Associations between plasma ANGPTL4 levels and the risk of 24 cancers: a prospective cohort study
Cytokine, 2025
Cheng X., Zhao S., Du M., Guo C., Chen X., Zhang T., Liu Z.
| Disease area | Application area | Sample type | Products |
|---|---|---|---|
Oncology | Patient Stratification | Plasma | Olink Explore 3072/384 |
Abstract
Background
Angiopoietin-like 4 (ANGPTL4) is a hepatokine involved in metabolism and inflammation and has been implicated in oncogenesis, yet its relationship with cancer risk in humans remains unclear.
Methods
We analyzed 35,716 cancer-free UK Biobank participants with baseline plasma ANGPTL4. Multivariable Cox models and restricted cubic splines assessed associations with 24 site-specific incident cancers; bidirectional two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) evaluated causality.
Results
During a median follow-up of 12.5 years, 9304 incident cancer cases occurred. Compared with the lowest quartile (Q1), the higher quartiles (Q2, Q3, and Q4) of ANGPTL4 levels were significantly associated with the risks of ten cancers, including cancers of the bladder, breast, cervix uteri, colorectum/anus, esophagus, kidney, liver, mesothelial/soft tissues, multiple myeloma, and ovary (hazard ratios ranging from 1.02 to 3.98). Risks generally increased across ANGPTL4 quartiles, and spline analyses supported approximately linear dose–response patterns. Adding ANGPTL4 to an age–sex model improved discrimination across several sites (ΔC-index 0–0.071), with statistical significance observed only for breast cancer. Associations were directionally consistent but heterogeneous by age, sex, and BMI. Forward MR provided no evidence that genetically proxied ANGPTL4 causally increases cancer risk. In reverse MR, genetic liability to liver cancer showed a nominal positive association with circulating ANGPTL4, suggesting ANGPTL4 may be elevated as part of tumor-related biology.
Conclusions
Higher circulating ANGPTL4 is associated with increased risk of multiple cancers, with sex-and tissue-specific heterogeneity. Although MR does not support a universal causal role, ANGPTL4 remains a promising pan-cancer biomarker for risk stratification and early prevention.