Centenarian controls increase variant effect sizes by an average twofold in an extreme case–extreme control analysis of Alzheimer’s disease

Journal Article (2019)
Author(s)

N. Tesi (TU Delft - Pattern Recognition and Bioinformatics, Amsterdam UMC)

S.J. van der Lee (Amsterdam UMC)

M. Hulsman (Amsterdam UMC, TU Delft - Pattern Recognition and Bioinformatics)

Iris E. Jansen (Amsterdam UMC, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam)

N. Stringa (Amsterdam Public Health Research Institute, Amsterdam UMC)

Natasja van Schoor (Amsterdam Public Health Research Institute, TU Delft - Pattern Recognition and Bioinformatics, Amsterdam UMC)

Hanne Meijers-Heijboer (Amsterdam UMC)

M.J.T. Reinders (TU Delft - Pattern Recognition and Bioinformatics)

H. Holstege (TU Delft - Pattern Recognition and Bioinformatics, Amsterdam UMC)

More authors (External organisation)

Research Group
Pattern Recognition and Bioinformatics
Copyright
© 2019 N. Tesi, S.J. van der Lee, M. Hulsman, Iris E. Jansen, N. Stringa, N.M. van Schoor, Hanne Meijers-Heijboer, M.J.T. Reinders, H. Holstege, More Authors
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41431-018-0273-5
More Info
expand_more
Publication Year
2019
Language
English
Copyright
© 2019 N. Tesi, S.J. van der Lee, M. Hulsman, Iris E. Jansen, N. Stringa, N.M. van Schoor, Hanne Meijers-Heijboer, M.J.T. Reinders, H. Holstege, More Authors
Research Group
Pattern Recognition and Bioinformatics
Issue number
2
Volume number
27
Pages (from-to)
244-253
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Abstract

The detection of genetic loci associated with Alzheimer’s disease (AD) requires large numbers of cases and controls because variant effect sizes are mostly small. We hypothesized that variant effect sizes should increase when individuals who represent the extreme ends of a disease spectrum are considered, as their genomes are assumed to be maximally enriched or depleted with disease-associated genetic variants. We used 1,073 extensively phenotyped AD cases with relatively young age at onset as extreme cases (66.3 ± 7.9 years), 1,664 age-matched controls (66.0 ± 6.5 years) and 255 cognitively healthy centenarians as extreme controls (101.4 ± 1.3 years). We estimated the effect size of 29 variants that were previously associated with AD in genome-wide association studies. Comparing extreme AD cases with centenarian controls increased the variant effect size relative to published effect sizes by on average 1.90-fold (SE = 0.29, p = 9.0 × 10−4). The effect size increase was largest for the rare high-impact TREM2 (R74H) variant (6.5-fold), and significant for variants in/near ECHDC3 (4.6-fold), SLC24A4-RIN3 (4.5-fold), NME8 (3.8-fold), PLCG2 (3.3-fold), APOE-ε2 (2.2-fold), and APOE-ε4 (twofold). Comparing extreme phenotypes enabled us to replicate the AD association for 10 variants (p < 0.05) in relatively small samples. The increase in effect sizes depended mainly on using centenarians as extreme controls: the average variant effect size was not increased in a comparison of extreme AD cases and age-matched controls (0.94-fold, p = 6.8 × 10−1), suggesting that on average the tested genetic variants did not explain the extremity of the AD cases. Concluding, using centenarians as extreme controls in AD case–control studies boosts the variant effect size by on average twofold, allowing the replication of disease-association in relatively small samples.