Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Orienting the causal relationship between imprecisely measured traits using GWAS summary data

Gibran Hemani, Kate Tilling, George Davey Smith

PLoS Genetics · 2017

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Summary

Inference about the causal structure that induces correlations between two traits can be achieved by combining genetic associations with a mediation-based approach, as is done in the causal inference test (CIT). However, we show that measurement error in the phenotypes can lead to the CIT inferring the wrong causal direction, and that increasing sample sizes has the adverse effect of increasing confidence in the wrong answer. This problem is likely to be general to other mediation-based approaches. Here we introduce an extension to Mendelian randomisation, a method that uses genetic associations in an instrumentation framework, that enables inference of the causal direction between traits, with some advantages. First, it can be performed using only summary level data from genome-wide assoc

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1371/journal.pgen.1007081
Catalogue ID
BFmoef2ocf-fhk2qc
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