131 results on '"Verellen-Dumoulin, C."'
Search Results
2. Fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis of 110 hematopoietic disorders with chromosome 5 abnormalities: do de novo and therapy-related myelodysplastic syndrome–acute myeloid leukemia actually differ?
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Lessard, M., Hélias, C., Struski, S., Perrusson, N., Uettwiller, F., Mozziconacci, M.-J., Lafage-Pochitaloff, M., Dastugue, N., Terré, C., Brizard, F., Cornillet-Lefebvre, P., Mugneret, F., Barin, C., Herry, A., Luquet, I., Desangles, F., Michaux, L., Verellen-Dumoulin, C., Perrot, C., Van den Akker, J., Lespinasse, J., Eclache, V., and Berger, R.
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- 2007
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3. The value of interphase fluorescence in situ hybridization for the detection of translocation t(12;21) in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia
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Ameye, G., Jacquy, C., Zenebergh, A., Stul, M., Vaerman, J.-L., Bilhou-Nabera, C., Libouton, J.-M., Deneys, V., Martiat, P., Hagemeijer, A., Cornu, G., Verellen-Dumoulin, C., and Michaux, L.
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- 2000
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4. 17q21.31 microduplication patients are characterised by behavioural problems and poor social interaction
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Grisart, B, Willatt, L, Destrée, A, Fryns, J-P, Rack, K, de Ravel, T, Rosenfeld, J, Vermeesch, J R, Verellen-Dumoulin, C, and Sandford, R
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- 2009
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5. Identification of symbol digit modality test score extremes in Huntington's disease
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Braisch, U, Muche, R, Rothenbacher, D, Landwehrmeyer, GB, Long, JD, Bentivoglio, AR, Biunno, I, Bonelli, RM, Dunnett, SB, Illmann, T, Levey, J, Ramos-Arroyo, M, Nielsen, JE, Paivarinta, M, Sebastian, AR, Tabrizi, SJ, Vandenberghe, W, Uhrova, T, Come, A, Garde, MB, Betz, S, Capodarca, S, Wildson, SC, da Silva, V, Di Renzo, M, Finisterra, M, Genoves, C, Gilling, M, Handley, OJ, Hvalstedt, C, Koppers, K, Lamanna, C, Laura, M, Descals, AM, Monza, D, Mutze, L, Oehmen, M, Padieu, H, Paterski, L, Koivisto, SP, Rindal, B, Roren, N, Sasinkova, P, Seliverstov, Y, Timewell, E, Cubillo, PT, van Walsem, MR, Witjes-Ane, MN, Yudina, E, Zielonka, E, Zinzi, P, Braunwarth, EM, Brugger, F, Buratti, L, Hametner, EM, Hepperger, C, Holas, C, Hotter, A, Hussl, A, Larcher, B, Mahlknecht, P, Muller, C, Pinter, B, Poewe, W, Seppi, K, Sprenger, F, Wenning, G, Dupuis, M, Minet, C, Ribai, P, Van Paemel, D, Verellen-Dumoulin, C, Klempir, J, Majerova, V, Roth, J, Babiloni, B, Debruxelles, S, Duche, C, Goizet, C, Jameau, L, Lafoucriere, D, Spampinato, U, Bachoud-Levi, AC, Boisse, MF, de Langavant, LC, Lemoine, L, Morgado, G, Youssov, K, Annic, A, Barthelemy, R, De Bruycker, C, Cabaret, M, Carette, AS, Carriere, N, Decorte, E, Defebvre, L, Delliaux, M, Delval, A, Depelchin, A, Destee, A, Dewulf-Pasz, N, Dondaine, T, Dugauquier, F, Dujardin, K, Lemaire, MH, Manouvrier, S, Peter, M, Plomhause, L, Sablonniere, B, Simonin, C, Tard, C, Thibault-Tanchou, S, Vuillaume, I, Bellonet, M, Benoit, A, Blin, S, Courtin, F, Duru, C, Fasquel, V, Godefroy, O, Krystkowiak, P, Mantaux, B, Roussel, M, Tir, M, Schuler, B, Wannepain, S, Azulay, JP, Chabot, C, Delfini, M, Eusebio, A, Fluchere, F, Grosjean, H, Mundler, L, Nowak, M, Bioux, S, Bliaux, E, Girard, C, Guyant-Marechal, L, Hannequin, D, Hannier, V, Jourdain, S, Maltete, D, Pouliquen, D, Blondeau, L, Calvas, F, Cheriet, S, Delabaere, H, Demonet, JF, Pariente, J, Pierre, M, Beuth, M, Gelderblom, H, Priller, J, Pruss, H, Spruth, E, Thiel, S, Ellrichmannberlin, G, Herrmann, L, Hoffmann, R, Kaminski, B, Saft, C, Bosredon, C, Hunger, U, Lohle, M, Maass, A, Ossig, C, Schmidt, S, Storch, A, Wolz, A, Wolz, M, Kohl, Z, Kozay, C, Ullah, J, Winkler, J, Bergmann, U, Boringer, R, Capetian, P, Kammel, G, Lambeck, J, Meier, S, Rijntjes, M, Zucker, B, Boelmans, K, Ganos, C, Goerendt, I, Heinicke, W, Hidding, U, Munchau, A, Schmalfeld, J, Stubbe, L, Zittel, S, Diercks, G, Dressler, D, Francis, F, Gayde-Stephan, S, Gorzolla, H, Kramer, B, Minschke, R, Schrader, C, Tacik, P, Longinus, B, Lusebrink, A, Muhlau, M, Peinemann, A, Stadtler, M, Weindl, A, Winkelmann, J, Ziegler, C, Bechtel, N, Beckmann, H, Bohlen, S, Gopfert, N, Holzner, E, Lange, H, Reilmann, R, Rohm, S, Rumpf, S, Sass, C, Schepers, S, Weber, N, Barth, K, Buck, A, Connemann, J, Ecker, D, Geitner, C, Held, C, Kesse, A, Landwehrmeyer, B, Lezius, F, Lewerenz, J, Nepper, S, Niess, A, Orth, M, Schneider, A, Schwenk, D, Sussmuth, S, Trautmann, S, Weydt, P, Klebe, S, Musacchio, T, Leypold, C, Noth, K, Cormio, C, de Tommaso, M, Franco, G, Sciruicchio, V, Serpino, C, Calandra-Buonaura, G, Capellari, S, Cortelli, P, Gallassi, R, Poda, R, Sambati, L, Scaglione, C, Maserati, MS, Agosti, C, Barlati, S, Compostella, S, Marchina, E, Padovani, A, Bertini, E, Ghelli, E, Ginestroni, A, Mechi, C, Paganini, M, Piacentini, S, Pradella, S, Romoli, AM, Sorbi, S, Abbruzzese, G, di Poggio, MB, Ferrandes, G, Mandich, P, Marchese, R, Tamburini, T, Baake, V, van den Bogaard, SJA, Bos, R, Dumas, EM, t'Hart, EP, Kampstra, A, Roos, RAC, Schoonderbeek, A, Aaserud, O, Bjorgo, K, Borgeod, N, Dramstad, E, Fannemel, M, Frich, JC, Gorvell, PF, Heiberg, A, Lorentzen, E, Retterstol, L, Rosby, O, Sikiric, A, Stokke, B, van Walsem, M, Wehus, R, Bjornevoll, I, Sando, SB, Haug, MG, Storseth, HH, Arntsen, V, Dziadkiewicz, A, Konkel, A, Narozanska, E, Robowski, P, Sitek, E, Slawek, J, Soltan, W, Szinwelski, M, Arkuszewski, M, Blaszczyk, M, Boczarska-Jedynak, M, Ciach-Wysocka, E, Gorzkowska, A, Nska-Myga, BJ, Kaczmarczyk, A, Klodowska-Duda, G, Opala, G, Stompel, D, Banaszkiewicz, K, Bocwinska, D, Bojakowska-Jaremek, K, Dec, M, Grabska, N, Krawczyk, GM, Kubowicz, E, Malec-Litwinowicz, M, Rudzinska, M, Stenwak, A, Szczudlik, A, Szczygiel, E, Wojcik, M, Wasielewska, A, Bryl, JAA, Ciesielska, A, Klimberg, A, Marcinkowski, J, Samara, H, Sempolowicz, J, Sniewski, BW, Zielonka, D, Gogol, A, Janik, P, Jamrozik, Z, Kaminska, A, Kwiecinski, H, Antczak, J, Jachinska, K, Krysa, W, Rakowicz, M, Richter, P, Rola, R, Ryglewicz, D, Sienkiewicz-Jarosz, H, Stepniak, I, Sulek, A, Witkowski, G, Zaremba, J, Zdzienicka, E, Ziora-Jakutowicz, K, Januario, C, Julio, F, Guedes, LC, Coelho, M, Finisterra, AM, Ferreira, JJ, Mestre, T, Mendes, T, Rosa, MM, Valadas, A, Kopishinskaya, S, Korotysh, M, Herrera, CD, Moreno, PG, Bas, J, Busquets, N, Calopa, M, Classen, SJ, Dedicha, NR, Buongiorno, MT, Maria, ADS, Munoz, E, Santacruz, P, Barbera, MA, Pardo, SA, Guia, DB, Calzado, N, Hernanz, LC, Diaz-Zorita, JPT, Catena, JL, Ferrer, PQ, Carruesco, GT, Robert, MF, Viladrich, CM, Roca, E, Idiago, JMR, Riballo, AV, Campolongo, A, de Bobadilla, RF, Bojarsky, JK, Martinez-Horta, S, Pagonabarraga, J, Perez, JP, Ribosa, R, Villa, C, Gil, MAA, Corrales, KB, Esteban, JCG, Gonzalez, A, Merino, BT, Cubo, E, Polo, CG, Mariscal, N, Romero, SG, Arbelo, JM, de Molina, RM, Martin, I, Perianez, JM, Udaeta, B, Alonso-Frech, F, Frades, B, Villanueva, MA, Sevilla, MAZ, Frech, FA, Fenollar, MD, Garcia, RGR, Villanueva, C, Bascunana, M, Ventura, MF, Ribas, GG, de Yebenes, JG, Moreno, JLLS, Barral, VM, Ruiz, PJG, Garcia, A, Lopez, RG, Barcenas, AH, Martinez-Descals, A, Martin, VP, Martinez, NR, Artiga, MJS, Sanchez, V, Pueyo, A, Gonzalez, S, Guisasola, LM, Ribacoba, MPPR, Salvador, C, Lozano, PS, Caldentey, JG, Ramirez, IL, Arques, PN, Lopera, MR, Pastor, BV, Gaston, I, Garcia-Amigot, F, Martinez-Jaurrieta, MD, Ramos-Arroyo, MA, Carrillo, F, Redondo, MTC, Mir, P, Gonzalez, LV, Moreno, JMG, Lucena, CM, Pena, JC, Redondo, L, Sanchez, VS, Fernandez, CM, Mata, MP, Lemos, MDR, Bosca, M, Burguera, JA, Vilaplana, FCBCP, Solis, P, Figuerola, BJ, Palanca, PM, Berglund, P, Constantinescu, R, Fredlund, G, Hosterey-Ugander, U, Linnsand, P, Neleborn-Lingefjard, L, Wahlstrom, J, Palhagen, S, Svenningsson, P, Paucar, M, Wallden, T, Ekwall, C, Goller, ML, Sundblom, J, Stebler, Y, Kaelin, A, Romero, I, Schupbach, M, Zaugg, SW, Jung, H, Petersen, J, Auer, M, Mihaylova, V, Vernon, N, Akhtar, S, Crooks, J, Curtis, A, de Souza, J, Piedad, J, Rickards, H, Wright, J, Pallett, A, Coulthard, E, Gethin, L, Hayward, B, Sieradzan, K, Wright, A, Busse, M, Butcher, C, Dunnett, S, Clenaghan, C, Hunt, S, Jones, L, Jones, U, Khalil, H, Minster, S, Owen, M, Price, K, Townhill, J, Rosser, A, Edwards, M, Ho, C, McGill, M, Porteous, M, Pearson, P, Harrower, T, Irvine, S, Brockie, P, Foster, J, Johns, N, McKenzie, S, Rothery, J, Thomas, G, Yates, S, Deith, C, Ireland, J, Ritchie, S, Andrew, A, Frost, J, Noad, R, Cosgrove, J, Gallantree, D, Hamer, S, Hobson, E, Jamieson, S, Kraus, A, Longthorpe, M, Markova, I, Musgrave, H, Peacy, C, Raman, A, Rowett, L, Toscano, J, Wild, S, Yardumian, P, Clayton, C, Dipple, H, Freire-Patino, D, Hallam, C, Middleton, J, Alusi, S, Davies, R, Foy, K, Gerrans, E, Leggett, H, Pate, L, Anjum, U, Coebergh, J, Eddy, C, McEntagart, M, Patton, M, Peterson, M, Rose, S, Andrews, T, Brown, S, Bruno, S, Doherty, K, Golding, C, Haider, S, Hensman, D, Lahiri, N, Lewis, M, Novak, M, Patel, A, Robertson, N, Rosser, E, Tabrizi, S, Taylor, R, Warner, T, Wild, E, Arran, N, Bek, J, Callaghan, J, Craufurd, D, Fullam, R, Howard, L, Huson, S, Johnson, L, Jones, M, Krishnamoorthy, A, Murphy, H, Oughton, E, Partington-Jones, L, Rogers, D, Sollom, A, Snowden, J, Stopford, C, Thompson, J, Tinkler, P, Trender-Gerhard, I, Verstraelen, N, Westmoreland, L, Cass, G, Davidson, L, Davison, J, Fullerton, N, Holmes, K, Komati, S, McDonnell, S, Mohammed, Z, Morgan, K, Savage, L, Singh, B, Wood, J, Chu, E, Knight, C, O'Neill, M, Das Purkayastha, D, Nemeth, AH, Siuda, G, Valentine, R, Dixon, K, Armstrong, R, Harrison, D, Hughes, M, Large, S, Donovan, JO, Palmer, A, Parkinson, A, Soltysiak, B, Timings, L, Williams, J, Burn, J, Weekes, R, Craven, J, Bailey, W, Coleman, C, Haig-Brown, D, Simpson, S, Hare, M, Majeed, T, Bandmann, O, Bradbury, A, Fairtlough, H, Fillingham, K, Foustanos, I, Gill, P, Kazoka, M, Nevitt, L, Peppa, N, Quarrell, O, Taylor, C, Tidswell, K, O'Donovan, K, Agarwal, V, Anderson, M, Gunner, K, Harris, K, Hayward, E, Heywood, M, Keys, L, Kipps, C, MacKinnon, L, Smalley, S, Gowers, L, Powell, K, Bethwaite, P, Edwards, R, Fuller, K, Phillips, M, Tan, L, Burgunder, JM, Lau, PN, Pica, E, Shoulson, I, Gusella, JG, Antonijevic, I, vankammen, D, Foroud, T, Warner, J, Giuliano, J, Vetter, L, Marshall, F, Marder, K, Frucht, S, Moskowitz, C, Clouse, R, Wasserman, P, Shannon, K, Jaglin, J, Jankovic, J, Palao, A, Harrison, M, Singer, C, Quesada, M, Hersch, S, Rosas, D, Tanev, K, Malarick, K, Colcher, A, Sanchez-Ramos, J, Kostyk, S, Paulsen, J, Perlmutter, J, Tabbal, S, Ross, C, Dorsey, R, Nucifora, F, Dubinsky, R, Dubinsky, H, Suchowersky, O, Klimek, ML, Jones, R, Morgan, J, Mohlo, E, Kang, U, Agarwal, P, Factor, S, Jennings, D, Higgins, D, Adams, J, Frank, S, Saint-Hilaire, M, Diggin, M, Furtado, S, Walker, F, O'Neill, C, Quaid, K, LeDoux, M, Raymond, L, Leavitt, B, Decolongon, J, Perlman, S, Peavy, G, Goldstein, J, Kumar, R, McCusker, E, Griffith, J, Loy, C, Wheelock, V, Tempkin, T, Martin, A, Nance, M, Mallonee, W, Suter, G, Revilla, F, Gartner, M, Drazinic, C, Fitzpatrick, MJ, Panisset, M, Duff, K, Scott, B, Weiner, W, Robottom, B, Chiu, E, Yastrubetskaya, O, Churchyard, A, Greenamyre, TJ, Oakes, D, Beck, C, Robertson, S, Eaton, K, Lindsay, P, Deuel, L, MacDonald, M, Hickey, C, Muratori, L, Leserman, A, Doucette, N, Uc, E, Rodnitzky, R, Vik, S, Davis, R, Dietrich, S, Segro, V, Erickson, D, Hunt, V, Lucarelli, N, Broyles, J, Delarosa, J, Louis, E, Panegyres, P, Schmidt, A, Barton, S, Sperin, E, Testa, C, Thiede, F, Zauber, SE, McInnis, R, Welsh, C, Wesson, M, Coleman, A, and European Commission
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Adult ,Male ,congenital, hereditary, and neonatal diseases and abnormalities ,COHORT ,Cox hazard model ,quantile regression ,REGISTRY ,symbol digit modalities test ,Genotype ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Cognition ,0302 clinical medicine ,Huntington's disease ,Rating scale ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,Verbal fluency test ,Longitudinal Studies ,Genetics (clinical) ,Proportional Hazards Models ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Proportional hazards model ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,nervous system diseases ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Huntington Disease ,Phenotype ,Test score ,Cohort ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Observational study ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Stroop effect ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
REGISTRY Investigators of the European Huntington's Disease Network and COHORT Investigators of the Huntington Study Group., Studying individuals with extreme phenotypes could facilitate the understanding of disease modification by genetic or environmental factors. Our aim was to identify Huntington's disease (HD) patients with extreme symbol digit modality test (SDMT) scores. We first examined in HD the contribution of cognitive measures of the Unified Huntington's Disease Rating Scale (UHDRS) in predicting clinical endpoints. The language-independent SDMT was used to identify patients performing very well or very poorly relative to their CAG and age cohort. We used data from REGISTRY and COHORT observational study participants (5,603 HD participants with CAG repeats above 39 with 13,868 visits) and of 1,006 healthy volunteers (with 2,241 visits), included to identify natural aging and education effects on cognitive measures. Separate Cox proportional hazards models with CAG, age at study entry, education, sex, UHDRS total motor score and cognitive (SDMT, verbal fluency, Stroop tests) scores as covariates were used to predict clinical endpoints. Quantile regression for longitudinal language-independent SDMT data was used for boundary (2.5% and 97.5% quantiles) estimation and extreme score analyses stratified by age, education, and CAG repeat length. Ten percent of HD participants had an extreme SDMT phenotype for at least one visit. In contrast, only about 3% of participants were consistent SDMT extremes at two or more visits. The thresholds for the one-visit and two-visit extremes can be used to classify existing and new individuals. The identification of these phenotype extremes can be useful in the search for disease modifiers., This work was in part funded by a grant from the EuropeanCommission under the 7th framework programme (RD-Connect, grantagreement number 305444).
