Investigator

Emma E Vincent

Academic , Professor of Molecular Metabolism · The University of Bristol, Bristol Medical School (THS)

EEVEmma E Vincent
Papers(1)
Adiposity distributio…
Collaborators(10)
Emma HazelwoodHeinz FreislingHermann BrennerJames YarmolinskyLi LiLucy J GoudswaardLudmila VodickovaMarc J GunterMatthew A LeeN Jewel Samadder
Institutions(7)
Mrc Integrative Epide…Centre International …German Cancer Researc…Imperial College Lond…Qilu Hospital of Shan…Univerzita KarlovaMayo Clinic

Papers

Adiposity distribution and risks of 12 obesity-related cancers: a Mendelian randomization analysis

Abstract Introduction There is convincing evidence that overall adiposity increases the risks of several cancers. Whether the distribution of adiposity plays a similar role is unclear. Methods We used 2-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) to examine causal relationships of 5 adiposity distribution traits (abdominal subcutaneous adipose tissue (ASAT); visceral adipose tissue (VAT); gluteofemoral adipose tissue (GFAT); liver fat; and pancreas fat) with the risks of 12 obesity-related cancers (endometrial, ovarian, breast, colorectal, pancreas, multiple myeloma, liver, kidney (renal cell), thyroid, gallbladder, esophageal adenocarcinoma, and meningioma). Results Sample size across all genome-wide association studies (GWAS) ranged from 8407 to 728 896 (median: 57 249). We found evidence that higher genetically predicted ASAT increased the risks of endometrial cancer, liver cancer, and esophageal adenocarcinoma (odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) per standard deviation (SD) higher ASAT = 1.79 (1.18 to 2.71), 3.83 (1.39 to 10.53), and 2.34 (1.15 to 4.78), respectively). Conversely, we found evidence that higher genetically predicted GFAT decreased the risks of breast cancer and meningioma (ORs and 95% CIs per SD higher genetically predicted GFAT = 0.77 (0.62 to 0.97) and 0.53 (0.32 to 0.90), respectively). We also found evidence for an effect of higher genetically predicted VAT and liver fat on increased liver cancer risk (ORs and 95% CIs per SD higher genetically predicted adiposity trait = 4.29 (1.41 to 13.07) and 4.09 (2.29 to 7.28), respectively). Discussion Our analyses provide novel insights into the relationship between adiposity distribution and cancer risk. These insights highlight the potential importance of adipose tissue distribution alongside maintaining a healthy weight for cancer prevention.

71Works
1Papers
15Collaborators
Colorectal NeoplasmsNeoplasmsKidney NeoplasmsLiver NeoplasmsEndometrial NeoplasmsBreast NeoplasmsEsophageal Neoplasms

Positions

2025–

Academic , Professor of Molecular Metabolism

The University of Bristol · Bristol Medical School (THS)

2017–

Member

The University of Bristol · Bristol Population Health Science Institute

2010–

Member

The University of Bristol · Cancer

2021–

Senior Lecturer in Molecular Metabolism

University of Bristol · Translational Health Sciences

2017–

Research Fellow

University of Bristol · School of Cellular and Molecular Medicine + Population Health Science

2016–

Research Associate

University of Bristol · Population Health Science

2012–

Postdoctoral Fellow

McGill University · Goodman Cancer Research Centre

2011–

Research Assistant

University of Bristol · School of Physiology and Pharmacology

2010–

Research Assistant

University of Bristol · School of Biochemistry

Education

2010

PhD

University of Bristol · Biochemistry

2005

BSc

University of Nottingham · Biochemistry