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. 1997 Mar;60(3):691-702.

Power studies for the transmission/disequilibrium tests with multiple alleles

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Power studies for the transmission/disequilibrium tests with multiple alleles

N L Kaplan et al. Am J Hum Genet. 1997 Mar.

Abstract

Case-control studies compare marker-allele distributions in affected and unaffected individuals, and significant results suggest linkage but may simply reflect population structure. For markers with m alleles (m > or = 2), a McNemar-like statistic, I, estimates the level of population association between marker and disease loci. To test for linkage after significant case-control tests, within-family tests are performed. These operate on the contingency table, with i, jth element equal to the number of parents that transmit marker allele Mi and do not transmit marker allele Mi to an affected offspring. The dimension of the table is the number of alleles at the marker locus. Three test statistics have recently been proposed in the literature: Tc compares symmetric pairs of cells (i, j) and (j, i), Tm compares row and column totals for the same marker allele, and a likelihood ratio statistic Tl uses all the cells in the table. In addition, we consider a new statistic, Tmhet, that uses only the heterozygous parents and is approximately chi2 with (m - 1) df. We use a Monte Carlo test to guarantee valid tests and to demonstrate the inferiority of Tc and the equality of Tm and Tl in terms of power. The power of the Tmhet test is close but not always equal to the power of the Tm test. We also show that under the alternative hypothesis of linkage, Tm is approximately noncentral chi2 with (m - 1) df and noncentrality parameter 2NT(1 - 2theta)2I*, when data on single affecteds in NT families are used. If the disease has a low population frequency, then I* is estimated using the case-control statistic I. This offers a basis for choosing sample size, or choosing a marker system.

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