@article{19a71696b7424839a5d4d544d22ead2d,
title = "Variance calculations for identity-by-descent estimation",
abstract = "Nonparametric linkage strategies often involve estimation of identity by descent (IBD) with the use of affected sibling pairs. Methods for IBD estimation are well established and have been successful for mapping complex traits. However, the majority of linkage approaches involving IBD have focused on statistical testing, rather than on the effect estimates themselves. Through a bootstrap procedure developed for linkage-scan data sets, we provide standard errors for the estimated mean IBD that are broadly applicable. Applications that benefit from the availability of standard errors include effect-size estimates and confidence intervals; meta-analyses, including tests for heterogeneity; and discordant-sibling-pair evaluation. We demonstrate the use of estimated mean IBD and its standard errors in the National Institute of Mental Health Human Genetics Initiative linkage samples for bipolar disorder and Alzheimer disease. Mean IBD and its standard errors are valuable tools for the further assessment and evaluation of linkage-scan samples involving complex disease.",
author = "McQueen, \{Matthew B.\} and Deborah Blacker and Laird, \{Nan M.\}",
note = "Funding Information: M.B.M. and N.M.L. were supported by NIMH grant MH063445. M.B.M. was additionally supported by NIMH grant T32-MH017119. Data and biomaterials from the three NIMH BP studies were collected in four projects that participated in the NIMH BP Genetics Initiative. From 1991 to 1998, the principal investigators and coinvestigators were, from Indiana University in Indianapolis (U01 MH46282), John Nurnberger, Marvin Miller, Howard Edenberg, Tatiana Foroud, and Elizabeth Bowman; from Washington University in St. Louis (U01 MH46280), Theodore Reich, Allison Goate, and John Rice; from Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore (U01 MH46274), J. Raymond DePaulo Jr., Sylvia Simpson, and Colin Stine; and, from the NIMH Intramural Research Program, Clinical Neurogenetics Branch, in Bethesda, Elliot Gershon, Diane Kazuba, and Elizabeth Maxwell. Data and biomaterials were collected as part of 10 projects that participated in the NIMH BP Genetics Initiative. From 1999 to 2003, the principal investigators and coinvestigators were, from Indiana University (R01 MH59545), John Nurnberger, Marvin J. Miller, Elizabeth S. Bowman, N. Leela Rau, P. Ryan Moe, Nalini Samavedy, Rif El-Mallakh (at the University of Louisville), Husseini Manji (at Wayne State University), Debra A. Glitz (at Wayne State University), Eric T. Meyer, Carrie Smiley, Tatiana Foroud, Leah Flury, Danielle M. Dick, and Howard Edenberg; from Washington University (R01 MH059534), John Rice, Theodore Reich, Allison Goate, and Laura Bierut; from Johns Hopkins University (R01 MH59533), Melvin McInnis, J. Raymond DePaulo Jr., Dean F. MacKinnon, Francis M. Mondimore, James B. Potash, Peter P. Zandi, Dimitrios Avramopoulos, and Jennifer Payne; from the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia (R01 MH59553), Wade Berrettini; from the University of California at Irvine (R01 MH60068), William Byerley and Mark Vawter; from the University of Iowa in Iowa City (R01 MH059548), William Coryell and Raymond Crowe; from the University of Chicago (R01 MH59535), Elliot Gershon, Judith Badner, Francis McMahon, Chunyu Liu, Alan Sanders, Maria Caserta, Steven Dinwiddie, Tu Nguyen, and Donna Harakal; from the University of California at San Diego (R01 MH59567), John Kelsoe and Rebecca McKinney; from Rush University in Chicago (R01 MH059556), William Scheftner, Howard M. Kravitz, Diana Marta, Annette Vaughn-Brown, and Laurie Bederow; and, from the NIMH Intramural Research Program (1Z01MH002810-01), Francis J. McMahon, Layla Kassem, Sevilla Detera-Wadleigh, Lisa Austin, and Dennis L. Murphy. Genotyping services were provided in part by the Center for Inherited Disease Research (CIDR). CIDR is fully funded through a federal contract from the National Institutes of Health to Johns Hopkins University (N01-HG-65403). Data and biomaterials were collected in three projects that participated in the NIMH AD Genetics Initiative. From 1991 to 1998, the principal investigators and coinvestigators were, from Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, Marilyn S. Albert and Deborah Blacker; from Johns Hopkins University, Susan S. Bassett, Gary A. Chase, and Marshal F. Folstein; and, from the University of Alabama in Birmingham, Rodney C. P. Go and Lindy E. Harrell. ",
year = "2006",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1086/503920",
language = "English",
volume = "78",
pages = "914--921",
journal = "American Journal of Human Genetics",
issn = "0002-9297",
publisher = "Cell Press",
number = "6",
}