The Effects of SNP Genotyping Errors on the Power of The Cochran‐Armitage Linear Trend Test for Case/Control Association Studies
- 10 November 2006
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Annals of Human Genetics
- Vol. 71 (2) , 249-261
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-1809.2006.00318.x
Abstract
Summary: The questions addressed in this paper are: What single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) genotyping errors are most costly, in terms of minimum sample size necessary (MSSN) to maintain constant asymptotic power and significance level, when performing case‐control studies of genetic association applying the Cochran‐Armitage trend test? And which trend test or χ2 test is more powerful under standard genetic models with genotyping errors? Our strategy is to expand the non‐centrality parameter of the asymptotic distribution of the trend test to approximate the MSSN using a Taylor series linear in the genotyping error rates. We apply our strategy to example scenarios that assume recessive, dominant, additive, or over‐dominant disease models.The most costly errors are recording the more common homozygote as the less common homozygote, and the more common homozygote as the heterozygote, with MSSN that become indefinitely large as the minor SNP allele frequency approaches zero. Misclassifying the heterozygote as the less common homozygote is costly when using the recessive trend test on data from a recessive model. The χ2 test has power close to, but less than, the optimal trend test and is never dominated over all genetic models studied by any specific trend test.Keywords
This publication has 49 references indexed in Scilit:
- The impact of diagnostic error on testing genetic association in case–control studiesStatistics in Medicine, 2004
- Estimation of genotype error rate using samples with pedigree information—an application on the GeneChip Mapping 10K arrayGenomics, 2004
- Increasing Power for Tests of Genetic Association in the Presence of Phenotype and/or Genotype Error by Use of Double-SamplingStatistical Applications in Genetics and Molecular Biology, 2004
- Quantifying the Percent Increase in Minimum Sample Size for SNP Genotyping Errors in Genetic Model-Based Association StudiesHuman Heredity, 2004
- The impacts of errors in individual genotyping and DNA pooling on association studiesGenetic Epidemiology, 2003
- The impact of genotyping error on haplotype reconstruction and frequency estimationEuropean Journal of Human Genetics, 2002
- A Multipoint Method for Detecting Genotyping Errors and Mutations in Sibling-Pair Linkage DataAmerican Journal of Human Genetics, 2000
- True Pedigree Errors More Frequent Than Apparent Errors for Single Nucleotide PolymorphismsHuman Heredity, 1999
- The Effects of Genoiyping Errors and Interference on Estimation of Genetic DistanceHuman Heredity, 1997
- Linkage analysis with misclassification at one locusClinical Genetics, 1977