• Human genetics · Jun 2009

    Comparative Study

    Linkage and heritability analysis of migraine symptom groupings: a comparison of three different clustering methods on twin data.

    • Carla C M Chen, Kerrie L Mengersen, Jonathan M Keith, Nicholas G Martin, and Dale R Nyholt.
    • School of Mathematical Sciences, Queensland University of Technology, QLD, Australia. carla.chen@qut.edu.au
    • Hum. Genet. 2009 Jun 1; 125 (5-6): 591-604.

    AbstractMigraine is a painful disorder for which the etiology remains obscure. Diagnosis is largely based on International Headache Society criteria. However, no feature occurs in all patients who meet these criteria, and no single symptom is required for diagnosis. Consequently, this definition may not accurately reflect the phenotypic heterogeneity or genetic basis of the disorder. Such phenotypic uncertainty is typical for complex genetic disorders and has encouraged interest in multivariate statistical methods for classifying disease phenotypes. We applied three popular statistical phenotyping methods-latent class analysis, grade of membership and grade of membership "fuzzy" clustering (Fanny)-to migraine symptom data, and compared heritability and genome-wide linkage results obtained using each approach. Our results demonstrate that different methodologies produce different clustering structures and non-negligible differences in subsequent analyses. We therefore urge caution in the use of any single approach and suggest that multiple phenotyping methods be used.

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