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- 2019
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6. A D255H substitution in the arylsulphatase A gene of two unrelated Belgian patients with late-infantile metachromatic leukodystrophy
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Lissens, W., Vervoort, R., Van Regemorter, N., Van Bogaert, P., Freund, M., Verellen-Dumoulin, C., Seneca, S., and Liebaers, I.
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- 1996
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7. ONLINE MUTATION REPORT
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Ghassibé, M, Revencu, N, Bayet, B, Gillerot, Y, Vanwijck, R, Verellen-Dumoulin, C, and Vikkula, M
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- 2004
8. Sister chromatid exchanges in human peripheral blood lymphocytes after ingestion of high doses of arsenicals
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Hantson, P., Verellen-Dumoulin, C., Libouton, J. M., Leonard, A., Leonard, E. D., and Mahieu, P.
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- 1996
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9. Gastrointestinal Polyposis and Nonpolyposis Syndromes
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Samowitz, Wade S., Burt, Randall W., Leppert, Mark, Dupuis, M. J. M., Verellen-Dumoulin, C., Coyle, Thomas, Ellis, Mark F., Whitelaw, Stuart, and Rustgi, Anil K.
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- 1995
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10. Use of topiramate in relation to the risk of orofacial clefts
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Wang, H., Loane, M., Morris, J., Garne, E., Nelen, V., Khoshnood, B., Rismann, A., Wiesel, A., O'Mahony, M., Pierini, A., Neville, A., Gatt, M., De Walle, H., Addor, M. C., Tucker, D., Klungsoyr, K., Latos-Bielenska, A., Mejnartowicz, J., Verellen-Dumoulin, C., Doray, B., Arriola, L., Barisic, I., Calzolari, E., Wellesley, D., Dolk, H., and De Jong-Van Den Berg, L.
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risk *pharmacoepidemiology *risk management registration female therapy human cleft palate exposure monotherapy congenital malformation pregnancy cleft lip first trimester pregnancy population United States drug database population based case control study prevalence pregnant woman mother infant control group drug administration food Europe register palate safety *topiramate lamotrigine carbamazepine valproic acid anticonvulsive agent - Abstract
Background: The use of topiramate (TPM) has been increased among pregnant women. Safety data for TPM in human pregnancy are limited. Recent studies have suggested that exposure to TPM early in gestation has a higher risk of orofacial clefts (OCs), particularly cleft lip with or without palate, and there has been a Food Drug Administration (FDA) alert. Objectives: The aim of this study was to assess the risk of OCs relative to other malformations in infants whose mothers had taken TPM during the first trimester of pregnancy. Methods: A population-based case-control study with malformed controls was performed using the EUROCAT Antiepileptic (AED) Drug Database including data from 19 population-based registries of congenital anomaly in Europe with a total coverage of 8.0 million births from 1995 to 2011. Cases were 10 802 nonsyndromic OC registrations, of whom 8919 were isolated, and 6827 were cleft lip with or without cleft palate (CL/P). Controls were 136 838 nonchromosomal, non-OC registrations. We compared first trimester TPM use versus no-AED use, for monotherapy and polytherapy. Results: Exposure to TPM monotherapy was recorded for a total of 12 registrations, with one registration in the case group (isolated cleft palate) and 11 in the control group (odds ratio (OR) 1.15, 95% CI 0.03-7.95 for OC relative to other malformations, OR 4.03, 95%CI 0.09-27.8 for isolated cleft palate). No registration of CL/P was in TPM monotherapy exposure. There were 36 registrations exposed to TPM polytherapy, of whom six with isolated CL/P, three with cleft palate. Out of 36 of TPM polytherapy, 19 included valproic acid, 8 included carbamazepine and 4 included lamotrigine. The OR for TPM polytherapy versus no-AED use was 4.23 (95%CI 1.75-9.28) for OC, 4.35 (95%CI 1.31- 11.5) for isolated CL/P and 3.85 (95%CI 0.75- 12.5) for isolated cleft palate. Conclusions: The prevalence of TPM monotherapy exposure was five times lower in these data than reported in the United States, which limited our ability to confirm or refute previous findings. We found an excess of OCs, particularly CL/P, associated with TPM polytherapy. Further attention to TPM polytherapy is warranted.
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- 2015
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11. NMDA receptor gene variations as modifiers in Huntington disease: a replication study
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Saft C, Epplen JT, Wieczorek S, Landwehrmeyer GB, Roos RA, de Yebenes JG, Dose M, Tabrizi SJ, Craufurd D, REGISTRY Investigators of the European Huntington's Disease Network, Arning L. CollaboratorsBarth K, Bascuñana Garde M, Bos R, Ecker D, Handley O, Heinonen N, Held C, Laurà M, Martínez Descals A, Mestre T, Monza D, Naji J, Orth M, Padieu H, Pro Koivisto S, Rialland A, Sasinková P, Trigo Cubillo P, van Walsem M, Witjes Ané MN, Zielonka D, Bonelli R, Herranhof B, Hödl A, Kapfhammer HP, Koppitz M, Magnet M, Otti D, Painold A, Reisinge K, Brugger F, Hepperger C, Hotter A, Mahlknecht P, Nocker M, Seppi K, Wenning G, Ribaï P, Verellen Dumoulin C, Klempí?? J, Kucharik M, Roth J, Hasholt L, Hjermind L, Jakobsen O, Nielsen J, Nørremølle A, Sørensen S, Stokholm J, Hiivola H, Martikainen K, Tuuha K, Kosinski C, Probst D, Sass C, Schiefer J, Schlangen C, Werner C, Lange H, Löhle M, Storch A, Wolz A, Wolz M, Lambeck J, Zucker B, Münchau A, Stubbe L, Zittel S, Heinicke W, Longinus B, Peinemann A, Städtler M, Weindl A, Bohlen S, Reilmann R, Beister A, Hammer K, Leythaeuser G, Marquard R, Raab T, Schrenk C, Schuierer M, Wiedemann A, Eschenbach C, Landwehrmeyer B, Lezius F, Trautmann S, Cormio C, Difruscolo O, de Tommaso M, Sciruicchio V, Serpino C, Bertini E, Mechi C, Paganini M, Piacentini S, Romoli M, Sorbi S, Abbruzzese G, Di Maria E, Bandettini di Poggio Giovanna Ferrandes M, Mandich P, Marchese R, Albanese A, Di Donato S, Mariotti C, Soliveri P, Gellera C, Tomasello C, Nanetti L, Luigi D, Squitieri F, Martino T, Orobello S, Alberti S, De Gregorio F, Codella V, De Nicola N, Maglione V, Bentivoglio A, Fasano A, Frontali M, Guidubaldi A, Ialongo T, Jacopini G, Loria G, Piano C, Romano S, Soleti F, Spadaro M, Zinzi P, Heiberg A, Bjørgo K, Fannemel M, Gørvell P, Retterstøl L, Bjørnevoll I, Botne Sando S, Slawek J, Soltan W, Sitek E, Boczarska Jedynak M, Jasinska Myga B, Opala G, Szczudlik A, Rudzi??ska M, Wójcik M, Banaszkiewicz K, Krawczyk M, Marcinkowski J, Ciesielska A, Sempo??owicz J, Bryl A, Klimberg A, Janik P, Kalbarczyk A, Kwiecinski H, Jamrozik Z, Witkowski G, Ryglewicz D, Antczak J, Rakowicz M, Jachinska K, Zdzienicka E, Richter P, Zaremba J, Coelho M, Ferreira J, Rosa M, Valadas A, Gago M, Garrett C, Guerra M, Barrero F, Morales B, López Sendón Moreno J, Cubo E, Mariscal N, Sánchez J, García R, Villanueva C, Pin Quiroga P, Bascuñana M, Fatàas M, Luis López Moreno J, García Ribas G, Schwarz C, de Yébenes JG, José Saiz Artiga M, García Ruíz P, Sánchez V, Fortuna Alcaraz L, Fuensanta Noguera Perea M, Martirio Antequera Torres M, Vivancos Moreau L, Rojo Sebastian A, Aguilar Barbera M, Badenes Guia D, Casas Hernanz L, Tome Carruesco G, Suarez San Martin E, López Catena J, Bas J, Calopa M, Busquets N, Navas Arques P, Gorospe A, Legarda I, José Torres Rodríguez M, Vives B, Carrillo F, Mir P, José Lama Suarez M, Loutfi G, Stattin EL, Westman L, Wikström B, Pålhagen S, Björnsson E, Burgunder JM, Romero I, Schüpbach M, Weber Zaugg S, van Hout M, van Vugt J, Marit de Weert A, Bolwijn JJ, Dekker M, Leenders KL, van Oostrom JC, Dumas E, Jurgens C, van den Bogaard SA, Roos R, Kremer B, Verstappen CC, de Souza J, Rickards H, Wright J, Barker R, Fisher K, Goyder Goodman A, Hill S, Kershaw A, Mason S, Paterson N, Raymond L, Bisson J, Busse M, Ellison Rose L, Hunt S, Price K, Rosser A, Dunnett S, Edwards M, De Sousa P, Hughes T, McGill M, Pearson P, Porteous M, Smith P, Zeman A, Lambord N, Rankin J, Burrows L, Fletcher A, Laver F, Silva M, Thomson A, Andrews T, Dougherty A, Kavalier F, Golding C, Lashwood A, Robertson D, Ruddy D, Whaite A, Patton M, Patterson M, Bourne C, Clayton C, Dipple H, Clapton J, Grant J, Gross D, Hallam C, Middleton J, Murch A, Patino D, Bruno S, Chu E, Doherty K, Lahiri N, Novak M, Patel A, Tabrizi S, Taylor R, Warner T, Wild E, Arran N, Fullam R, Howard L, Huson S, Partington Jones L, Verstraelen N, Snowden J, Sollom A, Stopford C, Thompson J, Westmoreland L, Nemeth A, Siuda G, Bandmann O, Bradbury A, Fillingham K, Foustanos I, Tidswell K, Quarrell O., DE MICHELE, GIUSEPPE, RINALDI, CARLO, RUSSO, CINZIA, SALVATORE, ELENA, TUCCI, TECLA, Saft C, Epplen JT, Wieczorek S, Landwehrmeyer GB, Roos RA, de Yebenes JG, Dose M, Tabrizi SJ, Craufurd D, REGISTRY Investigators of the European Huntington's Disease Network, Arning L. Collaborators (348), Saft, C, Epplen, Jt, Wieczorek, S, Landwehrmeyer, Gb, Roos, Ra, de Yebenes, Jg, Dose, M, Tabrizi, Sj, Craufurd, D, Russo, CINZIA VALERIA, Arning L., CollaboratorsBarth K, Bascuñana Garde, M, Bos, R, Ecker, D, Handley, O, Heinonen, N, Held, C, Laurà, M, Martínez Descals, A, Mestre, T, Monza, D, Naji, J, Orth, M, Padieu, H, Pro Koivisto, S, Rialland, A, Sasinková, P, Trigo Cubillo, P, van Walsem, M, Witjes Ané, Mn, Zielonka, D, Bonelli, R, Herranhof, B, Hödl, A, Kapfhammer, Hp, Koppitz, M, Magnet, M, Otti, D, Painold, A, Reisinge, K, Brugger, F, Hepperger, C, Hotter, A, Mahlknecht, P, Nocker, M, Seppi, K, Wenning, G, Ribaï, P, Verellen Dumoulin, C, Klempí??, J, Kucharik, M, Roth, J, Hasholt, L, Hjermind, L, Jakobsen, O, Nielsen, J, Nørremølle, A, Sørensen, S, Stokholm, J, Hiivola, H, Martikainen, K, Tuuha, K, Kosinski, C, Probst, D, Sass, C, Schiefer, J, Schlangen, C, Werner, C, Lange, H, Löhle, M, Storch, A, Wolz, A, Wolz, M, Lambeck, J, Zucker, B, Münchau, A, Stubbe, L, Zittel, S, Heinicke, W, Longinus, B, Peinemann, A, Städtler, M, Weindl, A, Bohlen, S, Reilmann, R, Beister, A, Hammer, K, Leythaeuser, G, Marquard, R, Raab, T, Schrenk, C, Schuierer, M, Wiedemann, A, Eschenbach, C, Landwehrmeyer, B, Lezius, F, Trautmann, S, Cormio, C, Difruscolo, O, de Tommaso, M, Sciruicchio, V, Serpino, C, Bertini, E, Mechi, C, Paganini, M, Piacentini, S, Romoli, M, Sorbi, S, Abbruzzese, G, Di Maria, E, Bandettini di Poggio Giovanna Ferrandes, M, Mandich, P, Marchese, R, Albanese, A, Di Donato, S, Mariotti, C, Soliveri, P, Gellera, C, Tomasello, C, Nanetti, L, Luigi, D, DE MICHELE, Giuseppe, Rinaldi, Carlo, Russo, Cinzia, Salvatore, Elena, Tucci, Tecla, Squitieri, F, Martino, T, Orobello, S, Alberti, S, De Gregorio, F, Codella, V, De Nicola, N, Maglione, V, Bentivoglio, A, Fasano, A, Frontali, M, Guidubaldi, A, Ialongo, T, Jacopini, G, Loria, G, Piano, C, Romano, S, Soleti, F, Spadaro, M, Zinzi, P, Heiberg, A, Bjørgo, K, Fannemel, M, Gørvell, P, Retterstøl, L, Bjørnevoll, I, Botne Sando, S, Slawek, J, Soltan, W, Sitek, E, Boczarska Jedynak, M, Jasinska