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Unbiased estimation and asymptotically valid inference in multivariable Mendelian randomization with many weak instrumental variables

Authors :
Yang, Yihe
Lorincz-Comi, Noah
Zhu, Xiaofeng
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Mendelian randomization (MR) is an instrumental variable (IV) approach to infer causal relationships between exposures and outcomes with genome-wide association studies (GWAS) summary data. However, the multivariable inverse-variance weighting (IVW) approach, which serves as the foundation for most MR approaches, cannot yield unbiased causal effect estimates in the presence of many weak IVs. To address this problem, we proposed the MR using Bias-corrected Estimating Equation (MRBEE) that can infer unbiased causal relationships with many weak IVs and account for horizontal pleiotropy simultaneously. While the practical significance of MRBEE was demonstrated in our parallel work (Lorincz-Comi (2023)), this paper established the statistical theories of multivariable IVW and MRBEE with many weak IVs. First, we showed that the bias of the multivariable IVW estimate is caused by the error-in-variable bias, whose scale and direction are inflated and influenced by weak instrument bias and sample overlaps of exposures and outcome GWAS cohorts, respectively. Second, we investigated the asymptotic properties of multivariable IVW and MRBEE, showing that MRBEE outperforms multivariable IVW regarding unbiasedness of causal effect estimation and asymptotic validity of causal inference. Finally, we applied MRBEE to examine myopia and revealed that education and outdoor activity are causal to myopia whereas indoor activity is not.<br />Comment: We have observed potential competitors, so we reverted to the version prior to the fourth update (v4). However, this paper and https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.01.10.523480v3.abstract have been merged, with the main content summarized in Supplemental Material 2

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2301.05130
Document Type :
Working Paper