metaCCA: summary statistics-based multivariate meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies using canonical correlation analysis
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2016Author(s)
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10.1093/bioinformatics/btw052Metadata
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Cichonska Anna. Rousu Juho. Marttinen Pekka. Kangas Antti J. Soininen Pasi. Lehtimäki Terho. Raitakari Olli T. Järvelin Marjo-Riitta. Salomaa Veikko. Ala-Korpela Mika. Ripatti Samuli. Pirinen Matti. (2016). metaCCA: summary statistics-based multivariate meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies using canonical correlation analysis. Bioinformatics, 32 (13) , 1981-1989. 10.1093/bioinformatics/btw052.Rights
Abstract
Motivation
A dominant approach to genetic association studies is to perform univariate tests between genotype-phenotype pairs. However, analyzing related traits together increases statistical power, and certain complex associations become detectable only when several variants are tested jointly. Currently, modest sample sizes of individual cohorts, and restricted availability of individual-level genotype-phenotype data across the cohorts limit conducting multivariate tests.
Results
We introduce metaCCA , a computational framework for summary statistics-based analysis of a single or multiple studies that allows multivariate representation of both genotype and phenotype. It extends the statistical technique of canonical correlation analysis to the setting where original individual-level records are not available, and employs a covariance shrinkage algorithm to achieve robustness.
Multivariate meta-analysis of two Finnish studies of nuclear magnetic resonance metabolomics by metaCCA , using standard univariate output from the program SNPTEST, shows an excellent agreement with the pooled individual-level analysis of original data. Motivated by strong multivariate signals in the lipid genes tested, we envision that multivariate association testing using metaCCA has a great potential to provide novel insights from already published summary statistics from high-throughput phenotyping technologies.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btw052Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)Collections
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