4.3 Article

Estimation of the multiple testing burden for genomewide association studies of nearly all common variants

Journal

GENETIC EPIDEMIOLOGY
Volume 32, Issue 4, Pages 381-385

Publisher

WILEY-LISS
DOI: 10.1002/gepi.20303

Keywords

human genetics; association studies; testing burden

Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [5 U54 CA121852] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIDDK NIH HHS [F32 DK070527] Funding Source: Medline

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Genomewide association studies are an exciting strategy in genetics, recently becoming feasible and harvesting many novel genes linked to multiple phenotypes. Determining the significance of results in the face of testing a genomewide set of multiple hypotheses, most of which are producing noisy, null-distributed association signals, presents a challenge to the wide community of association researchers. Rather than each study engaging in independent evaluation of significance standards, we have undertaken the task of developing such standards for genomewide significance, based on data collected by the International Haplotype Map Consortium. We report an estimated testing burden of a million independent tests genomewide in Europeans, and twice that number in Africans. We further identify the sensitivity of the testing burden to the required significance level, with implications to staged design of association studies.

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