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Efficient and powerful familywise error control in genome-wide association studies using generalized linear models

Authors :
Halle, K. K.
Bakke, Ø.
Djurovic, S.
Bye, A.
Ryeng, E.
Wisløff, U.
Andreassen, O. A.
Langaas, M.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

In genetic association studies, detecting phenotype-genotype association is a primary goal. We assume that the relationship between the data -phenotype, genetic markers and environmental covariates - can be modelled by a generalized linear model (GLM). The inclusion of environmental covariates makes it possible to account for important confounding factors, such as sex and population substructure. A multivariate score statistic, which under the complete null hypothesis of no phenotype-genotype association asymptotically has a multivariate normal distribution with a covariance matrix that can be estimated from the data, is used to test a large number of genetic markers for association with the phenotype. We stress the importance of controlling the familywise error rate (FWER), and use the asymptotic distribution of the multivariate score test statistic to find a local significance level for the individual test. Using real data (from one study on schizophrenia and bipolar disorder and one on maximal oxygen uptake) and constructed correlated structures, we show that our method is a powerful alternative to the popular Bonferroni and Sidak methods. For GLMs without environmental covariates, we show that our method is an efficient alternative to permutation methods for multiple testing. Further, we show that if environmental covariates and genetic markers are uncorrelated, the estimated covariance matrix of the score test statistic can be approximated by the estimated correlation matrix for just the genetic markers. As byproducts of our method, an effective number of independent tests can be defined, and FWER-adjusted $p$-values can be calculated as an alternative to using a local significance level.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1603.05938
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/sjos.12451