Publication | Open Access
Sample Size Requirements in Case-Only Designs to Detect Gene-Environment Interaction
105
Citations
17
References
1997
Year
Genetic TestingGeneticsGenetic EpidemiologyOptimal Experimental DesignGenetic FoundationApplied Genetic EpidemiologyGenome-wide Association StudyGenetic AnalysisSample Size RequirementsGenotype-phenotype AssociationBiostatisticsSample SizePublic HealthStatisticsMolecular Genetic TechnologyGene-environment InteractionStatistical GeneticsGenetic VariationPopulation GeneticsEpidemiologyExperiment DesignMedicine
With advances in molecular genetic technology, more studies will examine gene-environment interaction in disease etiology. If the primary purpose of the study is to estimate the effect of gene-environment interaction in disease etiology, one can do so without employing controls. The case-only design has been promoted as an efficient and valid method for screening for gene-environment interaction. The authors derive a method for estimating sample size requirements, present sample size estimates, and compare minimum sample size requirements to detect gene-environment interaction in case-only studies with case-control studies. Assuming independence between exposure and genotype in the population, the authors believe that the case-only design is more efficient than a case-control design in detecting gene-environment interaction. They also illustrate a method to estimate sample size when information on marginal effects (relative risk) of exposure and genotype is available from previous studies.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1