Relationship Estimation in Affected Sib Pair Analysis of Late-Onset
Diseases
H.H.H. Goring, J. Ott
European Journal of Human Genetics, Volume 5, Issue 2, 69-77
(March-April, 1997)
Abstract
In linkage studies, errors in pedigree structure will often be uncovered through
Mendelian inconsistencies. In affected sib pair analysis of diseases with late onset,
however, such mistakes will usually go undetected since parental genotypes are
commonly not known. Cases of nonpaternity, unrecorded adoption or accidental
sample swap in the laboratory will then not be noticed. Typically, such
relationship errors lead to a decrease in power for linkage. In this paper, a method
is presented which allows verification of the relationship between stated sibs
using their marker genotypes. The method is likelihood-based and incorporates a
Bayesian approach to compute posterior relationship probabilities. It is shown
that sibs, half-sibs and unrelated individuals can be distinguished from each other
quite reliably using numbers of markers that should be available in most sib pair
studies. It is demonstrated that elimination of false sib pairs increases the power
to detect linkage in affected sib pair studies. The gain in power may be large if
relationship errors occur quite frequently; the gain will be only moderate if
relationship errors are very infrequent. Software for relationship estimation is
provided.