Compositional Data Analysis using Kernels in mass cytometry data

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Abstract

Motivation: Cell-type abundance data arising from mass cytometry experiments are compositional in nature. Classical association tests do not apply to the compositional data due to their non-Euclidean nature. Existing methods for analysis of cell type abundance data suffer from several limitations for high-dimensional mass cytometry data, especially when the sample size is small. Results: We proposed a new multivariate statistical learning methodology, Compositional Data Analysis using Kernels (CODAK), based on the kernel distance covariance (KDC) framework to test the association of the cell type compositions with important predictors (categorical or continuous) such as disease status. CODAK scales well for high-dimensional data and provides satisfactory performance for small sample sizes (n < 25). We conducted simulation studies to compare the performance of the method with existing methods of analyzing cell type abundance data from mass cytometry studies. The method is also applied to a high-dimensional dataset containing different subgroups of populations including Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) patients and healthy control subjects. Contact: prudra@okstate.edu

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Rudra, P., Baxter, R., Hsieh, E. W. Y., & Ghosh, D. (2022). Compositional Data Analysis using Kernels in mass cytometry data. Bioinformatics Advances, 2(1). https://doi.org/10.1093/bioadv/vbac003

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