## Abstract Genome‐wide case‐control association study is gaining popularity, thanks to the rapid development of modern genotyping technology. In such studies, population stratification is a potential concern especially when the number of study subjects is large as it can lead to seriously inflated
Comparison of population- and family-based methods for genetic association analysis in the presence of interacting loci
✍ Scribed by Joanna M.M. Howson; Bryan J. Barratt; John A. Todd; Heather J. Cordell
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 141 KB
- Volume
- 29
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0741-0395
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
We compared different ascertainment schemes for genetic association analysis: affected sib‐pairs (ASPs), case‐parent trios, and unrelated cases and controls. We found, with empirical type 1 diabetes data at four known disease loci, that studies based on case‐parent trios and on unmatched cases and controls often gave higher odds ratio estimates and stronger significance test values than ASP designs. We used simulations and a simplified disease model involving two interacting loci, one of large effect and one smaller, to examine interaction models that could cause such an effect. The different ascertainment schemes were compared for power to detect an effect when only the locus of smaller effect was genotyped. ASPs showed the greatest power for association testing under most models of interaction except under additive and certain epistatic crossover models, for which case/controls and case‐parent trios did better. All ascertainment schemes gave an unbiased estimation of log genotype relative risks (GRRs) under a multiplicative model. Under nonmultiplicative interactions, GRRs at the minor locus as estimated from ASPs could be biased upwards or downwards, resulting in either an increase or decrease in power compared to the case/control or trio design. For the four known type 1 diabetes loci, we observed decreased risks with ASPs, which could be due to additive interactions with the remaining susceptibility loci. Thus, the optimal ascertainment strategy in genetic association studies depends on the unknown underlying multilocus genetic model, and on whether the goal of the study is to detect an effect or to accurately estimate the resulting disease risks. Genet. Epidemiol. © 2005 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Three loci for the restless legs syndrome (RLS) on chromosomes 12q, 14q, and 9p (RLS1, RLS2, and RLS3) have been mapped, but no gene has been identified as yet. RLS1 has been confirmed in families from three different populations. We conducted a family‐based association study of 159 Eur
## Abstract The haplotype‐sharing correlation (HSC) method for association analysis using family data is revisited by introducing a permutation procedure for estimating region‐wise significance at each marker on a study segment. In simulation studies, the HSC method has a correct type 1 error rate
## Abstract We propose a new approach for the analysis of copy number variants (CNVs)for genome‐wide association studies in family‐based designs. Our new overall association test combines the between‐family component and the within‐family component of the family‐based data so that the new test stat