Abstract

Recent advances in genotyping and sequencing technologies have enabled genetic association studies to leverage high-quality genotyped data to identify variants accounting for a substantial portion of disease risk. The usage of external controls, whose genomes have already been genotyped and are publicly available, could be a cost-effective approach to increase the power of association testing. There has been recent effort to integrate external controls while adjusting for possible batch effects, such as the integrating External Controls into Association Test (iECAT). The original iECAT test, however, cannot adjust for covariates such as age, gender, and so forth. Hence, based on the insight of iECAT, we propose a novel score-based test that allows for covariate adjustment and constructs a shrinkage score statistic that is a weighted sum of the score statistics using exclusively internal samples and uses both internal and external control samples. We assess the existence of batch effect at a variant by comparing control samples of internal and external sources. We show by simulation studies that our method has increased power over the original iECAT while controlling for type I error rates. We present the application of our method to the association studies of age-related macular degeneration (AMD) utilizing data from the International AMD Genomics Consortiumand Michigan Genomics Initiative. Through the incorporation of the score test approach, we extend the use of iECAT to adjust for covariates and improve power, further honing the statistical methods needed to identify disease-causing variants within the human genome.

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