Myga, B, Opala, G, Szczudlik, A, Rudzi??ska, M, Wójcik, M, Banaszkiewicz, K, Krawczyk, M, Marcinkowski, J, Ciesielska, A, Sempo??owicz, J, Bryl, A, Klimberg, A, Janik, P, Kalbarczyk, A, Kwiecinski, H, Jamrozik, Z, Witkowski, G, Ryglewicz, D, Antczak, J, Rakowicz, M, Jachinska, K, Zdzienicka, E, Richter, P, Zaremba, J, Coelho, M, Ferreira, J, Rosa, M, Valadas, A, Gago, M, Garrett, C, Guerra, M, Barrero, F, Morales, B, López Sendón Moreno, J, Cubo, E, Mariscal, N, Sánchez, J, García, R, Villanueva, C, Pin Quiroga, P, Bascuñana, M, Fatàas, M, Luis López Moreno, J, García Ribas, G, Schwarz, C, de Yébenes, Jg, José Saiz Artiga, M, García Ruíz, P, Sánchez, V, Fortuna Alcaraz, L, Fuensanta Noguera Perea, M, Martirio Antequera Torres, M, Vivancos Moreau, L, Rojo Sebastian, A, Aguilar Barbera, M, Badenes Guia, D, Casas Hernanz, L, Tome Carruesco, G, Suarez San Martin, E, López Catena, J, Bas, J, Calopa, M, Busquets, N, Navas Arques, P, Gorospe, A, Legarda, I, José Torres Rodríguez, M, Vives, B, Carrillo, F, Mir, P, José Lama Suarez, M, Loutfi, G, Stattin, El, Westman, L, Wikström, B, Pålhagen, S, Björnsson, E, Burgunder, Jm, Romero, I, Schüpbach, M, Weber Zaugg, S, van Hout, M, van Vugt, J, Marit de Weert, A, Bolwijn, Jj, Dekker, M, Leenders, Kl, van Oostrom, Jc, Dumas, E, Jurgens, C, van den Bogaard, Sa, Roos, R, Kremer, B, Verstappen, Cc, de Souza, J, Rickards, H, Wright, J, Barker, R, Fisher, K, Goyder Goodman, A, Hill, S, Kershaw, A, Mason, S, Paterson, N, Raymond, L, Bisson, J, Busse, M, Ellison Rose, L, Hunt, S, Price, K, Rosser, A, Dunnett, S, Edwards, M, De Sousa, P, Hughes, T, Mcgill, M, Pearson, P, Porteous, M, Smith, P, Zeman, A, Lambord, N, Rankin, J, Burrows, L, Fletcher, A, Laver, F, Silva, M, Thomson, A, Andrews, T, Dougherty, A, Kavalier, F, Golding, C, Lashwood, A, Robertson, D, Ruddy, D, Whaite, A, Patton, M, Patterson, M, Bourne, C, Clayton, C, Dipple, H, Clapton, J, Grant, J, Gross, D, Hallam, C, Middleton, J, Murch, A, Patino, D, Bruno, S, Chu, E, Doherty, K, Lahiri, N, Novak, M, Patel, A, Tabrizi, S, Taylor, R, Warner, T, Wild, E, Arran, N, Fullam, R, Howard, L, Huson, S, Partington Jones, L, Verstraelen, N, Snowden, J, Sollom, A, Stopford, C, Thompson, J, Westmoreland, L, Nemeth, A, Siuda, G, Bandmann, O, Bradbury, A, Fillingham, K, Foustanos, I, Tidswell, K, and Quarrell, O.
- Abstract
Several candidate modifier genes which, in addition to the pathogenic CAG repeat expansion, influence the age at onset (AO) in Huntington disease (HD) have already been described. The aim of this study was to replicate association of variations in the N-methyl D-aspartate receptor subtype genes GRIN2A and GRIN2B in the "REGISTRY" cohort from the European Huntington Disease Network (EHDN). The analyses did replicate the association reported between the GRIN2A rs2650427 variation and AO in the entire cohort. Yet, when subjects were stratified by AO subtypes, we found nominally significant evidence for an association of the GRIN2A rs1969060 variation and the GRIN2B rs1806201 variation. These findings further implicate the N-methyl D-aspartate receptor subtype genes as loci containing variation associated with AO in HD.
- Published
- 2011
12. EuroBioBank (EBB): European Network of DNA, Cell and Tissue Banks for Rare Diseases
- Author
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MORA M, AGIUS GALEA D, ANGELINI C, BIGNAMI F, COHEN O, DI DONATO JH, GUITARD ARNEAU C, IZQUIERDO M, KARKAGI V, LAURENT JC, LOCHMULLER H, MEZNARIC M, MOGGIO M, POSADA DE LA PAZ M, SALAMA F, VERELLEN DUMOULIN C. AND JAEGER C., POLITANO, Luisa, Mora, M, AGIUS GALEA, D, Angelini, C, Bignami, F, Cohen, O, DI DONATO, Jh, GUITARD ARNEAU, C, Izquierdo, M, Karkagi, V, Laurent, Jc, Lochmuller, H, Meznaric, M, Moggio, M, Politano, Luisa, POSADA DE LA PAZ, M, Salama, F, and VERELLEN DUMOULIN, C. AND JAEGER C.
- Published
- 2004
13. β-Defensin Genomic Copy Number Does Not Influence the Age of Onset in Huntington's Disease
- Author
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Vittori, A, Orth, M, Roos, Ra, Outeiro, Tf, Giorgini, F, Hollox, Ej, Bachoud-Levi, Ac, Bentivoglio, Ar, Biunno, I, Bonelli, Rm, Burgunder, Jm, Dunnett, Sb, Ferreira, Jj, Handley, Oj, Heiberg, A, Illmann, T, Landwehrmeyer, Gb, Levey, J, Martinez-Jaurrieta, Md, Nielsen, Je, Pro Koivisto, S, Piiiviirinta, M, Sebastian, Ar, Tabrizi, Sj, Vandenberghe, W, Verellen-Dumoulin, C, Zaremba, J, Uhrova, T, Wahlstrom, J, Barth, K, Correia-Guedes, L, Finisterra, Am, Bascuiiana Garde, M, Betz, S, Bos, R, Ecker, D, Held, C, Koppers, K, Laura, M, Descals, Am, Mestre, T, Monza, D, Townhill, J, Padieu, H, Paterski, L, Peppa, N, Rialland, A, Røren, N, Sasinkova, P, Trigo Cubillo, P, van Walsem, M, Witjes-Ane, Mn, Yudina, E, Zielonka, D, Zielonka, E, Zinzi, P, Herranhof, B, Hod, A, Kapfhammer, Hp, Koppitz, M, Magnet, M, Otti, D, Painold, A, Reisinge, K, Scheib, M, Hecht, K, Lilek, S, Muller, N, Schoggl, H, Ullah, J, Ribal, P, Klempff, J, Majerova, V, Roth, J, Hjermind, Le, Jakobsen, O, Vinthev-Jensen, T, Larsen, Iu, Stokholm, J, Hiivola, H, Martikainen, K, Tuuha, K, Santala, M, Milkereit, E, Kosinski, Cm, Probst, D, Reetz, K, Sass, C, Schiefer, J, Schlangen, C, Werner, Cj, Andrich, J, Ellrichmann, G, Hoffmann, R, Kaminski, B, Saft, C, Stamm, C, Lange, H, Lohle, M, Schmidt, S, Storch, A, Wolz, A, Wolz, M, Capetian, P, Lambeck, J, Zucker, B, Boelmans, K, Ganos, C, Hidding, U, Lewerenz, J, Miinchau, A, Schmalfeld, J, Stubbe, L, Zittel, S, Heinicke, W, Ribbat, M, Longinus, B, Miihlau, M, Peinemann, A, Stiidtler, M, Weindl, A, Winkelmann, J, Ziegler, C, Bechtel, N, Beckmann, H, Bohlen, S, Holzner, E, Reilmann, R, Rohm, S, Rumpf, S, Schepers, S, Dose, M, Leythaeuser, G, Marquard, R, Raab, T, Schrenk, C, Schuierer, M, Buck, A, Eschenbach, C, Landwehrmeyer, B, Lezius, F, Nepper, S, Niess, A, Schwenk, D, Siissmuth, S, Trautmann, S, Weydt, P, Cormio, C, de Tommaso, M, Sciruicchio, V, Serpino, C, Ghelli, E, Ginestroni, A, Bertini, E, Massaro, F, Mechi, C, Paganini, M, Piacentini, S, Pradella, S, Romoli, Am, Sorbi, S, Abbruzzese, G, Ferrandes, Mb, Di Maria, E, Ferrandes, G, Mandich, P, Marchese, R, Di Donato, S, Gellera, C, Genitrini, S, Mariotti, C, Nanetti, L, Soliveri, P, Tomasello, C, De Michele, G, Dimaio, L, Massarelli, M, Rinaldi, C, Roca, A, Rossi, F, Russo, Cv, Salvatore, E, Sorrentino, P, Tucci, T, De Nicola, A, Elifani, F, Petrollini, M, Martino, T, Lovo, F, Squitieri, F, Catalli, C, Di Giacopo, R, Fasano, A, Frontali, M, Guidubaldi, A, Ialongo, T, Jacopini, G, Loria, G, Piano, C, Piccininni, C, Quaranta, D, Romano, S, Soleti, F, Spadaro, M, van Hout MS, van Vugt JP, de Weert, A, Bolwijn, Jj, Neurologie, P, Dekker, M, Leenders, Kl, van Oostrom JC, Dumas, Em, Jurgens, Ck, van den Bogaard SJ, 't Hart EP, Kremer, B, Verstappen, Cc, van Walsem MR, Frich, J, Aaserud, O, Wehus, R, Bjørgo, K, Fannemel, M, Gørvell, P, Lorentzen, E, Koivisto, Sp, Retterstøl, L, Stokke, B, Bjørnevoll, I, Sando, Sb, Dziadkiewicz, A, Nowak, M, Robowski, P, Sitek, E, Slawek, J, Soltan, W, Szinwelski, M, Blaszczyk, M, Boczarska-Jedynak, M, Ciach-Wysocka, E, Gorzkowska, A, Jasinska-Myga, B, Opala, G, Klodowska, G, Stompel, D, Banaszkiewicz, K, Boewiriska, D, Bojakowska-Jaremek, K, Neurologii, A, Dec, M, Krawczyk, M, Rudziriska, M, Szczudlik, A, Szczygiel, E, Wasielewska, A, Wojcik, M, Bryl, A, Ciesielska, A, Klimberg, A, Marcinkowski, J, Samara, H, Sempolowicz, J, Janik, P, Kalbarczyk, A, Kwiecinski, H, Jamrozik, Z, Antczak, J, Jachinska, K, Krysa, W, Rakowicz, M, Richter, P, Rola, R, Ryglewicz, D, Sienkiewicz-Jarosz, H, Sulek, A, Witkowski, G, Zdzienicka, E, Zieora-Jakutowicz, K, Coelho, M, Mendes, T, Valadas, A, Andrade, C, Joao, Ps, Gago, M, Garrett, C, Guerra, Mr, Solis, P, Herrera, Cd, Garcia, Pm, Cubo, E, Mariscal, N, Sanchez, J, Barrero, Fj, Alonso-Frech, F, Perez, Mr, Fenollar, M, Garda, R, Rivera, Sv, Villanueva, C, Alegre, J, Bascuiiana, M, Ventura, Mf, Ribas, Gg, Moreno, Jl, Cubillo, Pt, Rufz, Pj, Frech, Fa, Dfaz, J, Guerrero, R, Artiga, Mj, Sanchez, V, Alcaraz, Lf, de Ia Arrixaca, V, Manzanares, S, Perea, Mf, Reinante, G, Arrixaca, Ia, Torres, Mm, Moreau, Lv, Barbera, Ma, Guia, Db, Hernanz, Lc, Catena, Jl, Sebastian, R, Ferrer, Pq, Carruesco, Gt, Bas, J, Busquets, N, Calopa, M, Buongiorno, Mt, Munoz, E, Elorza, Md, Lopez, Cd, Terol, Ds, Robert, Mf, Rufz, Bg, Casado, Ag, Martinez, Ih, Viladrich, Cm, Pons, R, Roca, E, Llesoy, Jr, Idiago, Jm, Vergara, Mr, Garcia, Ss, Riballo, Av, Hoglund, A, Palhagen, Se, Paucar, M, Sandstrom, B, Svenningsson, P, Reza-Soltani, Tw, Kaelin, A, Romero, I, Schupbach, M, Stebler, Y, Zaugg, Sw, Akhtar, S, Crooks, J, Curtis, A, de Souza, J, Rickards, H, Wright, J, Barker, Ra, Di Pietro, A, Fisher, K, Goodman, Ao, Hill, S, Kershaw, A, Mason, S, O'Keefe, D, Swain, R, Guzman, Nv, Busse, M, Butcher, C, Clenaghan, C, Dunnett, S, Fullam, R, Jones, L, Jones, U, Khalil, H, Minster, S, Owen, M, Hunt, S, Price, K, Rosser, A, Edwards, M, Ho, C, Mcgill, M, Pearson, P, Porteous, M, Brockie, P, Foster, J, Johns, N, Mckenzie, S, Rothery, J, Thomas, G, Yates, S, Burrows, L, Chu, C, Fletcher, A, Gallantrae, D, Harding, A, Hamer, S, Kraus, A, Laver, F, Longthorpe, M, Markova, I, Raman, A, Silva, M, Thomson, A, Wild, S, Yardumian, P, Hobson, E, Jamieson, S, Musgrave, H, Rowett, L, Toscano, J, Clayton, C, Dipple, H, Middleton, J, Patino, D, Andrews, T, Dougherty, A, Kavalier, F, Golding, C, Laing, H, Lashwood, A, Robertson, D, Ruddy, D, Whaite, A, Santhouse, A, Bruno, S, Doherty, K, Lahiri, N, Novak, M, Patel, A, Rosser, E, Tabrizi, S, Taylor, R, Warner, T, Wild, E, Arran, N, Bek, J, Callaghan, J, Craufurd, D, Howard, L, Hare, M, Huson, S, Johnson, L, Jones, M, Murphy, H, Oughton, E, Partington-Janes, L, Rogers, D, Snowden, J, Sollom, A, Stopford, C, Thompson, J, Trender-Gerhard, I., Vittori, Angelica, Orth, Michael, Roos, Raymund A C, Outeiro, Tiago F, Giorgini, F, Russo, Cinzia Valeria, Flaviano, and Hollox, Edward J
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Age of Onset ,DNA Copy Number Variations ,Female ,Genotype ,Humans ,Huntington Disease ,Middle Aged ,beta-Defensins ,Disease ,Biology ,Genetic modifier ,Article ,Pathogenesis ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,Huntington's disease ,medicine ,Copy-number variation ,Defensin ,030304 developmental biology ,Genetics ,0303 health sciences ,copy number variation ,inflammation ,Acquired immune system ,medicine.disease ,3. Good health ,Beta defensin ,Neurology (clinical) ,Age of onset ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background: Huntington's disease (HD) is an autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disorder caused by the abnormal expansion of a CAG triplet repeat tract in the huntingtin gene. While the length of this CAG expansion is the major determinant of the age of onset (AO), other genetic factors have also been shown to play a modulatory role. Recent evidence suggests that neuroinflammations is a pivotal factor in the pathogenesis of HD, and that targeting this process may have important therapeutic ramifications. The human β-defensin 2 (hBD2)- encoded by DEFB4- is an antimicrobial peptide that exhibits inducible expression in astrocytes during inflammation and is an important regulator of innate and adaptive immune response. Therefore, DEFB4 may contribute to the neuroinflammatory processes observed in HD. Objective: In this study we tested the hypothesis that copy number variation (CNV) of the β-defensin region, including DEFB4, modifies the AO in HD. Methods and results: We genotyped β-defensin CNV in 490 HD individuals using the paralogue ratio test and found no association between β-defensin CNV and onset of HD. Conclusions: We conclude that it is unlikely that DEFB4 plays a role in HD pathogenesis.
