Does the inclusion of rare variants improve risk prediction?

被引:1
|
作者
Erin Austin
Wei Pan
Xiaotong Shen
机构
[1] School of Public Health,Division of Biostatistics
[2] University of Minnesota,School of Statistics
[3] University of Minnesota,undefined
关键词
Systolic Blood Pressure; Ridge Regression; Causative SNPs; GAW18 Data; Predictive Mean Square Error;
D O I
10.1186/1753-6561-8-S1-S94
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Every known link between a genetic variant and blood pressure improves the understanding and potentially the risk assessment of related diseases such as hypertension. Genetic data have become increasingly comprehensive and available for an increasing number of samples. The availability of whole-genome sequencing data means that statistical genetic models must evolve to meet the challenge of using both rare variants (RVs) and common variants (CVs) to link previously unidentified genome loci to disease-related traits. Penalized regression has two features, variable selection and proportional coefficient shrinkage, that allow researchers to build models tailored to hypothesized characteristics of the genotype-phenotype map. The following work uses the Genetic Analysis Workshop 18 data to investigate the performance of a spectrum of penalized regressions using at first only CVs or only RVs to predict systolic blood pressure (SBP). Next, combinations of CVs and RVs are used to model SBP, and the impact on prediction is quantified. The study demonstrates that penalized regression improves blood pressure prediction for any combination of CVs and RVs compared with maximum likelihood estimation. More significantly, models using both types of variants provide better predictions of SBP than those using only CVs or only RVs. The predictive mean squared error was reduced by up to 11.5% when RVs were added to CV-only penalized regression models. Elastic net regression with equally weighted LASSO and ridge components, in particular, can use large numbers of single-nucleotide polymorphisms to improve prediction.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Common and rare genetic variants and risk of CHD
    Daniel I. Swerdlow
    Steve E. Humphries
    Nature Reviews Cardiology, 2017, 14 : 73 - 74
  • [32] Common and rare genetic variants and risk of CHD
    Swerdlow, Daniel I.
    Humphries, Steve E.
    NATURE REVIEWS CARDIOLOGY, 2017, 14 (02) : 73 - 74
  • [33] THE ROLE OF DELETERIOUS RARE VARIANTS IN ADHD RISK
    Demontis, Ditte
    Duan, Jinjie
    Satterstrom, Frederick
    Farajzadeh, Leila
    Grove, Jakob
    Lesch, Klaus-Peter
    Werge, Thomas
    Nordentoft, Merete
    Mortensen, Preben Bo
    Franke, Barbara
    Hougaard, David
    Reif, Andreas
    Daly, Mark
    Neale, Benjamin
    Borglum, Anders
    EUROPEAN NEUROPSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY, 2021, 51 : E53 - E54
  • [34] Rare variants in the ATMgene and risk of breast cancer
    David E Goldgar
    Sue Healey
    James G Dowty
    Leonard Da Silva
    Xiaoqing Chen
    Amanda B Spurdle
    Mary Beth Terry
    Mary J Daly
    Saundra M Buys
    Melissa C Southey
    Irene Andrulis
    Esther M John
    Kum Kum Khanna
    John L Hopper
    Peter J Oefner
    Sunil Lakhani
    Georgia Chenevix-Trench
    Breast Cancer Research, 13
  • [35] Rare Variants and Risk for Schizophrenia: More Support
    Rapoport, Judith
    Ahn, Kwangmi
    BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY, 2011, 70 (12) : 1102 - 1103
  • [36] Does financial inclusion improve bank performance in the Asian region?
    Vo, Duc H.
    Nguyen, Nhan T.
    ASIAN-PACIFIC ECONOMIC LITERATURE, 2021, 35 (02) : 123 - 135
  • [37] Combining Genetic Variants to Improve Risk Prediction for NAFLD and Its Progression to Cirrhosis: A Proof of Concept Study
    Vespasiani-Gentilucci, Umberto
    Dell'Unto, Chiara
    De Vincentis, Antonio
    Baiocchini, Andrea
    Delle Monache, Marco
    Cecere, Roberto
    Pellicelli, Adriano Maria
    Giannelli, Valerio
    Carotti, Simone
    Galati, Giovanni
    Gallo, Paolo
    Valentini, Francesco
    Del Nonno, Franca
    Rosati, Davide
    Morini, Sergio
    Antonelli-Incalzi, Raffaele
    Picardi, Antonio
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY AND HEPATOLOGY, 2018, 2018
  • [38] IBD PREDICTION AND TREATMENT: MULTI-POPULATION RISK SCORES AND RARE VEO-IBD VARIANTS
    Gettler, Kyle
    Levantovsky, Rachel
    Cho, Judy H.
    GASTROENTEROLOGY, 2021, 160 (06) : S71 - S71
  • [39] Does the inclusion of depression and cognitive screening to frailty assessment improve prediction of outcomes in heart transplant-eligible patients?
    Jha, S. R.
    Hannu, H. K.
    Newton, P.
    Wilhelm, K.
    Hayward, C.
    Jabbour, A.
    Harkess, M.
    Tunnicilff, P.
    Shaw, S.
    Macdonald, P.
    EUROPEAN HEART JOURNAL, 2015, 36 : 500 - 500
  • [40] Advanced imaging: Does it improve outcome prediction?
    Huppi, P.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS, 2016, 175 (11) : 1401 - 1402