Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium Testing of Biological Ascertainment for Mendelian Randomization Studies
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Abstract
Mendelian randomization (MR) permits causal inference between exposures and a disease. It can be compared with randomized controlled trials. Whereas in a randomized controlled trial the randomization occurs at entry into the trial, in MR the randomization occurs during gamete formation and conception. Several factors, including time since conception and sampling variation, are relevant to the interpretation of an MR test. Particularly important is consideration of the "missingness" of genotypes that can be originated by chance, genotyping errors, or clinical ascertainment. Testing for Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium (HWE) is a genetic approach that permits evaluation of missingness. In this paper, the authors…
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Topics
Keywords
- Mendelian randomization
- Missing data
- Statistics
- Genotyping
- Hardy–Weinberg principle
- Imputation (statistics)
- Causal inference
- Medicine
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