Assessment of cumulative evidence on genetic associations: interim guidelines

JPA Ioannidis, P Boffetta, J Little… - International journal …, 2008 - academic.oup.com
JPA Ioannidis, P Boffetta, J Little, TR O'Brien, AG Uitterlinden, P Vineis, DJ Balding
International journal of epidemiology, 2008academic.oup.com
Established guidelines for causal inference in epidemiological studies may be inappropriate
for genetic associations. A consensus process was used to develop guidance criteria for
assessing cumulative epidemiologic evidence in genetic associations. A proposed semi-
quantitative index assigns three levels for the amount of evidence, extent of replication, and
protection from bias, and also generates a composite assessment of 'strong','moderate'or
'weak'epidemiological credibility. In addition, we discuss how additional input and guidance …
Abstract
Established guidelines for causal inference in epidemiological studies may be inappropriate for genetic associations. A consensus process was used to develop guidance criteria for assessing cumulative epidemiologic evidence in genetic associations. A proposed semi-quantitative index assigns three levels for the amount of evidence, extent of replication, and protection from bias, and also generates a composite assessment of ‘strong’, ‘moderate’ or ‘weak’ epidemiological credibility. In addition, we discuss how additional input and guidance can be derived from biological data. Future empirical research and consensus development are needed to develop an integrated model for combining epidemiological and biological evidence in the rapidly evolving field of investigation of genetic factors.
Oxford University Press