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Principles of Genetic Epidemiology Kirsten Ohm Kyvik

Principles of Genetic Epidemiology

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Page 1: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Principles of Genetic Epidemiology

Kirsten Ohm Kyvik

Page 2: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Genetic epidemiology

Genetic epidemiology deals with the etiology, distribution, and control of disease (epidemiology) in groups of relatives and with inherited causes of disease (genetics) in populations (adapted from Morton and Chung 1978)

Page 3: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Steps in genetic epidemiology

• Evidence for familial aggregation• Is familial aggregation due to genes or environment?• Specific genetic mechanisms Taking advantage of designs involving

Families Twins Adoptees and their families

Page 4: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Fundamentals Definition of phenotype

Classification of phenotype

Natural history of phenotype

Page 5: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Adaptation of concept of causation

Family status changes risk profile Observations on family members not independent Boundary between cohort and case-control studies is

blurred

Page 6: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Multifactorial inheritance

Monogenic Quantitativ

Mød en forsker

Page 7: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

TRESHOLD

MODEL

Page 8: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Family studies

Page 9: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Design of familiestudies Identify probands – ”ascertainment probability”

Information on phenotype in relatives (1.degree, 2. degree etc.)

Compare groups of relatives

Compare with background population

Page 10: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Familial aggregation = genetic aetiology?

Against: Effect of:

Page 11: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Groups of relativesRisk of siblings compared to risk in parent-offspring• RR(sib) = RR(par)

• RR(sib) >> RR(par

• RR(sib) and RR(par) small, but bigger than population risk

Page 12: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Expected risk pattern

010203040506070

MZ twins 1- degr 2- degr 3- degr

Risik

o %

Family risk

Page 13: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Parkinson’s disease in Iceland

(Sveinbjørnsdottir et al. NEJM, 2000)

Relatives Risk ratio(family vs population)

p

Sibling 6.3 <0.001

Children 3.0 0.001

Nephew/niece 2.4 <0.001

Cousin 2.4 0.1

Spouse 1.9 0.16

Page 14: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Genetic epidemiology of infantile hypertrophic pyloric

stenosis

The IHPS register

• Funen based• Cases from 1950 to 2004• A total of 892 cases, 870 identified in CPR• Questionnaire send to all cases• Reply from 65%

Page 15: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Smoothed prevalence

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000Year

All BoysGirls

Page 16: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Recurrence risk in relativesRecurrence risk % (95% Confidence Interval)

Group Female Male AllPopulation 0.11 (0.06-

0.15)0.43 (0.40-

0.46)0.27 (0.24-

0.30)

1.degree 5.7 (3.9-9.5) 4.4 (3.4-6.1) 4.8 (4.1-7.0)

Parent 4.5 (1.4-7.4) 3.9 (2.4-5.7) 4.0 (2.9-6.2)

Offspring 4.5 (0.14-5.3)

4.5 (0.10-8.3)

4.5 (0.24-8.3)

Siblings 11.4 (4.0-17.5)

5.1 (3.0-10.8)

6.6 (4.7-9.8)

2. degree

Grandparents

0.76 (-0.13-1.5)

0.51 (0.10-1.1)

0.57 (0.20-1.0)

Page 17: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Twin studies

Page 18: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology
Page 19: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Aims

• What is the risk/recurrence risk in twins• Is a phenotype genetically determined• Aetiological models• Size of genetic variation / heritability• Genes, markers, chromosomal regions• Environmental determinants

Page 20: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

DESIGNS

Classical twin study

Classical twin study with separated MZ twins

Twin family studies

Twin-control studies

Page 21: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Classical twin studyMZ pairs:

DZ pairs:

Page 22: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

DESIGNS

Classical twin study

Classical twin study with separated MZ twins

Twin family studies

Twin-control studies

Page 23: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Is a phenotype genetically determined?

• Categorical data

• Continous data

Page 24: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Types of concordance

Pairwise: Probability that both in a pair is affected:

Casewise/probandwise: Probability that a twin is diseased given that the twin partner is diseased:

Page 25: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Probandwise concordance Estimate of the casewise probability by the proband method.

2C1 + C2

2C1 + C2 + D -----------------

Page 26: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Concordance

CMZ = CDZ

CMZ > CDZ

CMZ <1.0 (100%)

Page 27: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Solutions to problems with age at diagnosis

Survival analysis

Actuarial/Kaplan Meier methodology

Frailty models

Newer models

Others?

