[TECHNIQUES] Integrating Family-Based and Mendelian Randomization Designs

Most Mendelian randomization (MR) studies published in the literature to date have involved analyses of unrelated, putatively independent sets of individuals. However, estimates obtained from these sorts of studies are subject to a range of biases including dynastic effects, assortative mating, residual population stratification, and horizontal pleiotropy. The inclusion of related individuals in MR studies can help control for and, in some cases, estimate the effect of these biases on causal parameters. In this review, we discuss these biases, how they can affect MR studies, and describe three sorts of family-based study designs that can be used to control for them. We conclude that including family information from related individuals is not only possible given the world's existing twin, birth, and large-scale population-based cohorts, but likely to reap rich rewards in understanding the etiology of complex traits and diseases in the near future.
Source: Cold Spring Harbor perspectives in medicine - Category: Research Authors: Tags: Combining Human Genetics and Causal Inference to Understand Human Disease and Development TECHNIQUES Source Type: research
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