GWAS for ordinal data? Quantitative trait with lots of "zero" values....
0
1
Entering edit mode
5.6 years ago
fletchkatie ▴ 10

Hello,

I have been using SNPTEST and also BOLT-LMM for some quantitative trait GWAS. Is there any GWAS software out there that can handle ordinal data or possibly a bimodal distribution? I've tried googling / searching, but have not found any answers....

I am now helping a colleague with a GWAS for a quantitative trait derived from ELISA measurements. The trait she has measured has approx 40% of the study population with "non-detectable" levels, and the remaining 60% have a wider range of values (which are important to retain). I'm happy with a rank-based distribution for the detectable ones but don't really know how to incorporate the non-detectable levels (essentially, zeros).

It's important that these subjects are retained and that they have lower values that the detectable ones - in other words, I don't simply want to add "detectable vs not" as a covariate, unless it can be ordered. It might be possible to rank them per quartile/quintile, but I don't know of any software (and am not really confident of the ordinal regression statistics) which can handle an ordinal dataset for association testing. It's a 9.5 million SNP dataset, so computational efficiency is also important.

I'm exploring modelling it as a bimodal distribution (with the non-detectable values modelled as a normal distribution between zero and the lower detection limit of the ELISA), but I don't know of any GWAS software which can handle this for association testing, and other than boot-strapping (which'd be too computationally expensive with our 9.5million SNPs), I don't really know how to model the normal distribution in a population which has no information to rank the subjects (the non-detectable values).

Any pointers massively appreciated!

GWAS ordinal quantitative trait bimodal regression • 2.1k views
ADD COMMENT
0
Entering edit mode

I am not very expert of this, but maybe you can try with the so-called zero-inflated approaches? Like something discussed in this paper: http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1415-47572011000400008

ADD REPLY

Login before adding your answer.

Traffic: 1992 users visited in the last hour
Help About
FAQ
Access RSS
API
Stats

Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and Privacy Policy.

Powered by the version 2.3.6