Articles

Overestimated prediction using polygenic prediction derived from summary statistics

Park, David K.; Chen, Mingshen; Kim, Seungsoo; Joo, Yoonjung Y.; Loving, Rebekah K.; Kim, Hyoung S.; Cha, Jiook; Yoo, Shinjae; Kim, Jong H.

Background
When polygenic risk score (PRS) is derived from summary statistics, independence between discovery and test sets cannot be monitored. We compared two types of PRS studies derived from raw genetic data (denoted as rPRS) and the summary statistics for IGAP (sPRS).

Results
Two variables with the high heritability in UK Biobank, hypertension, and height, are used to derive an exemplary scale effect of PRS. sPRS without APOE is derived from International Genomics of Alzheimer’s Project (IGAP), which records ΔAUC and ΔR2 of 0.051 ± 0.013 and 0.063 ± 0.015 for Alzheimer’s Disease Sequencing Project (ADSP) and 0.060 and 0.086 for Accelerating Medicine Partnership - Alzheimer’s Disease (AMP-AD). On UK Biobank, rPRS performances for hypertension assuming a similar size of discovery and test sets are 0.0036 ± 0.0027 (ΔAUC) and 0.0032 ± 0.0028 (ΔR2). For height, ΔR2 is 0.029 ± 0.0037.

Conclusion
Considering the high heritability of hypertension and height of UK Biobank and sample size of UK Biobank, sPRS results from AD databases are inflated. Independence between discovery and test sets is a well-known basic requirement for PRS studies. However, a lot of PRS studies cannot follow such requirements because of impossible direct comparisons when using summary statistics. Thus, for sPRS, potential duplications should be carefully considered within the same ethnic group.

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Also Published In

Title
BMC Genomic Data
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12863-023-01151-4

More About This Work

Published Here
December 27, 2024

Notes

Polygenic risk score, Complex genetic disease, Alzheimer’s disease, Overestimation bias