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GWAS Study

The impact of adjusting for baseline in pharmacogenomic genome-wide association studies of quantitative change.

Oni-Orisan A, Haldar T, Ranatunga DK et al.

31969989 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
1205 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

OA
Oni-Orisan A
HT
Haldar T
RD
Ranatunga DK
MM
Medina MW
SC
Schaefer C
KR
Krauss RM
IC
Iribarren C
RN
Risch N
HT
Hoffmann TJ
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

In pharmacogenomic studies of quantitative change, any association between genetic variants and the pretreatment (baseline) measurement can bias the estimate of effect between those variants and drug response. A putative solution is to adjust for baseline. We conducted a series of genome-wide association studies (GWASs) for low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) response to statin therapy in 34,874 participants of the Genetic Epidemiology Research on Adult Health and Aging (GERA) cohort as a case study to investigate the impact of baseline adjustment on results generated from pharmacogenomic studies of quantitative change. Across phenotypes of statin-induced LDL-C change, baseline adjustment identified variants from six loci meeting genome-wide significance (SORT/CELSR2/PSRC1, LPA, SLCO1B1, APOE, APOB, and SMARCA4/LDLR). In contrast, baseline-unadjusted analyses yielded variants from three loci meeting the criteria for genome-wide significance (LPA, APOE, and SLCO1B1). A genome-wide heterogeneity test of baseline versus statin on-treatment LDL-C levels was performed as the definitive test for the true effect of genetic variants on statin-induced LDL-C change. These findings were generally consistent with the models not adjusting for baseline signifying that genome-wide significant hits generated only from baseline-adjusted analyses (SORT/CELSR2/PSRC1, APOB, SMARCA4/LDLR) were likely biased. We then comprehensively reviewed published GWASs of drug-induced quantitative change and discovered that more than half (59%) inappropriately adjusted for baseline. Altogether, we demonstrate that (1) baseline adjustment introduces bias in pharmacogenomic studies of quantitative change and (2) this erroneous methodology is highly prevalent. We conclude that it is critical to avoid this common statistical approach in future pharmacogenomic studies of quantitative change.

1,205 African ancestry individuals

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

1205
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
African unspecified, African American or Afro-Caribbean, European, East Asian, Hispanic or Latin American
Ancestry
U.S.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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