Publications by authors named "Emilie Cordina-Duverger"

Introduction: Prostate cancer (PCa) is by far the most common type of cancer among men in western countries. However, relatively little is known about its etiology despite the high morbidity and mortality. It has been suggested that chronic inflammation may be involved in prostate carcinogenesis.

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  • A genome-wide study explored gene-environment interactions (G×E) to identify variants that could impact breast cancer risk, analyzing data from around 72,285 breast cancer cases and 80,354 controls.
  • Researchers found two specific SNP-risk factor pairs that showed a significant association with breast cancer risk, including variations related to adult height and age at menarche.
  • Overall, the study concluded that G×E interactions contribute minimally to the heritability of breast cancer and don't significantly enhance risk prediction for the disease.
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  • Circadian rhythm disruptions from night shift work and sleep disorders are linked to negative health outcomes, including lung cancer, although evidence is limited compared to breast and prostate cancer.
  • A study involving 716 lung cancer cases and 758 controls found that women who sleep more than 8 hours have a higher odds ratio (1.39) for lung cancer compared to those sleeping 7-7.9 hours, while those sleeping less than 7 hours had a lower association (1.16).
  • The research indicated that while lung cancer risk was not significantly affected by sleep disorders or night shift work overall, a notably higher risk was seen among current smokers, especially in women who had worked night shifts for 5 or more years.
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  • A study investigated the relationship between diabetes, metabolic syndrome (MetS), and prostate cancer (PCa) risk using data from the Epidemiological study of PCa (EPICAP), which included 819 PCa cases and 879 controls.
  • The results indicated no direct link between diabetes and PCa, but highlight that longer durations of treated diabetes might reduce PCa risk; no significant associations were found between MetS and PCa risk.
  • The study concludes that while diabetes duration may inversely relate to PCa risk, further research is needed to clarify the role of MetS and its components in this context.
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Objectives: We aimed to examine the effects of circadian and sleep rhythm disruptions on immune biomarkers among hospital healthcare professionals working night shifts and rotating day shifts.

Methods: Hospital nurses working either as permanent night shifters (n=95) or as day shifters rotating between morning and afternoon shifts (n=96) kept a daily diary on their sleep and work schedules over a full working week. Blood samples were collected at the beginning and end of the last shift during the week, and participants were categorized into three groups based on work shift: morning shift (39 day shifters sampled at 7:00 and 14:00), afternoon shift (57 day shifters sampled at 14:00 and 21:00), and night shift (95 night shifters sampled at 21:00 and 7:00).

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  • - The study investigated the link between sleep disturbances and prostate cancer risk, finding that overall sleep duration and deprivation weren't major factors, regardless of cancer aggressiveness.
  • - However, sleep deprivation increased prostate cancer risk for men with an evening chronotype, and long-term use of sleep medications was also associated with higher risk, especially in those who worked nights or didn't use NSAIDs.
  • - The findings suggest that factors like chronotype and specific work schedules may influence the relationship between sleep issues and prostate cancer, indicating the need for further research to identify high-risk subgroups for potential preventive measures.
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Background: Night work has been increasing in the last decades due to new working arrangements for good and services production. Numerous studies have shown that night shift work causes disruptions in circadian rhythms that may affect health. In 2019, night shift work was classified as probably carcinogenic to humans by the International Agency for Research on Cancer, and may contribute to other health disorders.

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Background: Telemonitoring of circadian and sleep cycles could identify shift workers at increased risk of poor health, including cancer and cardiovascular diseases, thus supporting personalized prevention.

Methods: The Circadiem cross-sectional study aimed at determining early warning signals of risk of health alteration in hospital nightshifters (NS) versus dayshifters (DS, alternating morning and afternoon shifts). Circadian rhythmicity in activity, sleep, and temperature was telemonitored on work and free days for one week.

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  • * Through analysis of over 9 million genetic variants, the researchers found that none showed a significant interaction with MHT use for breast cancer risk, indicating common genetic variations do not heavily influence this association.
  • * The strongest evidence of interaction was linked to a specific genetic variant, but overall findings suggest MHT's effect on breast cancer risk is primarily not affected by common genetic factors.
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Background: Although prostate cancer (PCa) is the most frequent male cancer in industrialized countries, little is known about its aetiology. The literature has suggested an influence of the environment, including occupational exposures, but results are inconsistent. In this context, we investigated PCa risk associated to employment among several occupations using data from EPICAP study.

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Purpose: Thyroid cancer is the most common endocrine cancer and its etiology is still not well understood. The aim of the present study was to assess the association between an adapted dietary inflammatory index and differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC) risk in two population-based case-control studies (CATHY and YOUNG-THYR) conducted in France.

Methods: These studies included a total of 1321 DTC cases and 1502 controls, for which an adapted dietary inflammatory index (ADII) was computed based on food frequency questionnaires in each study separately.

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Dietary regimens promoting inflammatory conditions have been implicated in breast cancer development, but studies on the association between pro-inflammatory diet and breast cancer risk have reported inconsistent results. We investigated the association between the inflammatory potential of diet and breast cancer risk in a case-control study in France including 872 breast cancer cases and 966 population controls. All women completed a food frequency questionnaire that was used to compute a Dietary Inflammatory Index (DII) based on the inflammatory weight of 33 dietary components.

