Ascertainment Bias for Non-Twin Relatives in Twin Proband Studies
- 1 January 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by S. Karger AG in Human Heredity
- Vol. 32 (3) , 202-207
- https://doi.org/10.1159/000153292
Abstract
When families are ascertained through affected twins, as for example when twin probands are selected from a registry and their non-twin relatives studied, a correction for ascertainment bias is needed. It is shown that probandwise counting (where relatives of doubly ascertained twin pairs are counted twice) is the appropriate method. The bias resulting from pairwise counting is given and depends on the genetic model and on the probability of selecting an affected twin as a proband. For the multifactorial and generalized single major locus models the bias is small, and the problems associated with nonindependent ascertainment are negligible in practice.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Etiologic Factors of Breast Cancer Elucidated By A Study of Unselected Twins2JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1980
- Analysis of behavioral traits in the presence of cultural transmission and assortative mating: Applications to IQ and SESBehavior Genetics, 1980
- MULTIFACTORIAL INHERITANCE WITH CULTURAL TRANSMISSION AND ASSORTATIVE MATING .2. GENERAL-MODEL OF COMBINED POLYGENIC AND CULTURAL INHERITANCE1979
- Limits of the general two‐allele single locus model with incomplete penetranceAnnals of Human Genetics, 1976
- The effect of cultural transmission on continuous variationHeredity, 1976
- RESOLUTION OF CULTURAL AND BIOLOGICAL INHERITANCE BY PATH-ANALYSIS1976
- Measures of Twin ConcordanceHuman Heredity, 1967
- The inheritance of liability to certain diseases, estimated from the incidence among relativesAnnals of Human Genetics, 1965
- GENETIC TESTS UNDER INCOMPLETE ASCERTAINMENT1959