- Published
- 2013
14. Discrepancies in reporting the CAG repeat lengths for Huntington's disease
- Author
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Quarrell, Ow, Handley, O, O'Donovan, K, Dumoulin, C, Ramos Arroyo, M, Biunno, I, Bauer, P, Kline, M, Landwehrmeyer, Gb, Barth, K, Correia Guedes, L, Maria Finisterra, A, Bascuñana Garde, M, Bos, R, Ecker, D, Held, C, Koppers, K, Laurà, M, Martínez Descals, A, Mclean, T, Mestre, T, Minster, S, Monza, D, Townhill, J, Orth, M, Padieu, H, Paterski, L, Peppa, N, Koivisto, Sp, Rialland, A, Røren, N, Šašinková, P, Cubillo, Pt, van Walsem MR, Witjes Ané MN, Yudina, E, Zielonka, D, Zielonka, E, Zinzi, P, Bachoud Lévi AC, Bentivoglio, Ar, Bonelli, R, Burgunder, Jm, Dunnett, Sb, Ferreira, Jj, Handley, Oj, Heiberg, A, Illmann, T, Levey, J, Nielsen, Je, Päivärinta, M, Roos, Ra, Rojo Sebastián, A, Tabrizi, Sj, Vandenberghe, W, Verellen Dumoulin, C, Zaremba, J, Uhrova, T, Wahlström, J, Bonelli, Rm, Herranhof, B, Holl, A, Kapfhammer, Hp, Koppitz, M, Magnet, M, Otti, D, Painold, A, Reisinger, K, Scheibl, M, Hecht, K, Lilek, S, Müller, N, Schöggl, H, Ullah, J, Brugger, F, Hepperger, C, Hotter, A, Mahlknecht, P, Nocker, M, Seppi, K, Wenning, G, Buratti, L, Hametner, Em, Holas, C, Hussl, A, Mair, K, Poewe, W, Wolf, E, Zangerl, A, Braunwarth, Em, Ribaï, P, Flamez, A, Morez, V, de Raedt, S, Boogaerts, A, van Reijen, D, Klempíř, J, Kucharík, M, Roth, J, Hjermind, Le, Jakobsen, O, Stokholm, J, Hasholt, L, Nørremølle, A, Sørensen, Sa, Hiivola, H, Martikainen, K, Tuuha, K, Peippo, M, Sipponen, M, Kosinski, Cm, Milkereit, E, Probst, D, Sass, C, Schiefer, J, Schlangen, C, Werner, Cj, Gelderblom, H, Priller, J, Prüss, H, Spruth, Ej, Andrich, J, Hoffmann, R, Kraus, Ph, Muth, S, Prehn, C, Saft, C, Salmen, S, Stamm, C, Steiner, T, Strassburger, K, Lange, H, Friedrich, A, Hunger, U, Löhle, M, Schmidt, S, Storch, A, Wolz, A, Wolz, M, Lambeck, J, Zucker, B, Boelmans, K, Ganos, C, Hidding, U, Lewerenz, J, Münchau, A, Schmalfeld, J, Stubbe, L, Zittel, S, Heinicke, W, Longinus, B, Uni, M, Bürk, K, Möller, Jc, Rissling, I, Peinemann, A, Städtler, M, Weindl, A, Bechtel, N, Beckmann, H, Bohlen, S, Hölzner, E, Reilmann, R, Rohm, S, Rumpf, S, Schepers, S, Beister, A, Dose, M, Hammer, K, Kieni, J, Leythaeuser, G, Marquard, R, Raab, T, Richter, S, Selimbegovic Turkovic, A, Schrenk, C, Schuierer, M, Wiedemann, A, Buck, A, Connemann, J, Eschenbach, C, Landwehrmeyer, B, Lezius, F, Nepper, S, Niess, A, Süssmuth, S, Trautmann, S, Weydt, P, Cormio, C, Difruscolo, O, Sciruicchio, V, Serpino, C, de Tommaso, M, Capellari, S, Cortelli, P, Gallassi, R, Poda, R, Rizzo, G, Scaglione, C, Bertini, E, Ghelli, E, Ginestroni, A, Massaro, F, Mechi, C, Paganini, M, Piacentini, S, Pradella, S, Romoli, Am, Sorbi, S, Abbruzzese, G, Bandettini di Poggio, M, Di Maria, E, Ferrandes, G, Mandich, P, Marchese, R, Albanese, A, Di Bella, D, Di Donato, S, Gellera, C, Genitrini, S, Mariotti, C, Nanetti, L, Paridi, D, Soliveri, P, Tomasello, C, De Michele, G, Di Maio, L, Rinaldi, C, Valeria Russo, C, Salvatore, E, Tucci, T, Cannella, M, Codella, V, De Gregorio, F, De Nicola, N, Martino, T, Simonelli, M, Squitieri, F, Catalli, C, Di Giacopo, R, Fasano, A, Frontali, M, Guidubaldi, A, Ialongo, T, Jacopini, G, Loria, G, Modoni, A, Piano, C, Piccininni, C, Quaranta, D, Romano, Silvia, Soleti, F, Spadaro, M, van Hout MS, van Vugt JP, Marit de Weert, A, Bolwijn, Jj, Dekker, M, Leenders, Kl, van Oostrom JC, Dumas, Em, Jurgens, Ck, van den Bogaard SJ, 't Hart EP, Kremer, B, Verstappen, Cc, Aaserud, O, Wehus, R, Bjørgo, K, Fannemel, M, Gørvell, P, Retterstøl, L, Overland, T, Stokke, B, Bjørnevoll, I, Sando, Sb, Sitek, E, Slawek, J, Soltan, W, Boczarska Jedynak, M, Jasinska Myga, B, Opala, G, Kodowska Duda, G, Banaszkiewicz, K, Szczudlik, A, Rudziñska, M, Wójcik, M, Dec, M, Krawczyk, M, Bryl, A, Ciesielska, A, Klimberg, A, Marcinkowski, J, Sempoowicz, J, Samara, H, Janik, P, Kalbarczyk, A, Kwiecinski, H, Jamrozik, Z, Antczak, J, Jachinska, K, Rakowicz, M, Richter, P, Ryglewicz, D, Witkowski, G, Zdzienicka, E, Suek, A, Krysa, W, Guedes, L, Coelho, M, Mendes, T, Valadas, A, Cavaco, S, Damásio, J, Magalhães, M, Gago, M, Garrett, C, Guerra, Mr, Barrero, F, Morales, B, Cubo, E, Mariscal, N, Sánchez, J, Alonso Frech, F, Rabasa Perez, M, Fenollar, M, García, R, Quiroga, Pp, Vázquez Rivera, S, Villanueva, C, Bascuñana, M, Fatás Ventura, M, García Ribas, G, García de Yébenes, J, López Sendón Moreno JL, García Ruíz PJ, José Saiz Artiga, M, Sánchez, V, Noguera Perea, F, Lorenza, F, Torres, Mm, Reinante, G, Vivancos Moreau, L, Barbera, Ma, Badenes Guia, D, Hernanz, Lc, Catena, Jl, Ferrer, Pq, Tome Carruesco, G, Bas, J, Busquets, N, Calopa, M, Dalmau Elorza, M, Díez, C, López, A, Durán, S, Terol, S, Floriach Robert, M, Garzón Ruíz, B, González Casado, A, Haro Martínez, I, Viladrich, Cm, Càrdenas R, Pons i., Roca, E, Llesoy, Jr, Ruiz Idiago JM, Ruíz Vergara, M, Soriano García, S, Villa Riballo, A, Gorospe, A, Legarda, I, Arques, Pn, Torres Rodríguez MJ, Vives, B, Gaston, I, Bosca, M, Burguera, Ja, Garcia, Ac, Pålhagen, Se, Paucar, M, Svenningsson, P, Walldén Reza Soltani, T, Höglund, A, Sandström, B, Høsterey Ugander, U, Fredlund, G, Constantinescu, R, Neleborn Lingefjärd, L, Tedroff, J, Esmaeilzadeh, M, Winnberg, E, Burgunder, Y, Stebler, Y, Kaelin, A, Romero, I, Schüpbach, M, Zaugg, Sw, Jack, R, Matheson, K, Miedzybrodzka, Z, Rae, D, Simpson, S, Summers, F, Ure, A, Crooks, J, Curtis, A, de Souza, J, Rickards, H, Wright, J, Barker, Ra, Di Pietro, A, Fisher, K, Goodman, A, Hill, S, Kershaw, A, Mason, S, Paterson, N, Raymond, L, Bisson, J, Busse, M, Clenaghan, C, Ellison Rose, L, Hunt, S, Price, K, Rosser, A, Edwards, M, Hughes, T, Mcgill, M, Pearson, P, Porteous, M, Smith, P, Zeman, A, Causley, A, Harrower, T, Howcroft, D, Lambord, N, Rankin, J, Brockie, P, Foster, J, Johns, N, Mckenzie, S, Rothery, J, Thomas, G, Yates, S, Miller, J, Ritchie, S, Burrows, L, Fletcher, A, Harding, A, Laver, F, Silva, M, Thomson, A, Barnes, K, Chu, C, Hobson, E, Jamieson, S, Markova, I, Thomson, J, Toscano, J, Wild, S, Yardumian, P, Bourne, C, Clayton, C, Dipple, H, Clapton, J, Grant, J, Gross, D, Hallam, C, Middleton, J, Murch, A, Patino, D, Andrews, T, Dougherty, A, Kavalier, F, Golding, C, Lashwood, A, Robertson, D, Ruddy, D, Whaite, A, Patton, M, Peterson, M, Rose, S, Bruno, S, Chu, E, Doherty, K, Henley, S, Lahiri, N, Novak, M, Patel, A, Read, J, Rosser, E, Say, M, Tabrizi, S, Taylor, R, Warner, T, Wild, E, Arran, N, Callaghan, J, Craufurd, D, Fullam, R, Howard, L, Huson, S, Oughton, E, Partington Jones, L, Snowden, J, Sollom, A, Stopford, C, Thompson, J, Trender Gerhad, I, Verstraelen, N, Westmoreland, L, Nemeth, Ah, Suida, G, Harrison, D, Hughes, M, Parkinson, A, Soltysiak, B, Bandmann, O, Bradbury, A, Gill, P, Fairtlough, H, Fillingham, K, Foustanos, I, Tidswell, K., Kaelin, André, Quarrel O.W., Handley O., O'Donovan K., Dumoulin C., Ramos-Arroyo M., Biunno I., Bauer P., Kline M., Capellari S., Cortelli P., Gallassi R., Landwehrmeyer G.B., European Huntington's Disease Network., Neurology, Clinical sciences, Neuroprotection & Neuromodulation, Quarrell, Ow, Handley, O, O'Donovan, K, Dumoulin, C, Ramos Arroyo, M, Biunno, I, Bauer, P, Kline, M, Landwehrmeyer, Gb, European Huntington's Disease, Network, European Huntington's Disease, N. e. t. w. o. r. k., Rinaldi, Carlo, Salvatore, Elena, and DE MICHELE, Giuseppe
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Concordance ,International Cooperation ,Diagnostic Errors/statistics & numerical data ,Nerve Tissue Proteins ,Guidelines as Topic ,Bioinformatics ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Article ,Huntingtin Gene ,Huntington's disease ,Trinucleotide Repeats ,Internal medicine ,External quality assessment ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,Nerve Tissue Proteins/genetics ,Diagnostic laboratory ,Genetic Testing ,Genetic Testing/methods/standards ,Allele ,Diagnostic Errors ,standard reference material ,Genetics (clinical) ,Alleles ,Huntingtin Protein ,ddc:618 ,business.industry ,international cooperation ,Nuclear Proteins ,Reproducibility of Results ,Reference Standards ,medicine.disease ,CAG repeat length ,Nuclear Proteins/genetics ,Huntington Disease ,Huntington Disease/diagnosis ,Mutation ,Medical genetics ,reproducibility of results ,mutation ,business ,Trinucleotide repeat expansion ,Huntington Disease/diagnosis/genetics ,Genetic Testing/methods - Abstract
Huntington's disease results from a CAG repeat expansion within the Huntingtin gene; this is measured routinely in diagnostic laboratories. The European Huntington's Disease Network REGISTRY project centrally measures CAG repeat lengths on fresh samples; these were compared with the original results from 121 laboratories across 15 countries. We report on 1326 duplicate results; a discrepancy in reporting the upper allele occurred in 51% of cases, this reduced to 13.3% and 9.7% when we applied acceptable measurement errors proposed by the American College of Medical Genetics and the Draft European Best Practice Guidelines, respectively. Duplicate results were available for 1250 lower alleles; discrepancies occurred in 40% of cases. Clinically significant discrepancies occurred in 4.0% of cases with a potential unexplained misdiagnosis rate of 0.3%. There was considerable variation in the discrepancy rate among 10 of the countries participating in this study. Out of 1326 samples, 348 were re-analysed by an accredited diagnostic laboratory, based in Germany, with concordance rates of 93% and 94% for the upper and lower alleles, respectively. This became 100% if the acceptable measurement errors were applied. The central laboratory correctly reported allele sizes for six standard reference samples, blind to the known result. Our study differs from external quality assessment (EQA) schemes in that these are duplicate results obtained from a large sample of patients across the whole diagnostic range. We strongly recommend that laboratories state an error rate for their measurement on the report, participate in EQA schemes and use reference materials regularly to adjust their own internal standards.
