‘Mendelian randomization’: can genetic epidemiology contribute to understanding environmental determinants of disease?*
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Abstract
Associations between modifiable exposures and disease seen in observational epidemiology are sometimes confounded and thus misleading, despite our best efforts to improve the design and analysis of studies. Mendelian randomization-the random assortment of genes from parents to offspring that occurs during gamete formation and conception-provides one method for assessing the causal nature of some environmental exposures. The association between a disease and a polymorphism that mimics the biological link between a proposed exposure and disease is not generally susceptible to the reverse causation or confounding that may distort interpretations of conventional observational studies. Several examples where the…
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Topics
Keywords
- Mendelian randomization
- Confounding
- Observational study
- Disease
- Causal inference
- Biology
- Causality (physics)
- Genetics
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