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While being in a committed relationship is associated with a better prostate cancer prognosis, little is known about how marital status relates to its incidence. Social support provided by marriage/relationship could promote a healthy lifestyle and an increased healthcare seeking behavior. We investigated the association between marital status and prostate cancer risk using data from the PRACTICAL Consortium.

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  • The study aims to understand how genetic factors influence the risk of radiation-induced thyroid cancer by analyzing the radiation exposure from diagnostic procedures in childhood and adulthood.
  • It involved genotyping 1,071 differentiated thyroid cancer cases and 1,188 controls, focusing on 5,817 SNPs in genes related to DNA damage repair.
  • Key findings indicated a significant correlation between specific genetic variants (like those in CDH2 and NFATc2) and an increased risk of developing thyroid cancer, suggesting these variants could play a crucial role in susceptibility to this disease.
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Background: Genetic testing for breast cancer susceptibility is widely used, but for many genes, evidence of an association with breast cancer is weak, underlying risk estimates are imprecise, and reliable subtype-specific risk estimates are lacking.

Methods: We used a panel of 34 putative susceptibility genes to perform sequencing on samples from 60,466 women with breast cancer and 53,461 controls. In separate analyses for protein-truncating variants and rare missense variants in these genes, we estimated odds ratios for breast cancer overall and tumor subtypes.

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Elevated body mass index (BMI) has been inconsistently associated with prostate cancer occurrence but it has been suggested that life course adulthood obesity may be associated with an increased risk of prostate cancer. However, few studies have investigated lifetime BMI and prostate cancer risk. We analyzed life course BMI trajectories on prostate cancer risk based on data from the Epidemiological study of Prostate Cancer (EPICAP).

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Experimental and epidemiologic studies suggest that light at night (LAN) exposure disrupts circadian rhythm, and this disruption may increase breast cancer risk. We investigated the potential association between residential outdoor LAN and breast cancer risk. A population-based case-control study was conducted in Vancouver, British Columbia and Kingston, Ontario, Canada with incident breast cancer cases, and controls frequency matched by age in the same region.

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Background: GSTM1 and GSTT1 are involved in detoxification of xenobiotics, products of oxidative stress and in steroid hormones metabolism. We investigated whether GSTM1 and GSTT1 gene deletion was associated with DTC risk and explored interaction with non-genetic risk factors of DTC.

Methods: The study included 661 DTC cases and 736 controls from two case-control studies conducted in France and New Caledonia.

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  • A large meta-analysis examined how germline variants impact breast cancer mortality in women of European ancestry, analyzing data from around 96,661 patients.
  • The study used data from approximately 10.4 million variants and found that no variant was strongly associated with breast cancer-specific mortality, although a couple of variants on chromosome 7 showed some significance for ER-positive and ER-negative breast cancer.
  • The findings suggest that while there are specific genetic variants related to breast cancer outcomes, there is still a significant challenge in using genetic information to predict mortality in breast cancer patients.
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Exposure to environmental chemicals with hormonal effects, such as organochlorine compounds (OCs), during developmental periods of breast cells may have an impact on the incidence of breast cancer later in life. However, the assessment of exposure to these chemicals that occurred in early life at the time of breast cancer development in adult women is a difficult challenge in epidemiological studies. Plasma levels of the OCs p,p'-dichlorodiphenyl dichloroethene (DDE) and polychlorinated biphenyl congener 153 (PCB153) were measured in 695 cases and 1055 controls of a population-based case-control study conducted in France (CECILE study).

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Stratification of women according to their risk of breast cancer based on polygenic risk scores (PRSs) could improve screening and prevention strategies. Our aim was to develop PRSs, optimized for prediction of estrogen receptor (ER)-specific disease, from the largest available genome-wide association dataset and to empirically validate the PRSs in prospective studies. The development dataset comprised 94,075 case subjects and 75,017 control subjects of European ancestry from 69 studies, divided into training and validation sets.

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  • * A gene-set analysis involving 1,125 breast cancer cases and 1,172 controls revealed that variations in the XM gene pathway were significantly linked to premenopausal breast cancer risk, particularly related to specific genes like NAT2 and CYP2C19.
  • * The study found that the interaction between XM gene variants and tobacco smoking contributed to breast cancer risk, indicating that these genetic factors may influence how environmental pollutants, including those in tobacco, affect carcinogenesis.
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Night shift work has been suspected to increase breast cancer risk but epidemiological studies have been inconsistent due to heterogeneous assessment of exposure to night work. To overcome this limitation, we pooled data of five population-based case-control studies from Australia, Canada, France, Germany, and Spain into a single harmonized dataset using a common definition of night work including 6093 breast cancer cases and 6933 population controls. The odds ratio for breast cancer in women who ever worked at night for at least 3 h between midnight and 5 a.

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Breast cancer risk is influenced by rare coding variants in susceptibility genes, such as BRCA1, and many common, mostly non-coding variants. However, much of the genetic contribution to breast cancer risk remains unknown. Here we report the results of a genome-wide association study of breast cancer in 122,977 cases and 105,974 controls of European ancestry and 14,068 cases and 13,104 controls of East Asian ancestry.

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Most common breast cancer susceptibility variants have been identified through genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of predominantly estrogen receptor (ER)-positive disease. We conducted a GWAS using 21,468 ER-negative cases and 100,594 controls combined with 18,908 BRCA1 mutation carriers (9,414 with breast cancer), all of European origin. We identified independent associations at P < 5 × 10 with ten variants at nine new loci.

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