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- 2012
15. NMDA receptor gene variations as modifiers in Huntington disease
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Saft, C, Epplen, Jt, Wieczorek, S, Landwehrmeyer, Gb, Roos, Ra, de Yebenes JG, Dose, M, Tabrizi, Sj, Craufurd, D, Arning, L, Barth, K, Bascuñana Garde, M, Bos, R, Ecker, D, Handley, O, Heinonen, N, Held, C, Laurà, M, Martínez Descals, A, Mestre, T, Monza, D, Naji, J, Orth, M, Padieu, H, Pro Koivisto, S, Rialland, A, Sasinková, P, Trigo Cubillo, P, van Walsem, M, Witjes Ané MN, Zielonka, D, Bonelli, R, Herranhof, B, Hödl, A, Kapfhammer, Hp, Koppitz, M, Magnet, M, Otti, D, Painold, A, Reisinge, K, Brugger, F, Hepperger, C, Hotter, A, Mahlknecht, P, Nocker, M, Seppi, K, Wenning, G, Ribaï, P, Verellen Dumoulin, C, Klempíř, J, Kucharik, M, Roth, J, Hasholt, L, Hjermind, L, Jakobsen, O, Nielsen, J, Nørremølle, A, Sørensen, S, Stokholm, J, Hiivola, H, Martikainen, K, Tuuha, K, Kosinski, C, Probst, D, Sass, C, Schiefer, J, Schlangen, C, Werner, C, Lange, H, Löhle, M, Storch, A, Wolz, A, Wolz, M, Lambeck, J, Zucker, B, Münchau, A, Stubbe, L, Zittel, S, Heinicke, W, Longinus, B, Peinemann, A, Städtler, M, Weindl, A, Bohlen, S, Reilmann, R, Beister, A, Hammer, K, Leythaeuser, G, Marquard, R, Raab, T, Schrenk, C, Schuierer, M, Wiedemann, A, Eschenbach, C, Landwehrmeyer, B, Lezius, F, Trautmann, S, Cormio, C, Difruscolo, O, de Tommaso, M, Sciruicchio, V, Serpino, C, Bertini, E, Mechi, C, Paganini, M, Piacentini, S, Romoli, M, Sorbi, S, Abbruzzese, G, Di Maria, E, Bandettini di Poggio Giovanna Ferrandes, M, Mandich, P, Marchese, R, Albanese, A, Di Donato, S, Mariotti, C, Soliveri, P, Gellera, C, Tomasello, C, Nanetti, L, Luigi, D, De Michele, G, Rinaldi, C, Russo, C, Salvatore, E, Tucci, T, Squitieri, F, Martino, T, Orobello, S, Alberti, S, De Gregorio, F, Codella, V, De Nicola, N, Maglione, V, Bentivoglio, A, Fasano, A, Frontali, M, Guidubaldi, A, Ialongo, T, Jacopini, G, Loria, G, Piano, C, Romano, Silvia, Soleti, F, Spadaro, M, Zinzi, P, Heiberg, A, Bjørgo, K, Fannemel, M, Gørvell, P, Retterstøl, L, Bjørnevoll, I, Botne Sando, S, Slawek, J, Soltan, W, Sitek, E, Boczarska Jedynak, M, Jasinska Myga, B, Opala, G, Szczudlik, A, Rudzińska, M, Wójcik, M, Banaszkiewicz, K, Krawczyk, M, Marcinkowski, J, Ciesielska, A, Sempołowicz, J, Bryl, A, Klimberg, A, Janik, P, Kalbarczyk, A, Kwiecinski, H, Jamrozik, Z, Witkowski, G, Ryglewicz, D, Antczak, J, Rakowicz, M, Jachinska, K, Zdzienicka, E, Richter, P, Zaremba, J, Coelho, M, Ferreira, J, Rosa, M, Valadas, A, Gago, M, Garrett, C, Guerra, M, Barrero, F, Morales, B, López Sendón Moreno, J, Cubo, E, Mariscal, N, Sánchez, J, García, R, Villanueva, C, Pin Quiroga, P, Bascuñana, M, Fatàas, M, Luis López Moreno, J, García Ribas, G, Schwarz, C, de Yébenes JG, José Saiz Artiga, M, García Ruíz, P, Sánchez, V, Fortuna Alcaraz, L, Fuensanta Noguera Perea, M, Martirio Antequera Torres, M, Vivancos Moreau, L, Rojo Sebastian, A, Aguilar Barbera, M, Badenes Guia, D, Casas Hernanz, L, Tome Carruesco, G, Suarez San Martin, E, López Catena, J, Bas, J, Calopa, M, Busquets, N, Navas Arques, P, Gorospe, A, Legarda, I, José Torres Rodríguez, M, Vives, B, Carrillo, F, Mir, P, José Lama Suarez, M, Loutfi, G, Stattin, El, Westman, L, Wikström, B, Pålhagen, S, Björnsson, E, Burgunder, Jm, Romero, I, Schüpbach, M, Weber Zaugg, S, van Hout, M, van Vugt, J, Marit de Weert, A, Bolwijn, Jj, Dekker, M, Leenders, Kl, van Oostrom JC, Dumas, E, Jurgens, C, van den Bogaard SA, Roos, R, Kremer, B, Verstappen, Cc, de Souza, J, Rickards, H, Wright, J, Barker, R, Fisher, K, Goyder Goodman, A, Hill, S, Kershaw, A, Mason, S, Paterson, N, Raymond, L, Bisson, J, Busse, M, Ellison Rose, L, Hunt, S, Price, K, Rosser, A, Dunnett, S, Edwards, M, De Sousa, P, Hughes, T, Mcgill, M, Pearson, P, Porteous, M, Smith, P, Zeman, A, Lambord, N, Rankin, J, Burrows, L, Fletcher, A, Laver, F, Silva, M, Thomson, A, Andrews, T, Dougherty, A, Kavalier, F, Golding, C, Lashwood, A, Robertson, D, Ruddy, D, Whaite, A, Patton, M, Patterson, M, Bourne, C, Clayton, C, Dipple, H, Clapton, J, Grant, J, Gross, D, Hallam, C, Middleton, J, Murch, A, Patino, D, Bruno, S, Chu, E, Doherty, K, Lahiri, N, Novak, M, Patel, A, Tabrizi, S, Taylor, R, Warner, T, Wild, E, Arran, N, Fullam, R, Howard, L, Huson, S, Partington Jones, L, Verstraelen, N, Snowden, J, Sollom, A, Stopford, C, Thompson, J, Westmoreland, L, Nemeth, A, Siuda, G, Bandmann, O, Bradbury, A, Fillingham, K, Foustanos, I, Tidswell, K, and Quarrell, O.
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Genetics ,biology ,business.industry ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Disease ,Bioinformatics ,Huntington Disease ,Cohort ,biology.protein ,Medicine ,GRIN2A ,NMDA receptor ,GRIN2B ,business ,Trinucleotide repeat expansion ,Gene ,Modifier Genes - Abstract
Several candidate modifier genes which, in addition to the pathogenic CAG repeat expansion, influence the age at onset (AO) in Huntington disease (HD) have already been described. The aim of this study was to replicate association of variations in the N-methyl D-aspartate receptor subtype genes GRIN2A and GRIN2B in the "REGISTRY" cohort from the European Huntington Disease Network (EHDN). The analyses did replicate the association reported between the GRIN2A rs2650427 variation and AO in the entire cohort. Yet, when subjects were stratified by AO subtypes, we found nominally significant evidence for an association of the GRIN2A rs1969060 variation and the GRIN2B rs1806201 variation. These findings further implicate the N-methyl D-aspartate receptor subtype genes as loci containing variation associated with AO in HD.
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- 2011
16. Prenatal diagnosis of the Prader-Wills syndrome through a 15;15 isochromosome and maternal isodisormy
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Freund, M., Dahan, K., Liebaers, Ingeborg, Hubinont, C., Verellen-Dumoulin, C., Department of Embryology and Genetics, and Vrije Universiteit Brussel
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- 2000
17. IRF6 Screening of Syndromic and a priori Non-Syndromic Cleft Lip and Palate Patients: Identification of a New Type of Minor VWS Sign.
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Desmyter, L., Ghassibe, M., Revencu, N., Boute, O., Lees, M., François, G., Verellen-Dumoulin, C., Sznajer, Y., Moncla, A., Benateau, H., Claes, K., Devriendt, K., Mathieu, M., Van Maldergem, L., Addor, M.-C., Drouin-Garraud, V., Mortier, G., Bouma, M., Dieux-Coeslier, A., and Genevieve, D.
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- 2010
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18. Frequency of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator gene mutations and 5T allele in patients with allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis.
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Marchand, Eric, Verellen-Dumoulin, Christine, Mairesse, Michel, Delaunois, Luc, Brancaleone, Pierre, Rahier, Jean-François, Vandenplas, Olivier, Marchand, E, Verellen-Dumoulin, C, Mairesse, M, Delaunois, L, Brancaleone, P, Rahier, J F, and Vandenplas, O
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PULMONARY aspergillosis ,CYSTIC fibrosis ,GENETIC mutation - Abstract
Study Objective: To assess the frequency of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene mutations in patients with allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (ABPA).Design: Case-control study. All subjects in the study were screened for the presence of 13 mutations in the CFTR gene (R117H, 621 + 1G(-)>T, R334 W, Delta F508, Delta I507, 1717-1G(-)>A, G542X, R553X, G551D, R1162X, 3849 + 10kbC(-)>T, W1282X, and N1303K). Moreover, they were also screened for the presence of the 5T variant in intron 8.Setting: University hospital and community-based hospital.Patients: Twenty-one white patients with ABPA participated in the study. The presence of CFTR mutations was also investigated in 43 white subjects with allergic asthma who did not show sensitization to Aspergillus fumigatus and in 142 subjects seeking genetic counseling for diseases other than cystic fibrosis (CF).Results: Six patients with ABPA were found to be heterozygous for one CFTR mutation, including Delta F508 (n = 2), G542X (n = 1), R1162X (n = 1), 1717-1G(-)>A (n = 1), and R117H (n = 1). The 5T allele was not detected in ABPA patients. None of the ABPA patients showed sweat chloride concentrations > 60 mEq/L. The frequency of CFTR mutation carriers was significantly higher in ABPA patients (6 of 21 patients; 28.5%) than in control asthmatic subjects (2 of 43 subjects; 4.6%; p = 0.01) and in subjects seeking genetic counseling (6 of 142 subjects; p < 0.001).Conclusion: These findings indicate that in patients without a clinical diagnosis of CF, CFTR gene mutations could be involved in the development of ABPA, in association with other genetic or environmental factors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2001
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19. Ataxie-télangiectasie.
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Rousseau, C., Eggers, S., Pirard, C., Decroix, J., Evrard, Ph., Lyon, G., and Verellen-Dumoulin, C.
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- 1989
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20. Un cas de dysplasie oculo-auriculo-vertébrale (Syndrome de Goldenhar) avec atteinte cutanée.
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Willocx, D., Bourlond, A., Vliers, A., Verellen-Dumoulin, C., and de Sélys, R.
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- 1989
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21. Isolated polycystic liver disease as a distinct genetic disease, unlinked to polycystic kidney disease 1 and polycystic kidney disease 2.
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Pirson, Y, Lannoy, N, Peters, D, Geubel, A, Gigot, J, Breuning, M, and Verellen-Dumoulin, C
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- 1996
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22. Hematological malignancies with a deletion of 11q23: cytogenetic and clinical aspects. European 11q23 Workshop participants.
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Harbott, J, Mancini, M, Verellen-Dumoulin, Ch, Moorman, A V, Secker-Walker, L M, and Verellen-Dumoulin, C
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HEMATOLOGICAL oncology ,LEUKEMIA ,CHROMOSOMAL translocation ,MYELODYSPLASTIC syndromes ,CHROMOSOMES ,GENETIC mutation ,LYMPHOBLASTIC leukemia ,AGE distribution ,MYELOID leukemia ,PROGNOSIS ,KARYOTYPES ,FLUORESCENCE in situ hybridization ,ACUTE diseases - Abstract
Balanced translocations of 11q23 are associated with specific clinical features and a poor outcome, but the relevance of deletions involving 11q23 is not clear. Fifty-seven patients with this deletion were collected by the Workshop, 30 had terminal and 27 had interstitial deletions. Twenty-seven patients had acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), 16 had acute myeloid leukemia (AML), one had acute biphenotypic leukemia, one had acute undifferentiated leukemia and 12 had myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS). ALL patients had a median age of 7 years, median white blood cell count (WBC) of 15 x 10(9)/l, and 10/24 had common ALL. AML patients had a median age of 23 years, a median WBC of 49 x 10(9)/l, and 9/16 had M4 or M5. MDS patients were all adult, median age of 69 years, median WBC of 3 x 10(9)/l, and 7/12 had refractory anemia. The clinical outcome depended on diagnosis: children with ALL had a better prognosis (4/16 relapsed, one died) than AML patients; all adults and children with AML and 5/12 MDS patients died. Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) identified 3 del(11q23) as translocations or insertions. Molecular studies revealed a MLL rearrangement in 8/10 patients. Because the involvement of MLL might be of prognostic relevance, identification of a del(11q23) should be an indication for FISH and molecular studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 1998
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23. Syndrome de Werner avec complications inhabituelles.
