Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Consistent Estimation in Mendelian Randomization with Some Invalid Instruments Using a Weighted Median Estimator

Jack Bowden, George Davey Smith, Philip Haycock, Stephen Burgess

Genetic Epidemiology · 2016

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Summary

Developments in genome-wide association studies and the increasing availability of summary genetic association data have made application of Mendelian randomization relatively straightforward. However, obtaining reliable results from a Mendelian randomization investigation remains problematic, as the conventional inverse-variance weighted method only gives consistent estimates if all of the genetic variants in the analysis are valid instrumental variables. We present a novel weighted median estimator for combining data on multiple genetic variants into a single causal estimate. This estimator is consistent even when up to 50% of the information comes from invalid instrumental variables. In a simulation analysis, it is shown to have better finite-sample Type 1 error rates than the inverse-v

Subject
Other / interdisciplinary
Source type
Peer-reviewed study
System type
Other
DOI
10.1002/gepi.21965
Catalogue ID
BFmommpgti-32fqn8
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