Two-stage sampling designs for gene association studies

被引:59
作者
Thomas, D [1 ]
Xie, RR [1 ]
Gebregziabher, M [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ So Calif, Keck Sch Med, Dept Prevent Med, Los Angeles, CA 90089 USA
关键词
gene association studies; two-stage designs; single nucleotide polymorphisms; tag SNPs;
D O I
10.1002/gepi.20047
中图分类号
Q3 [遗传学];
学科分类号
071007 ; 090102 ;
摘要
We consider two-stage case-control designs for testing associations between single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and disease, in which a subsample of subjects is used to select a panel of "tagging" SNPs that will be considered in the main study. We propose a pseudolikelihood [Pepe and Flemming, 1991: JASA 86:108-113] that combines the information from both the main study and the substudy to test the association with any polymorphism in the original set. SNP-tagging [Chapman et al., 2003: Hum Hered 56:18-31] and haplotype-tagging [Stram et al., 2003a; Hum Hered 55:27-36] approaches are compared. We show that the cost-efficiency of such a design for estimating the relative risk associated with the causal polymorphism can be considerably better than for a single-stage design, even if the causal polymorphism is not included in the tag-SNP set. We also consider the optimal selection of cases and controls in such designs and the relative efficiency for estimating the location of a causal variant in linkage disequilibrium mapping. Nevertheless, as the cost of high-volume genotyping plummets and haplotype tagging information from the International HapMap project [Gibbs et al., 2003; Nature 426:789-796] rapidly accumulates in public databases, such two-stage designs may soon become unnecessary. Genet, Epidemiol. (C) 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
引用
收藏
页码:401 / 414
页数:14
相关论文
共 48 条
[1]   Study design: Evaluating gene-environment interactions in the etiology of breast cancer - the WECARE study [J].
Bernstein, JL ;
Langholz, B ;
Haile, RW ;
Bernstein, L ;
Thomas, DC ;
Stovall, M ;
Malone, KE ;
Lynch, CF ;
Olsen, JH ;
Anton-Culver, H ;
Shore, RE ;
Boice, JD ;
Berkowitz, GS ;
Gatti, RA ;
Teitelbaum, SL ;
Smith, SA ;
Rosenstein, BS ;
Borresen-Dale, AL ;
Concannon, P .
BREAST CANCER RESEARCH, 2004, 6 (03) :R199-R214
[2]   Design and analysis of two-phase studies with binary outcome applied to Wilms tumour prognosis [J].
Breslow, NE ;
Chatterjee, N .
JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL STATISTICAL SOCIETY SERIES C-APPLIED STATISTICS, 1999, 48 :457-468
[3]  
BROWN DL, 1994, AM J HUM GENET, V54, P544
[4]   Selecting a maximally informative set of single-nucleotide polymorphisms for association analyses using linkage disequilibrium [J].
Carlson, CS ;
Eberle, MA ;
Rieder, MJ ;
Yi, Q ;
Kruglyak, L ;
Nickerson, DA .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS, 2004, 74 (01) :106-120
[5]  
Carroll RJ., 1995, MEASUREMENT ERROR NO
[6]   Detecting disease associations due to linkage disequilibrium using haplotype tags: A class of tests and the determinants of statistical power [J].
Chapman, JM ;
Cooper, JD ;
Todd, JA ;
Clayton, DG .
HUMAN HEREDITY, 2003, 56 (1-3) :18-31
[7]   Fine genetic mapping using haplotype analysis and the missing data problem [J].
Chiano, MN ;
Clayton, DG .
ANNALS OF HUMAN GENETICS, 1998, 62 :55-60
[8]   SNPs, haplotypes, and model selection in a candidate gene region: The SIMPle analysis for multilocus data [J].
Conti, DV ;
Gauderman, WJ .
GENETIC EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2004, 27 (04) :429-441
[9]   Association studies in candidate genes: Strategies to select SNPs to be tested [J].
Cousin, E ;
Genin, E ;
Mace, S ;
Ricard, S ;
Chansac, C ;
del Zompo, M ;
Deleuze, JF .
HUMAN HEREDITY, 2003, 56 (04) :151-159
[10]   Experimentally-derived haplotypes substantially increase the efficiency of linkage disequilibrium studies [J].
Douglas, JA ;
Boehnke, M ;
Gillanders, E ;
Trent, JA ;
Gruber, SB .
NATURE GENETICS, 2001, 28 (04) :361-364