Assessing the Risk Stratification of Breast Cancer Polygenic Risk Scores in a Brazilian Cohort.

Journal: The Journal Of Molecular Diagnostics : JMD
Published:
Abstract

Polygenic risk scores (PRSs) for breast cancer have a clear clinical utility in risk prediction. PRS transferability across populations and ancestry groups is hampered by population-specific factors, ultimately leading to differences in variant effects, such as linkage disequilibrium and differences in variant frequency (allele frequency differences). Thus, locally sourced population-based phenotypic and genomic data sets are essential to assess the validity of PRSs derived from signals detected across populations. This study assesses the transferability of a breast cancer PRS composed of 313 risk variants (313-PRS) in a Brazilian trihybrid admixed ancestries (European, African, and Native American) whole-genome sequenced cohort, the Rare Genomes Project. 313-PRS was computed in the Rare Genomes Project (n = 853) using the UK Biobank (UKBB; n = 264,307) as reference. The Brazilian cohorts have a high European ancestry (EA) component, with allele frequency differences and to a lesser extent linkage disequilibrium patterns similar to those found in EA populations. The 313-PRS distribution was found to be inflated when compared with that of the UKBB, leading to potential overestimation of PRS-based risk if EA is taken as a standard. However, case controls lead to equivalent predictive power when compared with UKBB-EA samples with area under the receiver operating characteristic curve values of 0.66 to 0.62 compared with 0.63 for UKBB.

Authors
Rodrigo A Barreiro, Tatiana De Almeida, Catarina Gomes, Frederico Monfardini, Allysson De Farias, Gabriela Tunes, Gabriel De Souza, Etienne Duim, Jaqueline De Sá Correia, Antonio Campos Coelho, Marcel Caraciolo, Yeda Oliveira Duarte, Mayana Zatz, Edson Amaro, João Oliveira, Bárbara Bitarello, Helena Brentani, Michel Naslavsky
Relevant Conditions

Breast Cancer