buffer without antigen (blank). Serum or plasma samples were added to the wells and incubated. Bound serum antibodies were detected using horseradish peroxidase (HRP)-labeled goat anti-human IgG (1:25.000; Jackson Immunoresearch). Optical density of the samples was measured in duplicate and titers were calculated as the mean OD450Ag − OD450blank and expressed as arbitrary FliC, Gallo2178 or Gallo2179 units based on reference samples from Salmonella typhimurium- (S. typhimurium), or S. gallolyticus-infected patients, respectively. Cut-off values for positive Gallo2179 and Gallo2178 response were set as published before with 78% specificity (Gallo2179 > 12.4 (Detroit), Gallo2179 > 9.2 (Nijmegen), Gallo2178 > 2.0 (Detroit) and Gallo2178 > 3.7 (Nijmegen)). Quartiles for FliC were calculated based on the FliC titers of the control group and set at Q1: <2.14, Q2: 2.14 −< 3.18, Q3: 3.18 −< 6.63, and Q4: ≥6.63 (Detroit) and Q1: <1.16, Q2: 1.16 −< 1.70, Q3: 1.70 −< 3.00, and Q4: ≥3.00 (Nijmegen).
Gallo2178, Gallo2179 and FliC multiplex serology
MCC-Spain serum samples were sent on dry ice to the German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ, Heidelberg, Germany) and analyzed in a final 1:500 dilution. Multiplex serology was performed as described previously8,26. His6-tagged recombinantly expressed and affinity-purified SGG pilus proteins Gallo2178 and Gallo21796 as well as S. typhimurium FliC (InvivoGen, San Diego, CA, USA) were directly cross-linked onto fluorescence-labeled polystyrene beads (SeroMap, Luminex Corp., Austin, TX, USA). Mixing of the different antigen-coupled bead sets allowed analysis of antibody responses in a serum against several antigens in one reaction. A Luminex analyser (Luminex Corp., Austin, TX, USA) distinguishes the bead sets and simultaneously quantifies the amount of bound serum antibody by a secondary antibody conjugated with a fluorescent reporter (Streptavidin-R-Phycoerythrin). The level of antibody response was given as median fluorescence intensity (MFI) of at least 100 beads per set measured.
Cut-off definition for antibody responses to SGG Gallo2178 and Gallo2179 was arbitrary as previously described8 and defined 10% of controls as positive (cut-off: Gallo2178: 21 MFI; Gallo2179: 506 MFI). Antibody responses to FliC were analyzed in quartiles as defined in controls (Q1: ≤159 MFI; Q2: 159.5–379.5 MFI; Q3: 380–938.5 MFI; Q4: >938.5 MFI).
Statistical analysis
Nijmegen and Detroit studies were analyzed as a combined study in the main analysis to increase statistical power.
Associations between antibody responses to FliC, and Gallo2178 and Gallo2179 in the Nijmegen/Detroit study and in the MCC-Spain study were analyzed using a Chi-square test.
Associations of antibody responses to FliC, Gallo2178 and Gallo2179 with CRC were assessed using logistic regression models to compute odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (95% CI). A p-value of <0.05 was considered statistically significant. For the Nijmegen/Detroit studies, additional sociodemographic information was available only for part of the samples and thus no further adjustment was performed. For the replication in the MCC-Spain study, multivariable logistic regression models were applied with adjustment for age, sex, province, education (low (primary school or lower), intermediate (secondary school), high (University)), BMI (kg/m2, <25, 25 −< 30, ≥30), smoking (never, former, current) and family history of CRC in first or second-degree relatives. In the MCC-Spain study, we further performed a stratified analysis by median FliC MFI (379.5 MFI) to address whether antibody responses to FliC affected the association of antibody positivity to SGG pilus proteins with CRC. We added an interaction term between FliC (below/above median MFI) and Gallo2178 or Gallo2179 antibody positivity and performed a likelihood ratio test to assess statistical significance.
Supplementary information
Acknowledgements
We thank Shaynoor Dramsi and Camille Danne (Department of Microbiology, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France) for providing the purified proteins Gallo2178 and Gallo2179. This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (grant number R01-CA93817, Ikuko Kato); The Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO 016.166.089 to A.B.); the “Acción Transversal del Cáncer”, approved on the Spanish Ministry Council on the 11th October 2007; the Instituto de Salud Carlos III-FEDER funds –a way to build Europe- (grants numbers PI08/1770, PI08/0533, PI08/1359, PS09/00773, PS09/01662, PS09/01286, PS09/01903, PS09/02078, PI11/00226, PI11/01403, PI11/01810, PI11/01889, PI11/02213, PI12/00150, PI12/00265, PI12/00488, PI12/00715, PI12/01270, PI14/00613, PI17/00092); the Fundación Marques de Valdecilla (grant number API 10/09); Obra Social CAJASTUR (grant number SV-CAJASTUR-1); Recercaixa (grant number 2010ACUP 00310); Spanish Association Against Cancer (AECC) Scientific Foundation; Agència de Gestió d’Ajuts Universitaris i de Recerca (AGAUR) –Generalitat de Catalunya (Catalonian Government) (grant numbers 2009SGR1026, 2009SGR1465 and 2017SGR723); and Junta de Castilla y León (grant number LE022A10-2). Sample collection and storage was partially supported by the Instituto de Salud Carlos III-FEDER (grant number RD09/0076/00036), Xarxa de Bancs de Tumors de Catalunya sponsored by Pla Director d’Oncologia de Catalunya (XBTC).
Author Contributions
J.B., A.B., N.A. and N.F. are responsible for the conception of the study, statistical analysis, interpretation of results and drafting the manuscript. V.M., B.P., V.M.o., T.D., J.C., G.F., P.A., D.S., J.A., J.J., J.H., S.S., R.C., M.K., M.P., N.A. are the principal investigators of the MCC-Spain study; I.K. is the principal investigator of the Detroit cohort; H.T. and A.B. are the principal investigators of the Nijmegen cohort; and responsible for the conception of the respective study and data collection. A.B., H.T. and R.R. were responsible for acquisition and analysis of ELISA data. J.B., M.P. and T.W. were responsible for acquisition and analysis of multiplex serology data. All authors have seen and approved the final version of the manuscript. J.B. is the guarantor.
Data Availability
The authors confirm that the study data of the Nijmegen/Detroit studies are available as supplementary material. The study data of MCC-Spain is available only upon reasonable request to Nerea Fernández de Larrea (nfernandez@isciii.es) due to personal data safety protection regulations.
Competing Interests
The authors declare no competing interests.
Footnotes
Publisher’s note: Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Annemarie Boleij and Nuria Aragonés jointly supervised this work.
Supplementary information
Supplementary information accompanies this paper at 10.1038/s41598-019-47347-6.
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Associated Data
This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.
Supplementary Materials
Data Availability Statement
The authors confirm that the study data of the Nijmegen/Detroit studies are available as supplementary material. The study data of MCC-Spain is available only upon reasonable request to Nerea Fernández de Larrea (nfernandez@isciii.es) due to personal data safety protection regulations.