| Literature DB >> 19909535 |
Abstract
Genetic association studies have become an important part of our scientific landscape. This commentary discusses some basic scientific issues which should be considered when reporting and evaluating such studies including SNP Discovery, Genotyping and Haplotype Analysis; Population Size, Matching of Cases and Controls, and Population Stratification; Phenotype Definition and Multiple Related Phenotypes; Multiple Testing; Replication; Genome-wide Association Studies (GWAS); and the Role of Functional Studies. All of these elements are important in evaluating such studies and should be carefully considered when these studies are conceived and carried out.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19909535 PMCID: PMC2780405 DOI: 10.1186/1465-9921-10-109
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Respir Res ISSN: 1465-9921
Criteria for Evaluating Genetic Association Studies
| Elements | Comment |
|---|---|
| SNP discovery and genotyping of a gene should be complete (based on current literature AND re-sequencing of the gene in a subgroup of the population studied). | |
| Haplotype analyses should be reported. | |
| Size should be large enough to have reasonable power to avoid both false negative and false positive results | |
| Appropriate matching is always a consideration | |
| Population stratification should always be addressed (in some manner) | |
| The best genetic association studies employ a robust definition of the phenotype (i.e. a physician's diagnosis of asthma is much less robust than one based on physiologic and clinical criteria) | |
| Issue of multiple testing must always be addressed, while acknowledging that some phenotypes are inter-related (and not independent), and Bonferroni correction may be too conservative | |
| Replication is necessary unless it cannot be reasonably performed. In some cases, functional studies substitute for replication |