skip to content
National Cancer Institute U.S. National Institutes of Health www.cancer.gov
Pubications

Publications Search

Abstract

Title: Impact of Misclassification in Genotype-Exposure Interaction Studies: Example of N-Acetyltransferase 2 (NAT2), Smoking, and Bladder Cancer.
Author: Deitz AC, Rothman N, Rebbeck TR, Hayes RB, Chow WH, Zheng W, Hein DW, Garcia-Closas M
Journal: Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 13(9):1543-1546
Year: 2004
Month: September

Abstract: Errors in genotype determination can lead to bias in the estimation of genotype effects and gene-environment interactions and increases in the sample size required for molecular epidemiologic studies. We evaluated the effect of genotype misclassification on odds ratio estimates and sample size requirements for a study of NAT2 acetylation status, smoking, and bladder cancer risk. Errors in the assignment of NAT2 acetylation status by a commonly used 3-single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) genotyping assay, compared with an 11-SNP assay, were relatively small (sensitivity of 94% and specificity of 100%) and resulted in only slight biases of the interaction parameters. However, use of the 11-SNP assay resulted in a substantial decrease in sample size needs to detect a previously reported NAT2-smoking interaction for bladder cancer: 1,121 cases instead of 1,444 cases, assuming a 1:1 case-control ratio. This example illustrates how reducing genotype misclassification can result in substantial decreases in sample size requirements and possibly substantial decreases in the cost of studies to evaluate interactions.