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Examine os métodos selecionados lado a lado; as linhas que diferem ficam destacadas.

Análise de Variação do Número de Cópias em Série Temporal×Estudo de Associação Genômica Ampla (GWAS)×
ÁreaBioinformáticaBioinformática
FamíliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Ano de origem2010s–present2005–2007
Autor originalDeveloped from foundational CNV methods (Olshen et al. 2004; Ding et al. 2010) extended to longitudinal tumor genomics frameworksKlein et al. (age-related macular degeneration GWAS, 2005); landmark scale: Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium (2007)
TipoComputational genomics pipelineObservational genomic association study
Fonte seminalDentro, S. C., et al. (2021). Characterizing genetic intra-tumor heterogeneity across 2,658 human cancer genomes. Cell, 184(8), 2239-2254. link ↗Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium. (2007). Genome-wide association study of 14,000 cases of seven common diseases and 3,000 shared controls. Nature, 447(7145), 661–678. link ↗
Outros nomeslongitudinal CNV analysis, temporal copy number analysis, time-series CNV profiling, serial CNV analysisGWAS, genome-wide association analysis, whole-genome association study, WGAS
Relacionados56
ResumoTime-series copy number variation (CNV) analysis is a computational genomics pipeline that characterizes chromosomal gains and losses across multiple sequential samples from the same individual or tumor. By comparing copy number profiles at successive time points — such as diagnosis, mid-treatment, relapse — it reconstructs the clonal dynamics and evolutionary trajectories driving genome instability, enabling researchers to track how sub-populations expand, contract, or acquire new aberrations over time.A genome-wide association study (GWAS) systematically tests hundreds of thousands to millions of single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) across the human genome for statistical association with a trait or disease. By comparing allele frequencies between cases and controls — or by regressing SNP genotypes on a quantitative phenotype — GWAS identifies genomic loci that harbor common genetic variants contributing to complex traits. Since its large-scale debut in 2007, GWAS has catalogued thousands of robust disease–variant associations across virtually every common human condition.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Time-series copy number variation analysis · Genome-wide association study. Recuperado em 2026-06-19 de https://scholargate.app/pt/compare