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Evaluation of two methods for assessing gene-environment interactions using data from the Danish case-control study of facial clefts

✍ Scribed by Analee J. Etheredge; Kaare Christensen; Deborah del Junco; Jeffrey C. Murray; Laura E. Mitchell


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2005
Tongue
English
Weight
97 KB
Volume
73
Category
Article
ISSN
1542-0752

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

BACKGROUND

Epidemiological investigations have begun to consider gene‐environment (GE) interactions as potential risk factors for many diseases, including several different birth defects. However, traditional methodological approaches for the analysis of case‐control data tend to have low power for detection of interaction effects. A log‐linear approach that can impose the assumption that the genotype and exposure of interest occur independently in the population has been proposed as a potentially more powerful method for assessing GE interactions but has not been widely applied in the published literature.

METHODS

The present analyses were undertaken to compare the results obtained when stratified analyses and a log‐linear approach were used to assess potential GE interactions. The analyses were conducted using data from a population‐based, case‐control study conducted in Denmark and considered associations between nonsyndromic cleft lip with or without cleft palate (CL±P), infant genotype for variants of RAR‐α, TGF‐α, TGF‐β__3__, and MSX1, and maternal exposure to smoking, alcohol, and multivitamins.

RESULTS

Neither the stratified nor the log‐linear analyses provided evidence that that risk of CL±P is influenced by any of the GE interactions that were evaluated, despite the potential increase in power offered by the latter approach. Further, the analyses highlight concerns regarding the power to reject the assumption of independence of the genetic and environmental factor of interest in the controls and related concerns regarding the validity of results obtained using the log‐linear approach when the underlying assumption is violated.

CONCLUSIONS

The potential increase in power offered by the log‐linear approach is offset by concerns regarding the validity of this approach when the independence assumption is violated. Birth Defects Research (Part A), 2005. © 2005 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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