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Rousseau, C., Pirard, C., Bourlond, A., de Sélys, R., Frankart, M., Minet, A., Lambert, A.E., Vandeleene, B., Brichard, S., Meunier, H., and Verellen-Dumoulin, C.
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- 1989
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24. Paternal inheritance of translocation chromosomes in a t(X;21) patient with X linked muscular dystrophy.
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Kean, V M, Macleod, H L, Thompson, M W, Ray, P N, Verellen-Dumoulin, C, and Worton, R G
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A number of DNA probes from the short arm of the X chromosome have been used to study the inheritance of the translocation chromosomes in a girl with an X; autosome translocation and muscular dystrophy. The two translocation chromosomes were found to be derived from the father's single normal X chromosome, ruling out maternal inheritance of a pre-existent mutation and enhancing the concept that the de novo translocation is responsible for the dystrophic phenotype. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 1986
25. Allelic heterogeneity of SMARD1 at the IGHMBP2 locus.
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Maystadt, I., Zarhrate, M., Landrieu, P., Boespflug-Tanguy, O., Sukno, S., Collignon, P., Melki, J., Verellen-Dumoulin, C., Munnich, A., and Viollet, L.
- Abstract
Spinal Muscular Atrophy with Respiratory Distress (SMARD) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by neurogenic muscular atrophy due to progressive anterior horn cell degeneration and early life-threatening respiratory failure ascribed to diaphragmatic dysfunction. SMARD is clinically and genetically heterogeneous. SMARD type 1 is characterized by onset of respiratory failure within the first weeks of life and has been ascribed to mutations in the immunoglobulin mu-binding protein 2 (IGHMBP2) gene on chromosome 11q13-q21. We report here the identification of nine novel IGHMBP2 mutations in five SMARD1 patients, including seven missense [ c.587A>G (p.Gln196Arg), c.647C>T (p.Pro216Leu), c.752T>C (p.Leu251Pro), c.1693G>A (p.Asp565Asn), c.1730T>C (p.Leu577Pro), c.1807C>T (p.Arg603Cys), c.1909C>T (p.Arg637Cys)] and two nonsense mutations [ c.1488C>A (p.Cys496X), c.2368C>T (p.Arg790X)]. Interestingly, 7 of 9 mutations occurred at highly conserved residues of the putative DNA helicase domain. The identification of novel IGHMBP2 variants will hopefully help diagnosing SMARD1 and contribute to a better functional characterization of IGHMBP2 gene product. © 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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26. High CTG repeat number in nodular thyroid tissue from a myotonic dystrophy patient.
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Daumerie, C, Lannoy, N, Squifflet, J P, Verellen, G, and Verellen-Dumoulin, C
- Abstract
CTG triplet expansion was studied in lymphocytes and thyroid tissue in a patient with myotonic dystrophy (DM) and associated thyroid nodular disease. An approximately 7 fold larger amplification was found in abnormal thyroid tissue compared to lymphocytes, suggesting that anomalies in the putative DM kinase gene might contribute to thyroid dysfunction. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 1994
27. Gastrointestinal Polyposis and Nonpolyposis Syndromes.
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Dupuis, M.J.M. and Verellen-Dumoulin, C.
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- *
LETTERS to the editor , *GASTROINTESTINAL diseases ,CENTRAL nervous system tumors - Abstract
The article presents a letter to the editor in response to a previous article on Turcot's syndrome and associations between polyposis and central nervous system tumors.
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- 1995
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28. Intrauterine exposure to carbamazepine and specific congenital malformations
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Jentink, Janneke, Dolk, Helen, Loane, Maria A., Morris, Joan K., Wellesley, Diana, Garne, Ester, de Jong-van den Berg, Lolkje, Bakker, Marian, EUROCAT Antiepileptic Study Working Group, Verellen-Dumoulin, C., Nelen, V., Barisic, I., Garne, E., Khoshnood, B., Doray, B., Poetzsch, S., Wiesel, A., O'Mahony, M., Pierini, A., Rivieri, F., Gatt, M., Bakker, M., Melve, K., Latos-Bielenska, A., Mejnartowicz, JP., Portillo, I., Addor, MC., Tucker, D., and Reproductive Origins of Adult Health and Disease (ROAHD)
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Pediatrics ,Dentistry and Oral Medicine ,Epilepsy ,Pregnancy ,Risk Factors ,Drugs: Psychiatry ,Prevalence ,Medicine ,EPILEPSY ,General Environmental Science ,TERATOGENESIS ,RISK ,General Engineering ,Congenital Heart Disease ,ANTIEPILEPTIC DRUGS ,Abnormalities, Drug-Induced ,General Medicine ,Europe ,Carbamazepine ,PREGNANCY ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Anticonvulsants ,Female ,Abnormalities, Drug-Induced/epidemiology ,Abnormalities, Drug-Induced/etiology ,Anticonvulsants/adverse effects ,Carbamazepine/adverse effects ,Case-Control Studies ,Epilepsy/drug therapy ,Epilepsy/epidemiology ,Europe/epidemiology ,Humans ,Infant, Newborn ,Pregnancy Complications/drug therapy ,Pregnancy Complications/epidemiology ,Pregnancy Trimester, First ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects/epidemiology ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects/etiology ,medicine.drug ,Cohort study ,medicine.medical_specialty ,IN-UTERO ,Lamotrigine ,VALPROIC ACID ,MAJOR MALFORMATIONS ,Urological Surgery ,FETAL ,Internet ,business.industry ,Spina bifida ,Research ,Case-control study ,Odds ratio ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Pregnancy Complications ,Oesophagus ,Epidemiologic Studies ,Reproductive Medicine ,LAMOTRIGINE ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,carbamazepine ,intrauterine ,business - Abstract
Objective To identify specific major congenital malformations associated with use of carbamazepine in the first trimester of pregnancy.Design A review of all published cohort studies to identify key indications and a population based case-control study to test these indications.Setting Review of PubMed, Web of Science, and Embase for papers about carbamazepine exposure in the first trimester of pregnancy and specific malformations, and the EUROCAT Antiepileptic Study Database, including data from 19 European population based congenital anomaly registries, 1995-2005.Participants The literature review covered eight cohort studies of 2680 pregnancies with carbamazepine monotherapy exposure, and the EUROCAT dataset included 98 075 registrations of malformations covering over 3.8 million births.Main outcome measures Overall prevalence for a major congenital malformation after exposure to carbamazepine monotherapy in the first trimester. Odds ratios for malformations with exposure to carbamazepine among cases (five types of malformation identified in the literature review) compared with two groups of controls: other non-chromosomal registrations of malformations and chromosomal syndromes.Results The literature review yielded an overall prevalence for a major congenital malformation of 3.3% (95% confidence interval 2.7 to 4.2) after exposure to carbamazepine monotherapy in the first trimester. In 131 registrations of malformations, the fetus had been exposed to carbamazepine monotherapy. Spina bifida was the only specific major congenital malformation significantly associated with exposure to carbamazepine monotherapy (odds ratio 2.6 (95% confidence interval 1.2 to 5.3) compared with no antiepileptic drug), but the risk was smaller for carbamazepine than for valproic acid (0.2, 0.1 to 0.6). There was no evidence for an association with total anomalous pulmonary venous return (no cases with carbamazepine exposure), cleft lip (with or without palate) (0.2, 0.0 to 1.3), diaphragmatic hernia (0.9, 0.1 to 6.6), or hypospadias (0.7, 0.3 to 1.6) compared with no exposure to antiepileptic drugs. Further exploratory analysis suggested a higher risk of single ventricle and atrioventricular septal defect.Conclusion Carbamazepine teratogenicity is relatively specific to spina bifida, though the risk is less than with valproic acid. Despite the large dataset, there was not enough power to detect moderate risks for some rare major congenital malformations.
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- 2010
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29. G.O.4 The NF-kappaB activator PLEKHG5 gene is mutated in a form of autosomal recessive lower motor neuron disease with childhood onset
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Maystadt, I., Rezsöhazy, R., Barkats, M., Duque, S., Vannuffel, P., Najimi, M., Munnich, A., Viollet, L., and Verellen-Dumoulin, C.
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- 2007
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30. Amniotic band syndrome and limb body wall complex in Europe 1980-2019.
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Bergman JEH, Barišić I, Addor MC, Braz P, Cavero-Carbonell C, Draper ES, Echevarría-González-de-Garibay LJ, Gatt M, Haeusler M, Khoshnood B, Klungsøyr K, Kurinczuk JJ, Latos-Bielenska A, Luyt K, Martin D, Mullaney C, Nelen V, Neville AJ, O'Mahony MT, Perthus I, Pierini A, Randrianaivo H, Rankin J, Rissmann A, Rouget F, Sayers G, Schaub B, Stevens S, Tucker D, Verellen-Dumoulin C, Wiesel A, Gerkes EH, Perraud A, Loane MA, Wellesley D, and de Walle HEK
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- Pregnancy, Humans, Female, Infant, Newborn, Europe epidemiology, Maternal Age, Stillbirth epidemiology, Registries, Prevalence, Amniotic Band Syndrome complications, Abnormalities, Multiple epidemiology
- Abstract
Amniotic band syndrome (ABS) and limb body wall complex (LBWC) have an overlapping phenotype of multiple congenital anomalies and their etiology is unknown. We aimed to determine the prevalence of ABS and LBWC in Europe from 1980 to 2019 and to describe the spectrum of congenital anomalies. In addition, we investigated maternal age and multiple birth as possible risk factors for the occurrence of ABS and LBWC. We used data from the European surveillance of congenital anomalies (EUROCAT) network including data from 30 registries over 1980-2019. We included all pregnancy outcomes, including live births, stillbirths, and terminations of pregnancy for fetal anomalies. ABS and LBWC cases were extracted from the central EUROCAT database using coding information responses from the registries. In total, 866 ABS cases and 451 LBWC cases were included in this study. The mean prevalence was 0.53/10,000 births for ABS and 0.34/10,000 births for LBWC during the 40 years. Prevalence of both ABS and LBWC was lower in the 1980s and higher in the United Kingdom. Limb anomalies and neural tube defects were commonly seen in ABS, whereas in LBWC abdominal and thoracic wall defects and limb anomalies were most prevalent. Twinning was confirmed as a risk factor for both ABS and LBWC. This study includes the largest cohort of ABS and LBWC cases ever reported over a large time period using standardized EUROCAT data. Prevalence, clinical characteristics, and the phenotypic spectrum are described, and twinning is confirmed as a risk factor., (© 2022 The Authors. American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2023
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31. Prevention of Neural Tube Defects in Europe: A Public Health Failure.
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Morris JK, Addor MC, Ballardini E, Barisic I, Barrachina-Bonet L, Braz P, Cavero-Carbonell C, Den Hond E, Garne E, Gatt M, Haeusler M, Khoshnood B, Lelong N, Kinsner-Ovaskainen A, Kiuru-Kuhlefelt S, Klungsoyr K, Latos-Bielenska A, Limb E, O'Mahony MT, Perthus I, Pierini A, Rankin J, Rissmann A, Rouget F, Sayers G, Sipek A Jr, Stevens S, Tucker D, Verellen-Dumoulin C, de Walle HEK, Wellesley D, Wertelecki W, and Bermejo-Sanchez E
- Abstract
Objective: Thirty years ago it was demonstrated that folic acid taken before pregnancy and in early pregnancy reduced the risk of a neural tube defect (NTD). Despite Public Health Initiatives across Europe recommending that women take 0.4 mg folic acid before becoming pregnant and during the first trimester, the prevalence of NTD pregnancies has not materially decreased in the EU since 1998, in contrast to the dramatic fall observed in the USA. This study aimed to estimate the number of NTD pregnancies that would have been prevented if flour had been fortified with folic acid in Europe from 1998 as it had been in the USA. Design and Setting: The number of NTD pregnancies from 1998 to 2017 that would have been prevented if folic acid fortification had been implemented in the 28 countries who were members of the European Union in 2019 was predicted was predicted using data on NTD prevalence from 35 EUROCAT congenital anomaly registries and literature searches for population serum folate levels and folic acid supplementation. Results: From 1998 to 2017 an estimated 95,213 NTD pregnancies occurred amongst 104 million births in the 28 countries in the EU, a prevalence of 0.92 per 1,000 births. The median serum folate level in Europe over this time period was estimated to be 14.1 μg/L. There is a lack of information about women taking folic acid supplements before becoming pregnant and during the first trimester of pregnancy, with one meta-analysis indicating that around 25% of women did so. An estimated 14,600 NTD pregnancies may have been prevented if the European countries had implemented fortification at the level adopted by the USA in 1998 and 25% of women took folic acid supplements. An estimated 19,500 NTD pregnancies would have been prevented if no women took folic acid supplements. Conclusions: This study suggests that failure to implement mandatory folic acid fortification in the 28 European countries has caused, and continues to cause, neural tube defects to occur in almost 1,000 pregnancies every year., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Morris, Addor, Ballardini, Barisic, Barrachina-Bonet, Braz, Cavero-Carbonell, Den Hond, Garne, Gatt, Haeusler, Khoshnood, Lelong, Kinsner-Ovaskainen, Kiuru-Kuhlefelt, Klungsoyr, Latos-Bielenska, Limb, O'Mahony, Perthus, Pierini, Rankin, Rissmann, Rouget, Sayers, Sipek, Stevens, Tucker, Verellen-Dumoulin, de Walle, Wellesley, Wertelecki and Bermejo-Sanchez.)
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- 2021
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32. Multilevel analyses of related public health indicators: The European Surveillance of Congenital Anomalies (EUROCAT) Public Health Indicators.
