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GWAS Study

Bayesian Effect Size Ranking to Prioritise Genetic Risk Variants in Common Diseases for Follow-Up Studies.

Crouch DJM, Inshaw JRJ, Robertson CC et al.

39749473 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
173981 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

CD
Crouch DJM
IJ
Inshaw JRJ
RC
Robertson CC
NE
Ng E
ZJ
Zhang JY
CW
Chen WM
OS
Onengut-Gumuscu S
CA
Cutler AJ
SC
Sidore C
CF
Cucca F
PF
Pociot F
CP
Concannon P
RS
Rich SS
TJ
Todd JA
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Biological datasets often consist of thousands or millions of variables, e.g. genetic variants or biomarkers, and when sample sizes are large it is common to find many associated with an outcome of interest, for example, disease risk in a GWAS, at high levels of statistical significance, but with very small effects. The False Discovery Rate (FDR) is used to identify effects of interest based on ranking variables according to their statistical significance. Here, we develop a complementary measure to the FDR, the priorityFDR, that ranks variables by a combination of effect size and significance, allowing further prioritisation among a set of variables that pass a significance or FDR threshold. Applying to the largest GWAS of type 1 diabetes to date (15,573 cases and 158,408 controls), we identified 26 independent genetic associations, including two newly-reported loci, with qualitatively lower priorityFDRs than the remaining 175 signals. We detected putatively causal type 1 diabetes risk genes using Mendelian Randomisation, and found that these were located disproportionately close to low priorityFDR signals (p = 0.005), as were genes in the IL-2 pathway (p = 0.003). Selecting variables on both effect size and significance can lead to improved prioritisation for mechanistic follow-up studies from genetic and other large biological datasets.

15,573 European ancestry cases, 158,408 European ancestry controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

173981
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European
Ancestry
Finland, Italy, U.K.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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