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      Population stratification and spurious allelic association.

      1 ,
      Lancet (London, England)
      Elsevier BV

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          Abstract

          Great efforts and expense have been expended in attempts to detect genetic polymorphisms contributing to susceptibility to complex human disease. Concomitantly, technology for detection and scoring of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) has undergone rapid development, extensive catalogues of SNPs across the genome have been constructed, and SNPs have been increasingly used as a means for investigation of the genetic causes of complex human diseases. For many diseases, population-based studies of unrelated individuals--in which case-control and cohort studies serve as standard designs for genetic association analysis--can be the most practical and powerful approach. However, extensive debate has arisen about optimum study design, and considerable concern has been expressed that these approaches are prone to population stratification, which can lead to biased or spurious results. Over the past decade, a great shift has been noted, away from case-control and cohort studies, towards family-based association designs. These designs have fewer problems with population stratification but have greater genotyping and sampling requirements, and data can be difficult or impossible to gather. We discuss past evidence for population stratification on genotype-phenotype association studies, review methods to detect and account for it, and present suggestions for future study design and analysis.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Lancet
          Lancet (London, England)
          Elsevier BV
          0140-6736
          0140-6736
          Feb 15 2003
          : 361
          : 9357
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics, University of Oxford, OX3 7BN, Oxford, UK. Ion.cardon@well.ox.ac.uk
          Article
          S0140-6736(03)12520-2
          10.1016/S0140-6736(03)12520-2
          12598158
          28e61aa5-bb78-4e79-b203-47d4ee4f1794
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