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  5. An Empirical Comparison of Joint and Stratified Frameworks for Studying G × E Interactions: Systolic Blood Pressure and Smoking in the CHARGE Gene‐Lifestyle Interactions Working Group

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Article
English
2016

An Empirical Comparison of Joint and Stratified Frameworks for Studying G × E Interactions: Systolic Blood Pressure and Smoking in the CHARGE Gene‐Lifestyle Interactions Working Group

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English
2016
Genetic Epidemiology
Vol 40 (5)
DOI: 10.1002/gepi.21978

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Claude Bouchard
Claude Bouchard

Pennington Biomedical Research Center

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Yan V. Sun
Thomas W. Winkler
Alisa K. Manning
+55 more

Abstract

Studying gene‐environment (G × E) interactions is important, as they extend our knowledge of the genetic architecture of complex traits and may help to identify novel variants not detected via analysis of main effects alone. The main statistical framework for studying G × E interactions uses a single regression model that includes both the genetic main and G × E interaction effects (the “joint” framework). The alternative “stratified” framework combines results from genetic main‐effect analyses carried out separately within the exposed and unexposed groups. Although there have been several investigations using theory and simulation, an empirical comparison of the two frameworks is lacking. Here, we compare the two frameworks using results from genome‐wide association studies of systolic blood pressure for 3.2 million low frequency and 6.5 million common variants across 20 cohorts of European ancestry, comprising 79,731 individuals. Our cohorts have sample sizes ranging from 456 to 22,983 and include both family‐based and population‐based samples. In cohort‐specific analyses, the two frameworks provided similar inference for population‐based cohorts. The agreement was reduced for family‐based cohorts. In meta‐analyses, agreement between the two frameworks was less than that observed in cohort‐specific analyses, despite the increased sample size. In meta‐analyses, agreement depended on (1) the minor allele frequency, (2) inclusion of family‐based cohorts in meta‐analysis, and (3) filtering scheme. The stratified framework appears to approximate the joint framework well only for common variants in population‐based cohorts. We conclude that the joint framework is the preferred approach and should be used to control false positives when dealing with low‐frequency variants and/or family‐based cohorts.

How to cite this publication

Yan V. Sun, Thomas W. Winkler, Alisa K. Manning, Hugues Aschard, Vilmundur Guðnason, Tamara B. Harris, Albert V. Smith, Eric Boerwinkle, Michael R. Brown, Alanna C. Morrison, Myriam Fornage, Li‐An Lin, Melissa A. Richard, Traci M. Bartz, Bruce M. Psaty, Caroline Hayward, Ozren Polašek, Jonathan Marten, Igor Rudan, Mary F. Feitosa, Aldi T. Kraja, Michael A. Province, Xuan Deng, Virginia Fisher, Yanhua Zhou, Lawrence F. Bielak, Jennifer A. Smith, Jennifer E. Huffman, Sandosh Padmanabhan, Blair H. Smith, Jingzhong Ding, Yongmei Liu, Kurt Lohman, Claude Bouchard, Tuomo Rankinen, Treva Rice, Donna K. Arnett, Karen Schwander, Xiuqing Guo, Walter Palmas, Jerome I. Rotter, Tamuno Alfred, Erwin P. Böttinger, Ruth J. F. Loos, Najaf Amin, Oscar H. Franco, Cornelia M. van Duijn, Dina Vojinović, Daniel I. Chasman, Paul M. Ridker, Lynda M. Rose, Sharon L. R. Kardia, Xiaofeng Zhu, Kenneth Rice, Ingrid B. Borecki, D. C. Rao, W. James Gauderman, L. Adrienne Cupples (2016). An Empirical Comparison of Joint and Stratified Frameworks for Studying G × E Interactions: Systolic Blood Pressure and Smoking in the CHARGE Gene‐Lifestyle Interactions Working Group. Genetic Epidemiology, 40(5), pp. 404-415, DOI: 10.1002/gepi.21978.

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Publication Details

Type

Article

Year

2016

Authors

58

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

English

Journal

Genetic Epidemiology

DOI

10.1002/gepi.21978

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