A comparison of batch effect removal methods for enhancement of prediction performance using MAQC-II microarray gene expression data

J. Luo, M. Schumacher, A. Scherer, D. Sanoudou, D. Megherbi, T. Davison, T. Shi, W. Tong, L. Shi, H. Hong, C. Zhao, F. Elloumi, W. Shi, R. Thomas, S. Lin, G. Tillinghast, G. Liu, Y. Zhou, D. Herman, Y. LiY. Deng, H. Fang, P. Bushel, M. Woods, J. Zhang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

233 Scopus citations

Abstract

Batch effects are the systematic non-biological differences between batches (groups) of samples in microarray experiments due to various causes such as differences in sample preparation and hybridization protocols. Previous work focused mainly on the development of methods for effective batch effects removal. However, their impact on cross-batch prediction performance, which is one of the most important goals in microarray-based applications, has not been addressed. This paper uses a broad selection of data sets from the Microarray Quality Control Phase II (MAQC-II) effort, generated on three microarray platforms with different causes of batch effects to assess the efficacy of their removal. Two data sets from cross-tissue and cross-platform experiments are also included. Of the 120 cases studied using Support vector machines (SVM) and K nearest neighbors (KNN) as classifiers and Matthews correlation coefficient (MCC) as performance metric, we find that Ratio-G, Ratio-A, EJLR, mean-centering and standardization methods perform better or equivalent to no batch effect removal in 89, 85, 83, 79 and 75% of the cases, respectively, suggesting that the application of these methods is generally advisable and ratio-based methods are preferred.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)278-291
Number of pages14
JournalPharmacogenomics Journal
Volume10
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2010
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • MAQC-II
  • batch effect
  • batch effect removal
  • cross-batch prediction
  • gene expression
  • microarray

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