Literature DB >> 11315014

Testing for age-at-onset anticipation with affected parent-child pairs.

D Rabinowitz1, Q Yang.   

Abstract

The tendency for the onset of a genetic disease to occur at progressively earlier ages or with progressively greater severity in successive generations is known as anticipation. Following the discovery of trinucleotide repeat expansion as a plausible genetic mechanism for anticipation, interest in testing for anticipation has increased. Studies of anticipation can be biased when parents with late onset or children with early onset are preferentially ascertained. This paper presents a nonparametric approach to testing for age-at-onset anticipation that adjusts for such preferential ascertainment. The approach is illustrated through application to data on panic disorder.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 11315014     DOI: 10.1111/j.0006-341x.1999.00834.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biometrics        ISSN: 0006-341X            Impact factor:   2.571


  5 in total

Review 1.  A review of statistical methods for testing genetic anticipation: looking for an answer in Lynch syndrome.

Authors:  Philip S Boonstra; Stephen B Gruber; Victoria M Raymond; Shu-Chen Huang; Susanne Timshel; Mef Nilbert; Bhramar Mukherjee
Journal:  Genet Epidemiol       Date:  2010-11       Impact factor: 2.135

2.  Bayesian modeling for genetic anticipation in presence of mutational heterogeneity: a case study in Lynch syndrome.

Authors:  Philip S Boonstra; Bhramar Mukherjee; Jeremy M G Taylor; Mef Nilbert; Victor Moreno; Stephen B Gruber
Journal:  Biometrics       Date:  2011-05-31       Impact factor: 2.571

3.  Age at intracranial aneurysm rupture among generations: Familial Intracranial Aneurysm Study.

Authors:  D Woo; R Hornung; L Sauerbeck; R Brown; I Meissner; J Huston; T Foroud; J Broderick
Journal:  Neurology       Date:  2009-02-24       Impact factor: 9.910

4.  Epilepsy in families: Age at onset is a familial trait, independent of syndrome.

Authors:  Colin A Ellis; Leonid Churilov; Michael P Epstein; Sharon X Xie; Susannah T Bellows; Ruth Ottman; Samuel F Berkovic
Journal:  Ann Neurol       Date:  2019-05-20       Impact factor: 10.422

5.  Ascertainment bias causes false signal of anticipation in genetic prion disease.

Authors:  Eric Vallabh Minikel; Inga Zerr; Steven J Collins; Claudia Ponto; Alison Boyd; Genevieve Klug; André Karch; Joanna Kenny; John Collinge; Leonel T Takada; Sven Forner; Jamie C Fong; Simon Mead; Michael D Geschwind
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  2014-10-02       Impact factor: 11.025

  5 in total

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