Skip to content
Open access · OA via OpenAlex

Association Between Telomere Length and Risk of Cancer and Non-Neoplastic Diseases

Philip Haycock, Stephen Burgess, Aayah Nounu, Jie Zheng, George N. Okoli, Jack Bowden, Kaitlin H. Wade, Nicholas J. Timpson, David M. Evans, Peter Willeit, Abraham Aviv, Tom R. Gaunt, Gibran Hemani, Massimo Mangino, Hayley Ellis

JAMA Oncology · 2017 · ▲ 528 citations

Abstract

IMPORTANCE: The causal direction and magnitude of the association between telomere(definition) length and incidence of cancer and non-neoplastic diseases is uncertain owing to the susceptibility of observational studies to confounding and reverse causation. OBJECTIVE: To conduct a Mendelian randomization study, using germline genetic variants as instrumental variables, to appraise the causal relevance of telomere length for risk of cancer and non-neoplastic diseases. DATA SOURCES: Genomewide association studies (GWAS) published up to January 15, 2015. STUDY SELECTION: GWAS of noncommunicable diseases that assayed germline genetic variation and did not select cohort or control participants on the basis of preexisting diseases. Of 163 GWAS of noncommunicable diseases identified, summary data from 103 were available. DATA EXTRACTION AND SYNTHESIS: Summary association statistics for single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that are strongly associated with telomere length in the general population. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for disease per standard deviation (SD) higher telomere length due to germline genetic variation. RESULTS: Summary data were available for 35 cancers and 48 non-neoplastic diseases, corresponding to 420 081 cases (median cases, 2526 per disease) and 1 093 105 controls (median, 6789 per disease). Increased telomere length due to germline genetic variation was generally associated with increased risk for site-specific cancers. The strongest associations (ORs [95% CIs] per 1-SD change in genetically increased telomere length) were observed for glioma, 5.27 (3.15-8.81); serous low-malignant-potential ovarian cancer, 4.35 (2.39-7.94); lung adenocarcinoma, 3.19 (2.40-4.22); neuroblastoma, 2.98 (1.92-4.62); bladder cancer, 2.19 (1.32-3.66); melanoma, 1.87 (1.55-2.26); testicular cancer, 1.76 (1.02-3.04); kidney cancer, 1.55 (1.08-2.23); and endometrial cancer, 1.31 (1.07-1.61). Associations were stronger for rarer cancers and at tissue sites with lower rates of stem cell division. There was generally little evidence of association between genetically increased telomere length and risk of psychiatric, autoimmune, inflammatory, diabetic, and other non-neoplastic diseases, except for coronary heart disease (OR, 0.78 [95% CI, 0.67-0.90]), abdominal aortic aneurysm (OR, 0.63 [95% CI, 0.49-0.81]), celiac disease (OR, 0.42 [95% CI, 0.28-0.61]) and interstitial lung disease (OR, 0.09 [95% CI, 0.05-0.15]). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: It is likely that longer telomeres increase risk for several cancers but reduce risk for some non-neoplastic diseases, including cardiovascular diseases.

◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.1001/jamaoncol.2016.5945
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-06-02 MST

Cite this

APA
Haycock, P., Burgess, S., Nounu, A., Zheng, J., Okoli, G.N., Bowden, J., Wade, K.H., Timpson, N.J., Evans, D.M., Willeit, P., Aviv, A., Gaunt, T.R., Hemani, G., Mangino, M., Ellis, H., Kurian, K.M., Pooley, K.A., Eeles, R.A., Lee, J.E., &amp; Fang, S. (2017). Association Between Telomere Length and Risk of Cancer and Non-Neoplastic Diseases. <em>JAMA Oncology</em>. https://doi.org/10.1001/jamaoncol.2016.5945
Vancouver
Haycock P, Burgess S, Nounu A, Zheng J, Okoli GN, Bowden J, et al. Association Between Telomere Length and Risk of Cancer and Non-Neoplastic Diseases. JAMA Oncology. 2017. doi:10.1001/jamaoncol.2016.5945.
BibTeX
@article{philip2017Associ, title = {Association Between Telomere Length and Risk of Cancer and Non-Neoplastic Diseases}, author = {Philip Haycock and Stephen Burgess and Aayah Nounu and Jie Zheng and George N. Okoli and Jack Bowden and Kaitlin H. Wade and Nicholas J. Timpson and David M. Evans and Peter Willeit and Abraham Aviv and Tom R. Gaunt and Gibran Hemani and Massimo Mangino and Hayley Ellis and Kathreena M. Kurian and Karen A. Pooley and Rosalind A. Eeles and Jeffrey E. Lee and Shenying Fang and Wei V. Chen and Matthew H. Law and Lisa Bowdler and Mark M. Iles and Qiong Yang}, journal = {JAMA Oncology}, year = {2017}, doi = {10.1001/jamaoncol.2016.5945}, }

Research neighborhood

References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.

Related findings