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Identifying disease-associated biomarker network features through conditional graphical model
Authors:Shanghong Xie  Xiang Li  Peter McColgan  Rachael I Scahill  Donglin Zeng  Yuanjia Wang
Institution:1. Department of Biostatistics, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York;2. Statistics and Decision Sciences, Janssen Research & Development, LLC, Raritan, New Jersey;3. Huntington's Disease Centre, Department of Neurodegenerative Disease, UCL Institute of Neurology, London, UK;4. Department of Biostatistics, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Abstract:Biomarkers are often organized into networks, in which the strengths of network connections vary across subjects depending on subject-specific covariates (eg, genetic variants). Variation of network connections, as subject-specific feature variables, has been found to predict disease clinical outcome. In this work, we develop a two-stage method to estimate biomarker networks that account for heterogeneity among subjects and evaluate network's association with disease clinical outcome. In the first stage, we propose a conditional Gaussian graphical model with mean and precision matrix depending on covariates to obtain covariate-dependent networks with connection strengths varying across subjects while assuming homogeneous network structure. In the second stage, we evaluate clinical utility of network measures (connection strengths) estimated from the first stage. The second-stage analysis provides the relative predictive power of between-region network measures on clinical impairment in the context of regional biomarkers and existing disease risk factors. We assess the performance of proposed method by extensive simulation studies and application to a Huntington's disease (HD) study to investigate the effect of HD causal gene on the rate of change in motor symptom through affecting brain subcortical and cortical gray matter atrophy connections. We show that cortical network connections and subcortical volumes, but not subcortical connections are identified to be predictive of clinical motor function deterioration. We validate these findings in an independent HD study. Lastly, highly similar patterns seen in the gray matter connections and a previous white matter connectivity study suggest a shared biological mechanism for HD and support the hypothesis that white matter loss is a direct result of neuronal loss as opposed to the loss of myelin or dysmyelination.
Keywords:graphical model  gray matter network  Huntington's disease  mediation analysis  regularized regression
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