Estimating Recessive Disease Allele Frequency Based on
Genetic Maps
F. Haghighi, J. Ott
European Journal of Human Genetics ,
5(4), 203-205 (1997)
Abstract
For a recessive disease whose gene has been localized on the
human gene map, a new method is described for estimating the
population frequency of the disease allele. The method focuses on
affected individuals whose parents are first cousins, where parents
and grandparents are genotyped for highly polymorphic markers at
the disease gene. The primary statistic is the proportion of such
probands who are autozygous (homozygous due to identity by
descent of the two disease alleles), where this proportion is a
function of the disease allele frequency. Our map-based method is
compared to Dahlberg’s method of estimating recessive
disease allele frequencies, which is based on the proportion of
affected individuals whose parents are first cousins; this proportion
is also a function of the disease allele frequency. For small to
moderate sample sizes and traits that are not too common, our new
method is more efficient (for some parameter values dramatically
more efficient) than Dahlberg’s method.