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Best KE, Rankin J, Dolk H, Loane M, Haeusler M, Nelen V, Verellen-Dumoulin C, Garne E, Sayers G, Mullaney C, O'Mahony MT, Gatt M, De Walle H, Klungsoyr K, Carolla OM, Cavero-Carbonell C, Kurinczuk JJ, Draper ES, Tucker D, Wellesley D, Zymak-Zakutnia N, Lelong N, and Khoshnood B
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- Adult, Europe epidemiology, Female, Gestational Age, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Multilevel Analysis, Perinatal Mortality, Pregnancy, Prevalence, Public Health Surveillance, Registries statistics & numerical data, Abortion, Eugenic statistics & numerical data, Congenital Abnormalities diagnosis, Congenital Abnormalities epidemiology, Prenatal Diagnosis methods, Prenatal Diagnosis statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: Public health organisations use public health indicators to guide health policy. Joint analysis of multiple public health indicators can provide a more comprehensive understanding of what they are intended to evaluate., Objective: To analyse variaitons in the prevalence of congenital anomaly-related perinatal mortality attributable to termination of pregnancy for foetal anomaly (TOPFA) and prenatal diagnosis of congenital anomaly prevalence., Methods: We included 55 363 cases of congenital anomalies notified to 18 EUROCAT registers in 10 countries during 2008-12. Incidence rate ratios (IRR) representing the risk of congenital anomaly-related perinatal mortality according to TOPFA and prenatal diagnosis prevalence were estimated using multilevel Poisson regression with country as a random effect. Between-country variation in congenital anomaly-related perinatal mortality was measured using random effects and compared between the null and adjusted models to estimate the percentage of variation in congenital anomaly-related perinatal mortality accounted for by TOPFA and prenatal diagnosis., Results: The risk of congenital anomaly-related perinatal mortality decreased as TOPFA and prenatal diagnosis prevalence increased (IRR 0.79, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.72, 0.86; and IRR 0.88, 95% CI 0.79, 0.97). Modelling TOPFA and prenatal diagnosis together, the association between congenital anomaly-related perinatal mortality and TOPFA prevalence became stronger (RR 0.70, 95% CI 0.61, 0.81). The prevalence of TOPFA and prenatal diagnosis accounted for 75.5% and 37.7% of the between-country variation in perinatal mortality, respectively., Conclusion: We demonstrated an approach for analysing inter-linked public health indicators. In this example, as TOPFA and prenatal diagnosis of congenital anomaly prevalence decreased, the risk of congenital anomaly-related perinatal mortality increased. Much of the between-country variation in congenital anomaly-related perinatal mortality was accounted for by TOPFA, with a smaller proportion accounted for by prenatal diagnosis., (© 2020 The Authors. Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2020
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33. Epidemiology of congenital cerebral anomalies in Europe: a multicentre, population-based EUROCAT study.
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Morris JK, Wellesley DG, Barisic I, Addor MC, Bergman JEH, Braz P, Cavero-Carbonell C, Draper ES, Gatt M, Haeusler M, Klungsoyr K, Kurinczuk JJ, Lelong N, Luyt K, Lynch C, O'Mahony MT, Mokoroa O, Nelen V, Neville AJ, Pierini A, Randrianaivo H, Rankin J, Rissmann A, Rouget F, Schaub B, Tucker DF, Verellen-Dumoulin C, Wiesel A, Zymak-Zakutnia N, Lanzoni M, and Garne E
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- Child, Child, Preschool, Europe epidemiology, Female, Fetal Death, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, International Classification of Diseases, Pregnancy, Prevalence, Stillbirth, Congenital Abnormalities epidemiology, Population Surveillance methods, Registries statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objectives: To describe the epidemiology and geographical differences in prevalence of congenital cerebral anomalies in Europe., Design and Setting: Congenital cerebral anomalies (International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision code Q04) recorded in 29 population-based EUROCAT registries conducting surveillance of 1.7 million births per annum (29% of all European births)., Participants: All birth outcomes (live births, fetal deaths from 20 weeks gestation and terminations of pregnancy after prenatal diagnosis of a fetal anomaly (TOPFA)) from 2005 to 2014., Main Outcome Measures: Prevalence, proportion of associated non-cerebral anomalies, prenatal detection rate., Results: 4927 cases with congenital cerebral anomalies were identified; a prevalence (adjusted for under-reporting) of 9.8 (95% CI: 8.5 to 11.2) per 10 000 births. There was a sixfold difference in prevalence across the registries. Registries with higher proportions of prenatal diagnoses had higher prevalence. Overall, 55% of all cases were liveborn, 3% were fetal deaths and 41% resulted in TOPFA. Forty-eight per cent of all cases were an isolated cerebral anomaly, 25% had associated non-cerebral anomalies and 27% were chromosomal or part of a syndrome (genetic or teratogenic). The prevalence excluding genetic or chromosomal conditions increased by 2.4% per annum (95% CI: 1.3% to 3.5%), with the increases occurring only for congenital malformations of the corpus callosum (3.0% per annum) and 'other reduction deformities of the brain' (2.8% per annum)., Conclusions: Only half of the cases were isolated cerebral anomalies. Improved prenatal and postnatal diagnosis may account for the increase in prevalence of congenital cerebral anomalies from 2005 to 2014. However, major differences in prevalence remain between regions., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2019
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34. Congenital clubfoot in Europe: A population-based study.
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Wang H, Barisic I, Loane M, Addor MC, Bailey LM, Gatt M, Klungsoyr K, Mokoroa O, Nelen V, Neville AJ, O'Mahony M, Pierini A, Rissmann A, Verellen-Dumoulin C, de Walle HEK, Wiesel A, Wisniewska K, de Jong-van den Berg LTW, Dolk H, Khoshnood B, and Garne E
- Subjects
- Clubfoot diagnosis, Congenital Abnormalities diagnosis, Europe epidemiology, Female, Gestational Age, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Pregnancy, Prevalence, Registries, Chromosome Aberrations, Clubfoot epidemiology, Congenital Abnormalities epidemiology, Fetal Death, Prenatal Diagnosis, Stillbirth epidemiology
- Abstract
We aimed to assess prevalence, birth outcome, associated anomalies and prenatal diagnosis of congenital clubfoot in Europe using data from the EUROCAT network, and to validate the recording of congenital clubfoot as a major congenital anomaly by EUROCAT registries. Cases of congenital clubfoot were included from 18 EUROCAT registries covering more than 4.8 million births in 1995-2011. Cases without chromosomal anomalies born during 2005-2009, were randomly selected for validation using a questionnaire on diagnostic details and treatment. There was 5,458 congenital clubfoot cases of which 5,056 (93%) were liveborn infants. Total prevalence of congenital clubfoot was 1.13 per 1,000 births (95% CI 1.10-1.16). Prevalence of congenital clubfoot without chromosomal anomaly was 1.08 per 1,000 births (95% CI 1.05-1.11) and prevalence of isolated congenital clubfoot was 0.92 per 1,000 births (95% CI 0.90-0.95), both with decreasing trends over time and large variations in prevalence by registry. The majority of cases were isolated congenital clubfoot (82%) and 11% had associated major congenital anomalies. Prenatal detection rate of isolated congenital clubfoot was 22% and increased over time. Among 301 validated congenital clubfoot cases, diagnosis was confirmed for 286 (95%). In conclusion, this large population-based study found a decreasing trend of congenital clubfoot in Europe after 1999-2002, an increasing prenatal detection rate, and a high standard of coding of congenital clubfoot in EUROCAT., (© 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
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- 2019
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35. Epidemiology of septo-optic dysplasia with focus on prevalence and maternal age - A EUROCAT study.
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Garne E, Rissmann A, Addor MC, Barisic I, Bergman J, Braz P, Cavero-Carbonell C, Draper ES, Gatt M, Haeusler M, Klungsoyr K, Kurinczuk JJ, Lelong N, Luyt K, Lynch C, O'Mahony MT, Mokoroa O, Nelen V, Neville AJ, Pierini A, Randrianaivo H, Rankin J, Rouget F, Schaub B, Tucker D, Verellen-Dumoulin C, Wellesley D, Wiesel A, Zymak-Zakutnia N, Lanzoni M, and Morris JK
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- Adolescent, Adult, Europe, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Maternal Age, Septo-Optic Dysplasia epidemiology
- Abstract
Septo-optic nerve dysplasia is a rare congenital anomaly with optic nerve hypoplasia, pituitary hormone deficiencies and midline developmental defects of the brain. The clinical findings are visual impairment, hypopituitarism and developmental delays. The aim of this study was to report prevalence, associated anomalies, maternal age and other epidemiological factors from a large European population based network of congenital anomaly registries (EUROCAT). Data from 29 full member registries for the years 2005-2014 were included, covering 6.4 million births. There were 99 cases with a diagnosis of septo-optic dysplasia. The prevalence of septo-optic dysplasia in Europe was calculated to lie between 1.9 and 2.5 per 100,000 births after adjusting for potential under-reporting in some registries. The prevalence was highest in babies of mothers aged 20-24 years of age and was significantly higher in UK registries compared with other EUROCAT registries (P = 0.021 in the multilevel model) and the additional risk for younger mothers was significantly greater in the UK compared to the rest of Europe (P = 0.027). The majority of septo-optic dysplasia cases were classified as an isolated cerebral anomaly (N = 76, 77%). Forty percent of diagnoses occurred in fetuses with a prenatal diagnosis. The anomaly may not be visible at birth, which is reflected in that 57% of the postnatal diagnoses occurred over 1 month after birth. This is the first population based study to describe the prevalence of septo-optic dysplasia in Europe. Septo-optic dysplasia shares epidemiological patterns with gastroschisis and this strengthens the hypothesis of vascular disruption being an aetiological factor for septo-optic dysplasia., (Copyright © 2018. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS.)
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- 2018
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36. Trends in congenital anomalies in Europe from 1980 to 2012.
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Morris JK, Springett AL, Greenlees R, Loane M, Addor MC, Arriola L, Barisic I, Bergman JEH, Csaky-Szunyogh M, Dias C, Draper ES, Garne E, Gatt M, Khoshnood B, Klungsoyr K, Lynch C, McDonnell R, Nelen V, Neville AJ, O'Mahony M, Pierini A, Queisser-Luft A, Randrianaivo H, Rankin J, Rissmann A, Kurinczuk J, Tucker D, Verellen-Dumoulin C, Wellesley D, and Dolk H
- Subjects
- Congenital Abnormalities diagnosis, Congenital Abnormalities etiology, Congenital Abnormalities history, Europe epidemiology, Female, History, 20th Century, History, 21st Century, Humans, Male, Population Surveillance, Pregnancy, Prevalence, Registries, Congenital Abnormalities epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Surveillance of congenital anomalies is important to identify potential teratogens., Methods: This study analysed the prevalence of 61 congenital anomaly subgroups (excluding chromosomal) in 25 population-based EUROCAT registries (1980-2012). Live births, fetal deaths and terminations of pregnancy for fetal anomaly were analysed with multilevel random-effects Poisson regression models., Results: Seventeen anomaly subgroups had statistically significant trends from 2003-2012; 12 increasing and 5 decreasing., Conclusions: The annual increasing prevalence of severe congenital heart defects, single ventricle, atrioventricular septal defects and tetralogy of Fallot of 1.4% (95% CI: 0.7% to 2.0%), 4.6% (1.0% to 8.2%), 3.4% (1.3% to 5.5%) and 4.1% (2.4% to 5.7%) respectively may reflect increases in maternal obesity and diabetes (known risk factors). The increased prevalence of cystic adenomatous malformation of the lung [6.5% (3.5% to 9.4%)] and decreased prevalence of limb reduction defects [-2.8% (-4.2% to -1.5%)] are unexplained. For renal dysplasia and maternal infections, increasing trends may be explained by increased screening, and deceases in patent ductus arteriosus at term and increases in craniosynostosis, by improved follow up period after birth and improved diagnosis. For oesophageal atresia, duodenal atresia/stenosis and ano-rectal atresia/stenosis recent changes in prevalence appeared incidental when compared with larger long term fluctuations. For microcephaly and congenital hydronephrosis trends could not be interpreted due to discrepancies in diagnostic criteria. The trends for club foot and syndactyly disappeared once registries with disparate results were excluded. No decrease in neural tube defects was detected, despite efforts at prevention through folic acid supplementation.
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- 2018
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37. Estimating Global Burden of Disease due to congenital anomaly: an analysis of European data.
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Boyle B, Addor MC, Arriola L, Barisic I, Bianchi F, Csáky-Szunyogh M, de Walle HEK, Dias CM, Draper E, Gatt M, Garne E, Haeusler M, Källén K, Latos-Bielenska A, McDonnell B, Mullaney C, Nelen V, Neville AJ, O'Mahony M, Queisser-Wahrendorf A, Randrianaivo H, Rankin J, Rissmann A, Ritvanen A, Rounding C, Tucker D, Verellen-Dumoulin C, Wellesley D, Wreyford B, Zymak-Zakutnia N, and Dolk H
- Subjects
- Adult, Europe epidemiology, Female, Fetal Mortality, Gestational Age, Global Burden of Disease methods, Global Burden of Disease statistics & numerical data, Humans, Infant, Infant Mortality, Infant, Newborn, Male, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Outcome epidemiology, Prevalence, Registries statistics & numerical data, Stillbirth epidemiology, Abortion, Induced statistics & numerical data, Congenital Abnormalities diagnosis, Congenital Abnormalities epidemiology, Fetal Death prevention & control, Infant Death prevention & control, Prenatal Diagnosis methods, Prenatal Diagnosis statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objective: To validate the estimates of Global Burden of Disease (GBD) due to congenital anomaly for Europe by comparing infant mortality data collected by EUROCAT registries with the WHO Mortality Database, and by assessing the significance of stillbirths and terminations of pregnancy for fetal anomaly (TOPFA) in the interpretation of infant mortality statistics., Design, Setting and Outcome Measures: EUROCAT is a network of congenital anomaly registries collecting data on live births, fetal deaths from 20 weeks' gestation and TOPFA. Data from 29 registries in 19 countries were analysed for 2005-2009, and infant mortality (deaths of live births at age <1 year) compared with the WHO Mortality Database. Eight EUROCAT countries were excluded from further analysis on the basis that this comparison showed poor ascertainment of survival status., Results: According to WHO, 17%-42% of infant mortality was attributed to congenital anomaly. In 11 EUROCAT countries, average infant mortality with congenital anomaly was 1.1 per 1000 births, with higher rates where TOPFA is illegal (Malta 3.0, Ireland 2.1). The rate of stillbirths with congenital anomaly was 0.6 per 1000. The average TOPFA prevalence was 4.6 per 1000, nearly three times more prevalent than stillbirths and infant deaths combined. TOPFA also impacted on the prevalence of postneonatal survivors with non-lethal congenital anomaly., Conclusions: By excluding TOPFA and stillbirths from GBD years of life lost (YLL) estimates, GBD underestimates the burden of disease due to congenital anomaly, and thus declining YLL over time may obscure lack of progress in primary, secondary and tertiary prevention., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2018. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.)
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- 2018
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38. HUWE1 variants cause dominant X-linked intellectual disability: a clinical study of 21 patients.
