scholarly journals Genome-wide association studies of cardiovascular risk factors: design, conduct and interpretation

2009 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
pp. 308-311 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. C. BIS ◽  
N. L. GLAZER ◽  
B. M. PSATY
2011 ◽  
Vol 64 (6) ◽  
pp. 509-514
Author(s):  
Osmel Companioni ◽  
Francisco Rodríguez Esparragón ◽  
Alfonso Medina Fernández-Aceituno ◽  
José Carlos Rodríguez Pérez

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jingshu Wang ◽  
Qingyuan Zhao ◽  
Jack Bowden ◽  
Gilbran Hemani ◽  
George Davey Smith ◽  
...  

Over a decade of genome-wide association studies have led to the finding that significant genetic associations tend to spread across the genome for complex traits. The extreme polygenicity where "all genes affect every complex trait" complicates Mendelian Randomization studies, where natural genetic variations are used as instruments to infer the causal effect of heritable risk factors. We reexamine the assumptions of existing Mendelian Randomization methods and show how they need to be clarified to allow for pervasive horizontal pleiotropy and heterogeneous effect sizes. We propose a comprehensive framework GRAPPLE (Genome-wide mR Analysis under Pervasive PLEiotropy) to analyze the causal effect of target risk factors with heterogeneous genetic instruments and identify possible pleiotropic patterns from data. By using summary statistics from genome-wide association studies, GRAPPLE can efficiently use both strong and weak genetic instruments, detect the existence of multiple pleiotropic pathways, adjust for confounding risk factors, and determine the causal direction. With GRAPPLE, we analyze the effect of blood lipids, body mass index, and systolic blood pressure on 25 disease outcomes, gaining new information on their causal relationships and the potential pleiotropic pathways.


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