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Replication of past candidate loci for common diseases and phenotypes in 100 genome-wide association studies

Contributed by:Administrator
Originally posted:17th March 2010: 12:00 am
Last updated:17th June 2010: 7:00 am
Short URL:http://gen2phen.org/node/14429
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DOI: 
10.1038/ejhg.2010.26
URL: 
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ejhg.2010.26

European Journal of Human Genetics advance online publication, March 17, 2010. doi:10.1038/ejhg.2010.26

Authors: Konstantinos C M Siontis, Nikolaos A Patsopoulos & John P A Ioannidis

Abstract

Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have created a paradigm shift in discovering genetic associations for common diseases and phenotypes, but it is unclear whether the thousands of candidate genetic association studies performed in the pre-GWAS era had found any reliable associations for common diseases and phenotypes. We aimed to systematically evaluate whether loci proposed to harbor candidate associations before the advent of GWASs are replicated in GWASs. The GWAS data published through August, 2008 and included in the NHGRI catalog were screened and variants in candidate loci were selected on the basis of statistical significance (P<0.05) to create a list of independent, non-redundant associations. Altogether, 159 articles on GWASs were evaluated, 100 of which addressed past proposed candidate loci. A total of 291 independent, nominally significant (P<0.05) candidate gene associations were assembled after keeping only the SNP with lowest P-value for each locus and each phenotype; 108 of those had P<10−3 for association and 41 had P<10−7. A total of 22 of these 41 candidate gene associations pertained to binary phenotypes with a median odds ratio=2.91 (IQR: 1.82–4.6) and median minor allele frequency=0.17 (IQR: 0.12–0.29) in Caucasians; for comparison, 60 new associations of binary outcomes with P<10−7 discovered in the same GWASs had much smaller effects (median odds ratio 1.30, IQR: 1.18–1.58) and modestly larger minor allele frequencies (median 0.27, IQR: 0.15–0.43). Overall, few of the numerous genetic associations proposed in the candidate gene era have been replicated in GWASs, but those that have been conclusively replicated have large genetic effects that should not be discarded.

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  • candidate loci
  • common diseases/phenotypes
  • European Journal of Human Genetics
  • genome-wide association studies
  • replication
  • single nucleotide polymorphisms
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  • Original article

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