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Dissecting heterogeneity in GWAS meta-analysis

Statistical heterogeneity refers to differences among results of studies combined in a meta-analysis beyond that expected by chance. On the one hand, excessive heterogeneity can diminish power to discover genetic signals; on the other, moderate heterogeneity can reveal important biological differences among studies. Given its double-edged nature, this thesis dissects heterogeneity in genetic association meta-analyses from three vantage points. First, a novel multi-variant statistic, M is proposed to detect genome-wide (systematic) heterogeneity patterns in genetic association meta-analyses. This was motivated by the limited availability of appropriate methodology to measure the impact of heterogeneity across genetic signals, since traditional metrics (Q, I<sup>2</sup> and T<sup>2</sup>) measure heterogeneity at individual variants. Second, given that meta-analyses comprising small numbers of studies typically report imprecise summary effect estimates; GWAS-derived empirical heterogeneity priors are used to improve precision in estimation of average genetic effects and heterogeneity in smaller meta-analyses (e.g. ≤ 10 studies). Third, a critical evaluation of the Han-Eskin random-effects model shows how it can identify small effect heterogeneous loci overlooked by traditional fixed and random-effects methods. This work draws attention to the existence of genome-wide heterogeneity patterns, to reveal systematic differences among the ascertainment criteria of participating studies in a meta-analysis of coronary disease (CAD) risk. Furthermore, simulation studies with the Han-Eskin random-effects model revealed inflated genetic signals at small effect loci when heterogeneity levels were high. However, it did reveal an additional CAD risk variant overlooked by traditional meta-analysis methods. We therefore recommend a holistic approach to exploring heterogeneity in meta-analyses which assesses heterogeneity of genetic effects both at individual variants with traditional statistics and across multiple genetic signals with the M statistic. Furthermore, it is critically important to review forest plots for small effect loci identified using the Han-Eskin random-effects model amidst moderate-to-high heterogeneity (I<sup>2</sup> ≥ 40%).

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:740935
Date January 2017
CreatorsMagosi, Lerato Elaine
ContributorsHopewell, Jemma C. ; Farrall, Martin
PublisherUniversity of Oxford
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
Sourcehttps://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:c853f7e7-93de-440c-b57c-fcfc03d3bb86

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