A correction for sample overlap in genome-wide association studies in a polygenic pleiotropy-informed framework
LeBlanc, Marissa; Zuber, Verena; Thompson, Wesley K.; Andreassen, Ole A.; Frigessi, Arnoldo; Andreassen, Bettina Kulle; Ripke, Stephan; Neale, Benjamin M.; Corvin, Aiden; Walters, James T.R.; Farh, Kai How; Lee, Phil H.; Bulik-Sullivan, Brendan; Collier, David A.; Huang, Hailiang; Pers, Tune H.; Agartz, Ingrid; Agerbo, Esben; Albus, Margot; Alexander, Madeline; Amin, Farooq; Bacanu, Silviu A.; Begemann, Martin; Belliveau, Richard A.; Bene, Judit; Bevilacqua, Elizabeth; Bigdeli, Tim B.; Black, Donald W.; Bruggeman, Richard; Buccola, Nancy G.; Buckner, Randy L.; Cahn, Wiepke; Cai, Guiqing; Cairns, Murray J.; Campion, Dominique; Cantor, Rita M.; Carr, Vaughan J.; Carrera, Noa; Catts, Stanley V.; Chambert, Kimberly D.; Chan, Raymond C.K.; Chen, Ronald Y.L.; Chen, Eric Y.H.; Cheng, Wei; Cheung, Eric F.C.; Kahn, Rene S.; Murphy, Kieran C.; Os, Jim Van; Strengman, Eric; Ophoff, Roel A.; Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorder Working Groups of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium
(2018) BMC Genomics, volume 19, issue 1
(Article)
Abstract
Background: There is considerable evidence that many complex traits have a partially shared genetic basis, termed pleiotropy. It is therefore useful to consider integrating genome-wide association study (GWAS) data across several traits, usually at the summary statistic level. A major practical challenge arises when these GWAS have overlapping subjects. This
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is particularly an issue when estimating pleiotropy using methods that condition the significance of one trait on the signficance of a second, such as the covariate-modulated false discovery rate (cmfdr). Results: We propose a method for correcting for sample overlap at the summary statistic level. We quantify the expected amount of spurious correlation between the summary statistics from two GWAS due to sample overlap, and use this estimated correlation in a simple linear correction that adjusts the joint distribution of test statistics from the two GWAS. The correction is appropriate for GWAS with case-control or quantitative outcomes. Our simulations and data example show that without correcting for sample overlap, the cmfdr is not properly controlled, leading to an excessive number of false discoveries and an excessive false discovery proportion. Our correction for sample overlap is effective in that it restores proper control of the false discovery rate, at very little loss in power. Conclusions: With our proposed correction, it is possible to integrate GWAS summary statistics with overlapping samples in a statistical framework that is dependent on the joint distribution of the two GWAS.
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Keywords: Covariate-modulated false discovery rate, Cross-phenotype association, Data integration, Meta-analysis with shared subjects, Biotechnology, Genetics
ISSN: 1471-2164
Publisher: BioMed Central
Note: Funding Information: Verena Zuber is supported by the Wellcome Trust and the Royal Society (Grant Number 204623/Z/16/Z) and the UK Medical Research Council (Grant Number MC_UU_00002/7). Publisher Copyright: © 2018 The Author(s).
(Peer reviewed)