Background: Certain loci on the human genome, such as glutathione S-transferase MI (GSTMI), do not permit heterozygotes to be reliably determined by commonly used methods. Association of such a locus with a disease is therefore generally tested with a case-control design. When subjects have already been ascertained in a case-parent design however, the question arises as to whether the data can still be used to test disease association at such a locus. Results: A likelihood ratio test was constructed that can be used with a case-parents design but has somewhat less power than a Pearson's chi-squared test that uses a case-control design. The test is illustrated on a novel dataset showing a genotype relative risk near 2 for the homozygous GSTMI deletion genotype and autism. Conclusion: Although the case-control design will remain the mainstay for a locus with a deletion, the likelihood ratio test will be useful for such a locus analyzed as part of a larger case-parent study design. The likelihood ratio test has the advantage that it can incorporate complete and incomplete case-parent trios as well as independent cases and controls. Both analyses support (p = 0.046 for the proposed test, p = 0.028 for the case-control analysis) an association of the homozygous GSTMI deletion genotype with autism. © 2006 Buyske et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
CITATION STYLE
Buyske, S., Williams, T. A., Mars, A. E., Stenroos, E. S., Ming, S. X., Wang, R., … Johnson, W. G. (2006). Analysis of case-parent trios at a locus with a deletion allele: Association of GSTMI with autism. BMC Genetics, 7. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2156-7-8
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.