Vitamin D-related genetic variants and prostate cancer risk in Black men

The relationship between vitamin D and prostate cancer has primarily been characterized among White men. Black men, however, have higher prostate cancer incidence and mortality rates, chronically low circulating vitamin D levels, and ancestry-specific genetic variants in vitamin D-related genes. Her...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cancer epidemiology 2025-04, Vol.95, p.102742, Article 102742
Hauptverfasser: Layne, Tracy M., Rothstein, Joseph H., Song, Xiaoyu, Andersen, Shaneda Warren, Benn, Emma K.T., Sieh, Weiva, Klein, Robert J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The relationship between vitamin D and prostate cancer has primarily been characterized among White men. Black men, however, have higher prostate cancer incidence and mortality rates, chronically low circulating vitamin D levels, and ancestry-specific genetic variants in vitamin D-related genes. Here, we examine critical genes in the vitamin D pathway and prostate cancer risk in Black men. We assessed a total of 73 candidate variants in genes (namely GC, CYP27A1, CYP27B1, CYP24A1, VDR, and RXRA) including functional variants previously associated with prostate cancer and circulating 25(OHD) in White men. Associations with prostate cancer risk were examined using genome-wide association study data for approximately 10,000 prostate cancer cases and 10,000 controls among Black men and over 85,000 cases and 91,000 controls among White men for comparison. A statistical significance threshold of 0.000685 was used to account for the 73 variants tested. None of the variants examined were significantly associated with prostate cancer risk among Black men after multiple comparison adjustment. Suggestive associations (P 
ISSN:1877-7821
1877-783X
1877-783X
DOI:10.1016/j.canep.2025.102742