Authors
Daniel I Swerdlow, Karoline B Kuchenbaecker, Sonia Shah, Reecha Sofat, Michael V Holmes, Jon White, Jennifer S Mindell, Mika Kivimaki, Eric J Brunner, John C Whittaker, Juan P Casas, Aroon D Hingorani
Publication date
2016/10/1
Source
International journal of epidemiology
Volume
45
Issue
5
Pages
1600-1616
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
Mendelian randomization (MR) studies typically assess the pathogenic relevance of environmental exposures or disease biomarkers, using genetic variants that instrument these exposures. The approach is gaining popularity—our systematic review reveals a greater than 10-fold increase in MR studies published between 2004 and 2015. When the MR paradigm was first proposed, few biomarker- or exposure-related genetic variants were known, most having been identified by candidate gene studies. However, genome-wide association studies (GWAS) are now providing a rich source of potential instruments for MR analysis. Many early reviews covering the concept, applications and analytical aspects of the MR technique preceded the surge in GWAS, and thus the question of how best to select instruments for MR studies from the now extensive pool of available variants has received insufficient attention. Here we …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
DI Swerdlow, KB Kuchenbaecker, S Shah, R Sofat… - International journal of epidemiology, 2016