Analysis of polygenic risk score usage and performance in diverse human populations
Stanford University · Harvard University · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Abstract A historical tendency to use European ancestry samples hinders medical genetics research, including the use of polygenic scores, which are individual-level metrics of genetic risk. We analyze the first decade of polygenic scoring studies (2008–2017, inclusive), and find that 67% of studies included exclusively European ancestry participants and another 19% included only East Asian ancestry participants. Only 3.8% of studies were among cohorts of African, Hispanic, or Indigenous peoples. We find that predictive performance of European ancestry-derived polygenic scores is lower in non-European ancestry samples (e.g. African ancestry samples: t = −5.97, df = 24, p = 3.7 × 10 −6 ), and we demonstrate the…
Citation impact
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- 108.13
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 53
Authors
8Topics & keywords
- Polygenic risk score
- Linkage disequilibrium
- Genetic genealogy
- Genome-wide association study
- Ancestry-informative marker
- Demography
- Multifactorial Inheritance
- Biology