Pervasive biases in proxy genome-wide association studies based on parental history of Alzheimer’s disease

Year of Publication
2024
Author
ISSN Number
2692-8205
Abstract

Almost every recent Alzheimer's disease (AD) genome-wide association study (GWAS) has performed meta-analysis to combine studies with clinical diagnosis of AD with studies that use proxy phenotypes based on parental disease history. Here, we report major limitations in current GWAS-by-proxy (GWAX) practices due to uncorrected survival bias and non-random participation of parental illness survey, which cause substantial discrepancies between AD GWAS and GWAX results. We demonstrate that current AD GWAX provide highly misleading genetic correlations between AD risk and higher education which subsequently affects a variety of genetic epidemiologic applications involving AD and cognition. Our study sheds important light on the design and analysis of mid-aged biobank cohorts and underscores the need for caution when interpreting genetic association results based on proxy-reported parental disease history.

Date Published
2023 Oct 17
DOI
10.1038/s41588-024-01963-9
Alternate Journal
bioRxiv
PMID
37904974
PMCID
PMC10614766
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