On 2016 Aug 18, Daniel Weeks commented:
Relative effect sizes of FTO variants and rs373863828 on body mass index in Samoans
We would like to thank Dr. Janssens for making these helpful comments about the presentation and interpretation of our findings. And we welcome this opportunity to present our results more precisely and clearly.
Regarding the suggestion that we should have compared standardized effects, there exists some literature that argues that comparison of standardized effects can be misleading (Cummings P, 2004, Cummings P, 2011). Indeed, Rothman and Greenland (1998, p. 672) recommend that "effects should be expressed in a substantively meaningful unit that is uniform across studies, not in standard-deviation units." While the argument for comparing standardized effects may be more compelling when different studies used different measurement scales, in this case, body mass index (BMI) has been measured in prior studies and our current one using a common scale.
As recommended, we have now assessed the effect of variants on BMI in the FTO region to allow for direct comparison in our Samoan population. As Table 1 indicates, while the effects of these FTO variants are not statistically significant in our discovery sample, the estimates of the effect size of the FTO variants are similar in magnitude to previous estimates in other populations, and the non-standardized effect of the missense variant rs373863828 in CREBRF is approximately 3.75 to 4.66 times greater than the effects of the FTO variants in our discovery sample.
We concur with the important reminder that the odds ratio overestimates the relative risk when the outcome prevalence is high.
Thank you,
Daniel E. Weeks and Ryan Minster on behalf of all of the co-authors.
Department of Human Genetics, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
References:
Cummings P. (2004) Meta-analysis based on standardized effects is unreliable. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 158(6):595-7. PubMed PMID: 15184227.
Cummings P. (2011) Arguments for and against standardized mean differences (effect sizes). Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 165(7):592-6. doi: 10.1001/archpediatrics.2011.97. PubMed PMID: 21727271.
Rothman, K.J. and Greenland S. (1998) Modern epidemiology, second edition. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Philadelphia.
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