Article

Testing for Hardy Weinberg Equilibrium in national household surveys that collect family-based genetic data.

Department of Mathematics, University of Texas at Arlington, TX 76019, USA.
Annals of Human Genetics (impact factor: 2.57). 11/2011; 75(6):732-41. DOI:10.1111/j.1469-1809.2011.00680.x pp.732-41
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT In population-based household surveys, for example, the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), blood-related individuals are often sampled from the same household. Therefore, genetic data collected from national household surveys are often correlated due to two levels of clustering (correlation) with one induced by the multistage geographical cluster sampling, and the other induced by biological inheritance among multiple participants within the same sampled household. In this paper, we develop efficient statistical methods that consider the weighting effect induced by the differential selection probabilities in complex sample designs, as well as the clustering (correlation) effects described above. We examine and compare the magnitude of each level of clustering effects under different scenarios and identify the scenario under which the clustering effect induced by one level dominates the other. The proposed method is evaluated via Monte Carlo simulation studies and illustrated using the Hispanic Health and Nutrition Survey (HHANES) with simulated genotype data.

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Keywords

clustering
 
clustering effect induced
 
clustering effects
 
complex sample designs
 
different scenarios
 
differential selection probabilities
 
efficient statistical methods
 
HHANES
 
Monte Carlo simulation studies
 
multiple participants
 
multistage geographical cluster sampling
 
Nutrition Examination Survey
 
Nutrition Survey
 
population-based household surveys
 
sampled household
 
scenario
 
simulated genotype data
 

Yan Li