Variance of age-specific log incidence decomposition (VALID): a unifying model of measured and unmeasured genetic and non-genetic risks

Author:

Hopper John L1,Dowty James G1,Nguyen Tuong L1ORCID,Li Shuai1ORCID,Dite Gillian S12ORCID,MacInnis Robert J13,Makalic Enes1ORCID,Schmidt Daniel F14,Bui Minh1,Stone Jennifer5ORCID,Sung Joohon6ORCID,Jenkins Mark A1ORCID,Giles Graham G3,Southey Melissa C37,Mathews John D1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, University of Melbourne , Melbourne, VIC, Australia

2. Genetic Technologies Ltd. , Fitzroy, VIC, Australia

3. Cancer Epidemiology Division, Cancer Council Victoria , Melbourne, VIC, Australia

4. Faculty of Information Technology, Monash University , Clayton, VIC, Australia

5. School of Population and Global Health, University of Western Australia , Perth, WA, Australia

6. Division of Genome and Health Big Data, Department of Public Health Sciences, Graduate School of Public Health, Seoul National University , Seoul, Korea

7. Precision Medicine, School of Clinical Sciences at Monash Health, Monash University , Clayton, VIC, Australia

Abstract

Abstract Background The extent to which known and unknown factors explain how much people of the same age differ in disease risk is fundamental to epidemiology. Risk factors can be correlated in relatives, so familial aspects of risk (genetic and non-genetic) must be considered. Development We present a unifying model (VALID) for variance in risk, with risk defined as log(incidence) or logit(cumulative incidence). Consider a normally distributed risk score with incidence increasing exponentially as the risk increases. VALID’s building block is variance in risk, Δ2, where Δ = log(OPERA) is the difference in mean between cases and controls and OPERA is the odds ratio per standard deviation. A risk score correlated r between a pair of relatives generates a familial odds ratio of exp(rΔ2). Familial risk ratios, therefore, can be converted into variance components of risk, extending Fisher’s classic decomposition of familial variation to binary traits. Under VALID, there is a natural upper limit to variance in risk caused by genetic factors, determined by the familial odds ratio for genetically identical twin pairs, but not to variation caused by non-genetic factors. Application For female breast cancer, VALID quantified how much variance in risk is explained—at different ages—by known and unknown major genes and polygenes, non-genomic risk factors correlated in relatives, and known individual-specific factors. Conclusion VALID has shown that, while substantial genetic risk factors have been discovered, much is unknown about genetic and familial aspects of breast cancer risk especially for young women, and little is known about individual-specific variance in risk.

Funder

NHMRC

University of Melbourne

Cancer Council Victoria

Victorian Cancer Agency Early Career Research Fellow

National Breast Cancer Foundation Early Career Fellowship

National Research Foundation of Korea

National Health and Medical Research Council

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Medicine,Epidemiology

Reference55 articles.

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