Structured testing of genetic association with mixed clinical outcomes

Genetic factors play a fundamental role in disease development. Studying the genetic association with clinical outcomes is critical for understanding disease biology and devising novel treatment targets. However, the frequencies of genetic variations are often low, making it difficult to examine the...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inGenetic epidemiology Vol. 48; no. 5; pp. 226 - 237
Main Authors Liu, Meiling, Su, Yu‐Ru, Liu, Yang, Hsu, Li, He, Qianchuan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Wiley Subscription Services, Inc 01.07.2024
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Summary:Genetic factors play a fundamental role in disease development. Studying the genetic association with clinical outcomes is critical for understanding disease biology and devising novel treatment targets. However, the frequencies of genetic variations are often low, making it difficult to examine the variants one‐by‐one. Moreover, the clinical outcomes are complex, including patients' survival time and other binary or continuous outcomes such as recurrences and lymph node count, and how to effectively analyze genetic association with these outcomes remains unclear. In this article, we proposed a structured test statistic for testing genetic association with mixed types of survival, binary, and continuous outcomes. The structured testing incorporates known biological information of variants while allowing for their heterogeneous effects and is a powerful strategy for analyzing infrequent genetic factors. Simulation studies show that the proposed test statistic has correct type I error and is highly effective in detecting significant genetic variants. We applied our approach to a uterine corpus endometrial carcinoma study and identified several genetic pathways associated with the clinical outcomes.
Bibliography:Meiling Liu and Yu‐Ru Su contributed equally to this study.
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ISSN:0741-0395
1098-2272
1098-2272
DOI:10.1002/gepi.22560