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Published in: European Journal of Epidemiology 7/2010

01-07-2010 | GENETIC EPIDEMIOLOGY

Power assessment for genetic association study of human longevity using offspring of long-lived subjects

Authors: Qihua Tan, Jing Hua Zhao, Shuxia Li, Torben A. Kruse, Kaare Christensen

Published in: European Journal of Epidemiology | Issue 7/2010

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Abstract

Recently, an indirect genetic association approach that compares genotype frequencies in offspring of long-lived subjects and offspring from random families has been introduced to study gene-longevity associations. Although the indirect genetic association has certain advantages over the direct association approach that compares genotype frequency between centenarians and young controls, the power has been of concern. This paper reports a power study performed on the indirect approach using computer simulation. We perform our simulation study by introducing the current Danish population life table and the proportional hazard model for generating individual lifespan. Family genotype data is generated using a genetic linkage program for given SNP allele frequency. Power is estimated by setting the type I error rate at 0.05 and by calculating the Armitage’s chi-squared test statistic for 200 replicate samples for each setting of the specified allele risk and frequency parameters under different modes of inheritance and for different sample sizes. The indirect genetic association analysis is a valid approach for studying gene-longevity association, but the sample size requirement is about 3–4 time larger than the direct approach. It also has low power in detecting non-additive effect genes. Indirect genetic association using offspring from families with both parents as nonagenarians is nearly as powerful as using offspring from families with one centenarian parent. In conclusion, the indirect design can be a good choice for studying longevity in comparison with other alternatives, when relatively large sample size is available.
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Metadata
Title
Power assessment for genetic association study of human longevity using offspring of long-lived subjects
Authors
Qihua Tan
Jing Hua Zhao
Shuxia Li
Torben A. Kruse
Kaare Christensen
Publication date
01-07-2010
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Published in
European Journal of Epidemiology / Issue 7/2010
Print ISSN: 0393-2990
Electronic ISSN: 1573-7284
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10654-010-9465-1

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