Many statistical associations between a disease and alleles of specific genes have proven to be irreproducible. In part, this
irreproducibility can be attributed to a lack of replication before publication and the fact that, until recently, the relationship
between statistical significance and various measures of reproducibility was not widely understood. This review proposes a
classification system, the Better Associations for Disease and GEnes (BADGE) system, for describing genetic associations.
The BADGE classes, first class through fifth class, are based on the
P value of the association. A first-class association, with
P<2×10
−7, is expected to be reproducible even in the absence of other evidence supporting the association. A fifth-class association
corresponds to conventional statistical significance (
P<5×10
−2), which provides almost no assurance of reproducibility. Three intervening classes, described as second-, third-, and fourth-class
associations, are defined by
P values separated by factors of 20 or 25 from these extremes.