Review and Evaluation of Methods Correcting for Population Stratification with a Focus on Underlying Statistical Principles
- 1 March 2008
- journal article
- review article
- Published by S. Karger AG in Human Heredity
- Vol. 66 (2) , 67-86
- https://doi.org/10.1159/000119107
Abstract
When two or more populations have been separated by geographic or cultural boundaries for many generations, drift, spontaneous mutations, differential selection pressures and other factors may lead to allele frequency differences among populations. If these ‘parental’ populations subsequently come together and begin inter-mating, disequilibrium among linked markers may span a greater genetic distance than it typically does among populations under panmixia [see glossary]. This extended disequilibrium can make association studies highly effective and more economical than disequilibrium mapping in panmictic populations since less marker loci are needed to detect regions of the genome that harbor phenotype-influencing loci. However, under some circumstances, this process of intermating (as well as other processes) can produce disequilibrium between pairs of unlinked loci and thus create the possibility of confounding or spurious associations due to this population stratification. Accordingly, researchers are advised to employ valid statistical tests for linkage disequilibrium mapping allowing conduct of genetic association studies that control for such confounding. Many recent papers have addressed this need. We provide a comprehensive review of advances made in recent years in correcting for population stratification and then evaluate and synthesize these methods based on statistical principles such as (1) randomization, (2) conditioning on sufficient statistics, and (3) identifying whether the method is based on testing the genotype-phenotype covariance (conditional upon familial information) and/or testing departures of the marginal distribution from the expected genotypic frequencies.Keywords
This publication has 164 references indexed in Scilit:
- Natural Orifice Transesophageal Endoscopic Surgery: State of the ArtMinimally Invasive Surgery, 2012
- Multivariate Analysis of the Survival Rate for Treatment Modalities in Incurable Stage IV Colorectal CancerJournal of the Korean Society of Coloproctology, 2012
- Natural Orifice Transluminal Endoscopic Surgery (NOTES) and colorectal cancer?Colorectal Disease, 2011
- Endoscopic submucosal dissection for treatment of gastric subepithelial tumors (with video)Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, 2011
- Transoral robotic-assisted thyroidectomy with central neck dissection: preclinical cadaver feasibility study and proposed surgical techniqueJournal of Robotic Surgery, 2011
- Is Endoscopic Papillectomy Safe for Ampullary Adenomas with High-Grade Dysplasia?Annals of Surgical Oncology, 2009
- Natural orifice surgery: initial clinical experienceSurgical Endoscopy, 2009
- Endoscopic papillectomy for adenomas of the major duodenal papilla (with video)Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, 2006
- Endoscopic Treatment of Postoperative Fistulas Resistant to Conservative Management Using Biological Fibrin GlueEndoscopy, 2002
- Genotype relative-risks and association tests for nuclear families with missing parental dataGenetic Epidemiology, 1997