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      Meta-analysis of genetic association studies supports a contribution of common variants to susceptibility to common disease.

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          Abstract

          Association studies offer a potentially powerful approach to identify genetic variants that influence susceptibility to common disease, but are plagued by the impression that they are not consistently reproducible. In principle, the inconsistency may be due to false positive studies, false negative studies or true variability in association among different populations. The critical question is whether false positives overwhelmingly explain the inconsistency. We analyzed 301 published studies covering 25 different reported associations. There was a large excess of studies replicating the first positive reports, inconsistent with the hypothesis of no true positive associations (P < 10(-14)). This excess of replications could not be reasonably explained by publication bias and was concentrated among 11 of the 25 associations. For 8 of these 11 associations, pooled analysis of follow-up studies yielded statistically significant replication of the first report, with modest estimated genetic effects. Thus, a sizable fraction (but under half) of reported associations have strong evidence of replication; for these, false negative, underpowered studies probably contribute to inconsistent replication. We conclude that there are probably many common variants in the human genome with modest but real effects on common disease risk, and that studies using large samples will convincingly identify such variants.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Nat Genet
          Nature genetics
          Springer Science and Business Media LLC
          1061-4036
          1061-4036
          Feb 2003
          : 33
          : 2
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Whitehead/Massachuetts Institute of Technology Center for Genome Research, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, USA.
          Article
          ng1071
          10.1038/ng1071
          12524541
          197f0eaf-61ad-4d91-9572-9c7bf8311523
          History

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