Correction methods

Page 28: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Concordance type 1 diabetes

Zygosity Pairs Concordance (probands) Pairwise* Probandwise Cumulated

Conc Disc

MZ 10(18) 16 0.38 0.53 0.70 [0.20-0.59] [0.33-0.73] [0.45-0.95)

DZ 4 (8) 65 0.06 0.11 0.13 [0.02-0.14] [0.05-0.21] [0.04-0.21]

( ) Number of probands; [ ] 95% confidence limits.* Chi21d.f. = 10.93, p < 0.001

Page 29: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Cumulative concordance type 1 diabetes

Interpretable as cumulative risk from birth

%0-100

Age 0-40

MZ0.70

DZ0.13

Page 30: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

CorrelationsTwin-twin correlationsrMZ = rDZ

rMZ > rDZ

rMZ < 1.0 (100%)

Page 31: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

lnTS

H in

Tw

in 2

lnTSH in Twin 1-2 -1 0 1 2

-2

-1

0

1

2

lnTS

H in

Tw

in 2

lnTSH in Twin 1-2 -1 0 1 2

-2

-1

0

1

2rMZ=0.64 (CI 0.56-0.70) rDZ=0.29 (CI 0.18-0.39)

MZ n=284 pairs DZ n=285 pairs

p<0.00005

INTRACLASS CORRELATIONSlnTSH (Pia Skov Hansen)

Page 32: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

0,6625 0,6358

0,29150,1814

0,3577

0,6373

0

0,1

0,2

0,3

0,4

0,5

0,6

0,7

0,8

0,9

1

All Male Female

rMZ

rDZ

INTRACLASS CORRELATIONSlnTSH

Page 33: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Aetiological components Additive genetic variance

Dominant genetic variance/epistasis

Common environmental variance

Unique environmental variance

Page 34: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Genotype GroupModel AA Aa aaA is DominantA is RecessiveA is Co-Dominant

Inheritance Models in Single Gene Trait

Page 35: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Population MeanModel -x 0 +xA is Completely Dominant

aaAAAa

A is Partially Dominant

aa Aa AA

A is Not Dominant

aa Aa AA

Inheritance Models in Quantitative Trait

Page 36: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Heritability V (total) = VG + VE

V (total) = VA + VD + VI + VC + VE

h2narrow = VA/VA + VD + VI + VC + VE

h2broad = VA + VD + VI/VA + VD + VI + VC + VE

Page 37: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Heritability

Function of population, NOT a constant Does not apply to individuals Biased if mean and variance not the same in MZ

and DZ Greater MZ covariance will inflate h2

Page 38: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Correlations and aetiological models

rMZ < 1rMZ = rDZ = 0 rMZ = rDZ > 0 rMZ = 2rDZ > 0 rMZ > 2rDZ rMZ < 2rDZ

Page 39: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Aetiological models and genetic variation

Variance analysis Regression analysis Structural equation modelling

Page 40: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Path model for twin analysis

Page 41: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Pleiotrophy

Page 42: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

UniqueEnvironmental

effect0.36

Geneticeffect0.64

The genetic effects account for 64% of the variation

RESULTS TSH-LEVEL

Page 43: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

BMI Waist Gluc120 Ins0 SBP DBP HDL TG

BMI0.86 (0.01

)-0.13 (0.06)

0.48 (0.04)

0.29(0.04)

0.27(0.04)

-0.18(0.05)

0.20(0.06)

Waist 0.85 (0.01)

-0.16 (0.06)

0.51 (0.05)

0.30(0.05)

0.26(0.05)

-0.19(0.06)

0.26(0.06)

Gluc120

0.02

(0.03)

0.03 (0.03

)0.09 (0.08)

0.12(0.07)

0.11(0.07)

-0.02(0.08)

0.23(0.08)

Ins00.46

(0.02)

0.46

(0.02)

0.13 (0.03)

0.31(0.06)

0.29(0.06)

-0.17(0.07)

0.31(0.07)

SBP 0.28(0.03)

0.26(0.03

)0.14

(0.03)0.23

(0.03)0.71

(0.03)-0.09(0.06)

0.28(0.06)

DBP 0.26(0.03)

0.23(0.03

)0.13

(0.03)0.23

(0.03)0.69

(0.02)-0.01(0.06)

0.27(0.06)

HDL -0.17(0.03)

-0.19(0.03

)-0.04(0.03)

-0.14(0.03)

-0.01(0.03)

-0.03(0.03)

-0.24(0.07)

TG 0.22(0.03)

0.27(0.03

)0.20

(0.03)0.35

(0.02)0.20

(0.03)0.20

(0.03)-0.22(0.03)

Multivariate ACE Model

Page 44: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Important assumptions

• Biology of twinning • ”True” zygosity • Equal environment assumption

• true or not true? • Generalisability

Page 45: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Adoption studies

Page 46: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Adoption design

Adoptees are expected to

Page 47: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Early death in adopteesCause of death Parent dead < 50

yrsParent dead < 70 yrs

NaturalBioAdo

1.98*0.96

1.490.8

InfectionBioAdo

5.81*0.73

5*1

VasculærBio Ado

4.52*3.02

1.921.5

CancerBioAdo

1.195.16*

0.871.49

Page 48: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Assumptions and problems Early adoption Non-familial adoption Comparable environment in biological and adoptive

family Contact to biological family Intra-uterine environment Transcultural adoptions

Page 49: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Comparison of correlations

Correlation

Twin studiesMZDZMZA

0.70.360.7

Family studiesPOSib

0.270.25

Adoption studiesBioAdo

0.170.1

Page 50: Principles of  Genetic Epidemiology

Comparison heritabilityHeritability

Twin studiesMZA

50-90%60-70%

Family studies 20-80%Adoption studies 20-60%