BAYESIAN MODEL SEARCH AND MULTILEVEL INFERENCE FOR SNP ASSOCIATION STUDIES.


Autoria(s): Wilson, MA; Iversen, ES; Clyde, MA; Schmidler, SC; Schildkraut, JM
Data(s)

01/09/2010

Formato

1342 - 1364

Identificador

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21179394

Ann Appl Stat, 2010, 4 (3), pp. 1342 - 1364

1932-6157

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/8405

Relação

Ann Appl Stat

10.1214/09-AOAS322

Palavras-Chave #AIC #Bayes factor #Bayesian model averaging #BIC #Evolutionary Monte Carlo #false discovery #genetic models #lasso #model uncertainty #single nucleotide polymorphism #variable selection
Tipo

Journal Article

Cobertura

United States

Resumo

Technological advances in genotyping have given rise to hypothesis-based association studies of increasing scope. As a result, the scientific hypotheses addressed by these studies have become more complex and more difficult to address using existing analytic methodologies. Obstacles to analysis include inference in the face of multiple comparisons, complications arising from correlations among the SNPs (single nucleotide polymorphisms), choice of their genetic parametrization and missing data. In this paper we present an efficient Bayesian model search strategy that searches over the space of genetic markers and their genetic parametrization. The resulting method for Multilevel Inference of SNP Associations, MISA, allows computation of multilevel posterior probabilities and Bayes factors at the global, gene and SNP level, with the prior distribution on SNP inclusion in the model providing an intrinsic multiplicity correction. We use simulated data sets to characterize MISA's statistical power, and show that MISA has higher power to detect association than standard procedures. Using data from the North Carolina Ovarian Cancer Study (NCOCS), MISA identifies variants that were not identified by standard methods and have been externally "validated" in independent studies. We examine sensitivity of the NCOCS results to prior choice and method for imputing missing data. MISA is available in an R package on CRAN.

Idioma(s)

ENG