Comparison of family-based association tests in chromosome regions selected by linkage-based confidence intervals

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Abstract

We use the Genetic Analysis Workshop 14 simulated data to explore the effectiveness of a two-stage strategy for mapping complex disease loci consisting of an initial genome scan with confidence interval construction for gene location, followed by fine mapping with family-based tests of association on a dense set of single-nucleotide polymorphisms. We considered four types of intervals: the 1-LOD interval, a basic percentile bootstrap confidence interval based on the position of the maximum Zlr score, and asymptotic and bootstrap confidence intervals based on a generalized estimating equations method. For fine mapping we considered two family-based tests of association: a test based on a likelihood ratio statistic and a transmission-disequilibrium-type test implemented in the software FBAT. In two of the simulation replicates, we found that the bootstrap confidence intervals based on the peak Zlr and the 1-LOD support interval always contained the true disease loci and that the likelihood ratio test provided further strong confirmatory evidence of the presence of disease loci in these regions.

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Lewinger, J. P., Lee, S. S. F., Biernacka, J., Wu, L. Y., Shi, H. S., & Bull, S. B. (2005). Comparison of family-based association tests in chromosome regions selected by linkage-based confidence intervals. BMC Genetics, 6(SUPPL.1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2156-6-S1-S62

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