4.5 Article

Testing the generalizability of ancestry-specific polygenic risk scores to predict prostate cancer in sub-Saharan Africa

Journal

GENOME BIOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13059-022-02766-z

Keywords

Africa; Health disparities; Genomic medicine; Polygenic risk scores; Population genetics; Prostate cancer

Funding

  1. NCI [U01CA184374]
  2. NIGMS MIRA grant [R35GM133727]
  3. Integrated Cancer Research Center at Georgia Institute of Technology

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Genome-wide association studies do not always replicate well across populations, limiting the generalizability of polygenic risk scores (PRS). Existing PRS built from European populations perform better in European individuals than in African individuals. Leveraging information from African Americans could improve PRS performance for sub-Saharan African individuals. However, current PRS are largely unable to predict aggressive forms of prostate cancer in African individuals.
Background Genome-wide association studies do not always replicate well across populations, limiting the generalizability of polygenic risk scores (PRS). Despite higher incidence and mortality rates of prostate cancer in men of African descent, much of what is known about cancer genetics comes from populations of European descent. To understand how well genetic predictions perform in different populations, we evaluated test characteristics of PRS from three previous studies using data from the UK Biobank and a novel dataset of 1298 prostate cancer cases and 1333 controls from Ghana, Nigeria, Senegal, and South Africa. Results Allele frequency differences cause predicted risks of prostate cancer to vary across populations. However, natural selection is not the primary driver of these differences. Comparing continental datasets, we find that polygenic predictions of case vs. control status are more effective for European individuals (AUC 0.608-0.707, OR 2.37-5.71) than for African individuals (AUC 0.502-0.585, OR 0.95-2.01). Furthermore, PRS that leverage information from African Americans yield modest AUC and odds ratio improvements for sub-Saharan African individuals. These improvements were larger for West Africans than for South Africans. Finally, we find that existing PRS are largely unable to predict whether African individuals develop aggressive forms of prostate cancer, as specified by higher tumor stages or Gleason scores. Conclusions Genetic predictions of prostate cancer perform poorly if the study sample does not match the ancestry of the original GWAS. PRS built from European GWAS may be inadequate for application in non-European populations and perpetuate existing health disparities.

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