Enhancing the power to detect low-frequency variants in genome-wide screens

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Abstract

In genetic association studies a conventional test statistic is proportional to the correlation coefficient between the trait and the variant, with the result that it lacks power to detect association for low-frequency variants. Considering the link between the conventional association test statistics and the linkage disequilibrium measure r2, we propose a test statistic analogous to the standardized linkage disequilibrium D9 to increase the power of detecting association for low-frequency variants. By both simulation and real data analysis we show that the proposed D9 test is more powerful than the conventional methods for detecting association for low-frequency variants in a genome-wide setting. The optimal coding strategy for the D9 test and its asymptotic properties are also investigated. In summary, we advocate using the D9 test in a dominant model as a complementary approach to enhancing the power of detecting association for low-frequency variants with moderate to large effect sizes in case-control genome-wide association studies. © 2014 by the Genetics Society of America.

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APA

Lin, C. Y., Xing, G., Ku, H. C., Elston, R. C., & Xing, C. (2014). Enhancing the power to detect low-frequency variants in genome-wide screens. Genetics, 196(4), 1293–1302. https://doi.org/10.1534/genetics.113.160739

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