BR-squared: a practical solution to the winner’s curse in genome-wide scans

Publication Description
The detrimental effects of the winner’s curse, including overestimation of the genetic effects of associated variants and underestimation of sufficient sample sizes for replication studies are well-recognized in genome-wide association studies (GWAS). These effects can be expected to worsen as the field moves from GWAS into whole genome sequencing. To date, few studies have reported statistical adjustments to the naive estimates, due to the lack of suitable statistical methods and computational tools. We have developed an efficient genome-wide non-parametric method that explicitly accounts for the threshold, ranking, and allele frequency effects in whole genome scans. Here, we implement the method to provide bias-reduced estimates via bootstrap re-sampling (BR-squared) for association studies of both disease status and quantitative traits, and we report the results of applying BR-squared to GWAS of psoriasis and HbA1c. We observed over 50% reduction in the genetic effect size estimation for many associated SNPs. This translates into a greater than fourfold increase in sample size requirements for successful replication studies, which in part explains some of the apparent failures in replicating the original signals. Our analysis suggests that adjusting for the winner’s curse is critical for interpreting findings from whole genome scans and planning replication and meta-GWAS studies, as well as in attempts to translate findings into the clinical setting.

Primary Author
Sun,Lei
Dimitromanolakis,Apostolos
Faye,Laura L.
Paterson,Andrew D.
Waggott,Daryl
Bull,Shelley B.

Volume
129

Issue
5

Start Page
545

Other Pages
552

Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC

URL
https://search.datacite.org/works/10.1007/s00439-011-0948-2 https://search.datacite.org/works/10.1007/s00439-011-0948-2



Reference Type
Journal Article

Periodical Full
Human genetics

Publication Year
2011

Place of Publication
Berlin/Heidelberg

ISSN/ISBN
1432-1203

Document Object Index
10.1007/s00439-011-0948-2