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A New Pipeline for the Normalization and Pooling of Metabolomics Data.

Authors :
Viallon V
His M
Rinaldi S
Breeur M
Gicquiau A
Hemon B
Overvad K
Tjønneland A
Rostgaard-Hansen AL
Rothwell JA
Lecuyer L
Severi G
Kaaks R
Johnson T
Schulze MB
Palli D
Agnoli C
Panico S
Tumino R
Ricceri F
Verschuren WMM
Engelfriet P
Onland-Moret C
Vermeulen R
Nøst TH
Urbarova I
Zamora-Ros R
Rodriguez-Barranco M
Amiano P
Huerta JM
Ardanaz E
Melander O
Ottoson F
Vidman L
Rentoft M
Schmidt JA
Travis RC
Weiderpass E
Johansson M
Dossus L
Jenab M
Gunter MJ
Lorenzo Bermejo J
Scherer D
Salek RM
Keski-Rahkonen P
Ferrari P
Source :
Metabolites [Metabolites] 2021 Sep 17; Vol. 11 (9). Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Sep 17.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Pooling metabolomics data across studies is often desirable to increase the statistical power of the analysis. However, this can raise methodological challenges as several preanalytical and analytical factors could introduce differences in measured concentrations and variability between datasets. Specifically, different studies may use variable sample types (e.g., serum versus plasma) collected, treated, and stored according to different protocols, and assayed in different laboratories using different instruments. To address these issues, a new pipeline was developed to normalize and pool metabolomics data through a set of sequential steps: (i) exclusions of the least informative observations and metabolites and removal of outliers; imputation of missing data; (ii) identification of the main sources of variability through principal component partial R-square (PC-PR2) analysis; (iii) application of linear mixed models to remove unwanted variability, including samples' originating study and batch, and preserve biological variations while accounting for potential differences in the residual variances across studies. This pipeline was applied to targeted metabolomics data acquired using Biocrates AbsoluteIDQ kits in eight case-control studies nested within the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC) cohort. Comprehensive examination of metabolomics measurements indicated that the pipeline improved the comparability of data across the studies. Our pipeline can be adapted to normalize other molecular data, including biomarkers as well as proteomics data, and could be used for pooling molecular datasets, for example in international consortia, to limit biases introduced by inter-study variability. This versatility of the pipeline makes our work of potential interest to molecular epidemiologists.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2218-1989
Volume :
11
Issue :
9
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Metabolites
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
34564446
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/metabo11090631