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Moortgat S, Berland S, Aukrust I, Maystadt I, Baker L, Benoit V, Caro-Llopis A, Cooper NS, Debray FG, Faivre L, Gardeitchik T, Haukanes BI, Houge G, Kivuva E, Martinez F, Mehta SG, Nassogne MC, Powell-Hamilton N, Pfundt R, Rosello M, Prescott T, Vasudevan P, van Loon B, Verellen-Dumoulin C, Verloes A, Lippe CV, Wakeling E, Wilkie AOM, Wilson L, Yuen A, Study D, Low KJ, and Newbury-Ecob RA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Female, Genetic Diseases, X-Linked pathology, Humans, Intellectual Disability pathology, Male, Mutation, Missense, Syndrome, Genes, Dominant, Genetic Diseases, X-Linked genetics, Intellectual Disability genetics, Tumor Suppressor Proteins genetics, Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases genetics
- Abstract
Whole-gene duplications and missense variants in the HUWE1 gene (NM_031407.6) have been reported in association with intellectual disability (ID). Increased gene dosage has been observed in males with non-syndromic mild to moderate ID with speech delay. Missense variants reported previously appear to be associated with severe ID in males and mild or no ID in obligate carrier females. Here, we report the largest cohort of patients with HUWE1 variants, consisting of 14 females and 7 males, with 15 different missense variants and one splice site variant. Clinical assessment identified common clinical features consisting of moderate to profound ID, delayed or absent speech, short stature with small hands and feet and facial dysmorphism consisting of a broad nasal tip, deep set eyes, epicanthic folds, short palpebral fissures, and a short philtrum. We describe for the first time that females can be severely affected, despite preferential inactivation of the affected X chromosome. Three females with the c.329 G > A p.Arg110Gln variant, present with a phenotype of mild ID, specific facial features, scoliosis and craniosynostosis, as reported previously in a single patient. In these females, the X inactivation pattern appeared skewed in favour of the affected transcript. In summary, HUWE1 missense variants may cause syndromic ID in both males and females.
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- 2018
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39. Attentional impairments in Huntington's disease: A specific deficit for the executive conflict.
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Maurage P, Heeren A, Lahaye M, Jeanjean A, Guettat L, Verellen-Dumoulin C, Halkin S, Billieux J, and Constant E
- Subjects
- Aged, Attention, Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity etiology, Cues, Female, Humans, Huntington Disease complications, Male, Middle Aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Orientation, Reaction Time, Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity psychology, Conflict, Psychological, Executive Function, Huntington Disease psychology
- Abstract
Objective: Huntington's disease (HD) is characterized by motor and cognitive impairments including memory, executive, and attentional functions. However, because earlier studies relied on multidetermined attentional tasks, uncertainty still abounds regarding the differential deficit across attentional subcomponents. Likewise, the evolution of these deficits during the successive stages of HD remains unclear. The present study simultaneously explored 3 distinct networks of attention (alerting, orienting, executive conflict) in preclinical and clinical HD., Method: Thirty-eight HD patients (18 preclinical) and 38 matched healthy controls completed the attention network test, an integrated and theoretically grounded task assessing the integrity of 3 attentional networks., Results: Preclinical HD was not characterized by any attentional deficit compared to controls. Conversely, clinical HD was associated with a differential deficit across the 3 attentional networks under investigation, showing preserved performance for alerting and orienting networks but massive and specific impairment for the executive conflict network. This indexes an impaired use of executive control to resolve the conflict between task-relevant stimuli and interfering task-irrelevant ones., Conclusion: Clinical HD does not lead to a global attentional deficit but rather to a specific impairment for the executive control of attention. Moreover, the absence of attentional deficits in preclinical HD suggests that these deficits are absent at the initial stages of the disease. In view of their impact on everyday life, attentional deficits should be considered in clinical contexts. Therapeutic programs improving the executive control of attention by neuropsychology and neuromodulation should be promoted. (PsycINFO Database Record, ((c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved).)
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- 2017
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40. Use of hierarchical models to analyze European trends in congenital anomaly prevalence.
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Cavadino A, Prieto-Merino D, Addor MC, Arriola L, Bianchi F, Draper E, Garne E, Greenlees R, Haeusler M, Khoshnood B, Kurinczuk J, McDonnell B, Nelen V, O'Mahony M, Randrianaivo H, Rankin J, Rissmann A, Tucker D, Verellen-Dumoulin C, de Walle H, Wellesley D, and Morris JK
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- Europe epidemiology, Female, Humans, Male, Prevalence, Congenital Abnormalities epidemiology, Models, Biological, Registries
- Abstract
Background: Surveillance of congenital anomalies is important to identify potential teratogens. Despite known associations between different anomalies, current surveillance methods examine trends within each subgroup separately. We aimed to evaluate whether hierarchical statistical methods that combine information from several subgroups simultaneously would enhance current surveillance methods using data collected by EUROCAT, a European network of population-based congenital anomaly registries., Methods: Ten-year trends (2003 to 2012) in 18 EUROCAT registries over 11 countries were analyzed for the following groups of anomalies: neural tube defects, congenital heart defects, digestive system, and chromosomal anomalies. Hierarchical Poisson regression models that combined related subgroups together according to EUROCAT's hierarchy of subgroup coding were applied. Results from hierarchical models were compared with those from Poisson models that consider each congenital anomaly separately., Results: Hierarchical models gave similar results as those obtained when considering each anomaly subgroup in a separate analysis. Hierarchical models that included only around three subgroups showed poor convergence and were generally found to be over-parameterized. Larger sets of anomaly subgroups were found to be too heterogeneous to group together in this way., Conclusion: There were no substantial differences between independent analyses of each subgroup and hierarchical models when using the EUROCAT anomaly subgroups. Considering each anomaly separately, therefore, remains an appropriate method for the detection of potential changes in prevalence by surveillance systems. Hierarchical models do, however, remain an interesting alternative method of analysis when considering the risks of specific exposures in relation to the prevalence of congenital anomalies, which could be investigated in other studies. Birth Defects Research (Part A) 106:480-10, 2016. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc., (© 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
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- 2016
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41. Dissociating emotional and cognitive empathy in pre-clinical and clinical Huntington's disease.
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Maurage P, Lahaye M, Grynberg D, Jeanjean A, Guettat L, Verellen-Dumoulin C, Halkin S, Heeren A, Billieux J, and Constant E
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- Adult, Cognition Disorders complications, Female, Humans, Huntington Disease complications, Male, Middle Aged, Cognition physiology, Cognition Disorders psychology, Emotions physiology, Empathy physiology, Huntington Disease psychology
- Abstract
Huntington's disease (HD) is centrally characterized by motor, neurocognitive and psychiatric symptoms, but impaired emotional decoding abilities have also been reported. However, more complex affective abilities are still to be explored, and particularly empathy, which is essential for social relations and is impaired in various psychiatric conditions. This study evaluates empathic abilities and social skills in pre-clinical and clinical HD, and explores the distinction between two empathy sub-components (emotional-cognitive). Thirty-six HD patients (17 pre-clinical) and 36 matched controls filled in the Empathy Quotient Scale, while controlling for psychopathological comorbidities. At the clinical stage of HD, no global empathy impairment was observed but rather a specific deficit for the cognitive sub-component, while emotional empathy was preserved. A deficit was also observed for social skills. Pre-clinical HD was not associated with any empathy deficit. Emotional deficits in clinical HD are thus not limited to basic emotion decoding but extend towards complex interpersonal abilities. The dissociation between impaired cognitive and preserved emotional empathy in clinical HD reinforces the proposal that empathy subtypes are sustained by distinct processes. Finally, these results underline the extent of distinct affective and social impairments in HD and the need to grasp them in clinical contexts., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2016
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42. Long term trends in prevalence of neural tube defects in Europe: population based study.
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Khoshnood B, Loane M, de Walle H, Arriola L, Addor MC, Barisic I, Beres J, Bianchi F, Dias C, Draper E, Garne E, Gatt M, Haeusler M, Klungsoyr K, Latos-Bielenska A, Lynch C, McDonnell B, Nelen V, Neville AJ, O'Mahony MT, Queisser-Luft A, Rankin J, Rissmann A, Ritvanen A, Rounding C, Sipek A, Tucker D, Verellen-Dumoulin C, Wellesley D, and Dolk H
- Subjects
- Abortion, Eugenic statistics & numerical data, Europe epidemiology, Female, Fetal Death, Food Assistance, Humans, Live Birth epidemiology, Needs Assessment, Policy Making, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Outcome epidemiology, Prevalence, Vitamin B Complex therapeutic use, Dietary Supplements statistics & numerical data, Folic Acid therapeutic use, Neural Tube Defects epidemiology, Neural Tube Defects prevention & control, Pregnancy Complications epidemiology, Pregnancy Complications etiology, Pregnancy Complications prevention & control
- Abstract
Study Question: What are the long term trends in the total (live births, fetal deaths, and terminations of pregnancy for fetal anomaly) and live birth prevalence of neural tube defects (NTD) in Europe, where many countries have issued recommendations for folic acid supplementation but a policy for mandatory folic acid fortification of food does not exist?, Methods: This was a population based, observational study using data on 11,353 cases of NTD not associated with chromosomal anomalies, including 4162 cases of anencephaly and 5776 cases of spina bifida from 28 EUROCAT (European Surveillance of Congenital Anomalies) registries covering approximately 12.5 million births in 19 countries between 1991 and 2011. The main outcome measures were total and live birth prevalence of NTD, as well as anencephaly and spina bifida, with time trends analysed using random effects Poisson regression models to account for heterogeneities across registries and splines to model non-linear time trends., Summary Answer and Limitations: Overall, the pooled total prevalence of NTD during the study period was 9.1 per 10,000 births. Prevalence of NTD fluctuated slightly but without an obvious downward trend, with the final estimate of the pooled total prevalence of NTD in 2011 similar to that in 1991. Estimates from Poisson models that took registry heterogeneities into account showed an annual increase of 4% (prevalence ratio 1.04, 95% confidence interval 1.01 to 1.07) in 1995-99 and a decrease of 3% per year in 1999-2003 (0.97, 0.95 to 0.99), with stable rates thereafter. The trend patterns for anencephaly and spina bifida were similar, but neither anomaly decreased substantially over time. The live birth prevalence of NTD generally decreased, especially for anencephaly. Registration problems or other data artefacts cannot be excluded as a partial explanation of the observed trends (or lack thereof) in the prevalence of NTD., What This Study Adds: In the absence of mandatory fortification, the prevalence of NTD has not decreased in Europe despite longstanding recommendations aimed at promoting peri-conceptional folic acid supplementation and existence of voluntary folic acid fortification., Funding, Competing Interests, Data Sharing: The study was funded by the European Public Health Commission, EUROCAT Joint Action 2011-2013. HD and ML received support from the European Commission DG Sanco during the conduct of this study. No additional data available., (© Khoshnood et al 2015.)
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- 2015
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43. The Association of H1N1 Pandemic Influenza with Congenital Anomaly Prevalence in Europe: An Ecological Time Series Study.
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Luteijn JM, Addor MC, Arriola L, Bianchi F, Garne E, Khoshnood B, Nelen V, Neville A, Queisser-Luft A, Rankin J, Rounding C, Verellen-Dumoulin C, de Walle H, Wellesley D, Wreyford B, Yevtushok L, de Jong-van den Berg L, Morris J, and Dolk H
- Subjects
- Cystic Adenomatoid Malformation of Lung, Congenital epidemiology, Europe epidemiology, Female, Heart Septal Defects, Ventricular epidemiology, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Influenza A Virus, H1N1 Subtype, Influenza, Human virology, Neural Tube Defects epidemiology, Pregnancy, Prevalence, Tetralogy of Fallot epidemiology, Tricuspid Atresia epidemiology, Tricuspid Valve Stenosis epidemiology, Congenital Abnormalities epidemiology, Influenza, Human epidemiology, Pandemics, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious epidemiology, Registries
- Abstract
Background: In the context of the European Surveillance of Congenital Anomalies (EUROCAT) surveillance response to the 2009 influenza pandemic, we sought to establish whether there was a detectable increase of congenital anomaly prevalence among pregnancies exposed to influenza seasons in general, and whether any increase was greater during the 2009 pandemic than during other seasons., Methods: We performed an ecologic time series analysis based on 26,967 pregnancies with nonchromosomal congenital anomaly conceived from January 2007 to March 2011, reported by 15 EUROCAT registries. Analysis was performed for EUROCAT-defined anomaly subgroups, divided by whether there was a prior hypothesis of association with influenza. Influenza season exposure was based on World Health Organization data. Prevalence rate ratios were calculated comparing pregnancies exposed to influenza season during the congenital anomaly-specific critical period for embryo-fetal development to nonexposed pregnancies., Results: There was no evidence for an increased overall prevalence of congenital anomalies among pregnancies exposed to influenza season. We detected an increased prevalence of ventricular septal defect and tricuspid atresia and stenosis during pandemic influenza season 2009, but not during 2007-2011 influenza seasons. For congenital anomalies, where there was no prior hypothesis, the prevalence of tetralogy of Fallot was strongly reduced during influenza seasons., Conclusions: Our data do not suggest an overall association of pandemic or seasonal influenza with congenital anomaly prevalence. One interpretation is that apparent influenza effects found in previous individual-based studies were confounded by or interacting with other risk factors. The associations of heart anomalies with pandemic influenza could be strain specific.
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- 2015
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44. Meckel-Gruber Syndrome: a population-based study on prevalence, prenatal diagnosis, clinical features, and survival in Europe.
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Barisic I, Boban L, Loane M, Garne E, Wellesley D, Calzolari E, Dolk H, Addor MC, Bergman JE, Braz P, Draper ES, Haeusler M, Khoshnood B, Klungsoyr K, Pierini A, Queisser-Luft A, Rankin J, Rissmann A, and Verellen-Dumoulin C
- Subjects
- Ciliary Motility Disorders diagnosis, Ciliary Motility Disorders genetics, Ciliary Motility Disorders mortality, Encephalocele diagnosis, Encephalocele genetics, Encephalocele mortality, Europe, Female, Humans, Male, Polycystic Kidney Diseases diagnosis, Polycystic Kidney Diseases genetics, Polycystic Kidney Diseases mortality, Pregnancy, Prevalence, Retinitis Pigmentosa, Ciliary Motility Disorders epidemiology, Encephalocele epidemiology, Genetic Testing statistics & numerical data, Polycystic Kidney Diseases epidemiology, Prenatal Diagnosis statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Meckel-Gruber Syndrome is a rare autosomal recessive lethal ciliopathy characterized by the triad of cystic renal dysplasia, occipital encephalocele and postaxial polydactyly. We present the largest population-based epidemiological study to date using data provided by the European Surveillance of Congenital Anomalies (EUROCAT) network. The study population consisted of 191 cases of MKS identified between January 1990 and December 2011 in 34 European registries. The mean prevalence was 2.6 per 100,000 births in a subset of registries with good ascertainment. The prevalence was stable over time, but regional differences were observed. There were 145 (75.9%) terminations of pregnancy after prenatal diagnosis, 13 (6.8%) fetal deaths, 33 (17.3%) live births. In addition to cystic kidneys (97.7%), encephalocele (83.8%) and polydactyly (87.3%), frequent features include other central nervous system anomalies (51.4%), fibrotic/cystic changes of the liver (65.5% of cases with post mortem examination) and orofacial clefts (31.8%). Various other anomalies were present in 64 (37%) patients. As nowadays most patients are detected very early in pregnancy when liver or kidney changes may not yet be developed or may be difficult to assess, none of the anomalies should be considered obligatory for the diagnosis. Most cases (90.2%) are diagnosed prenatally at 14.3 ± 2.6 (range 11-36) gestational weeks and pregnancies are mainly terminated, reducing the number of LB to one-fifth of the total prevalence rate. Early diagnosis is important for timely counseling of affected couples regarding the option of pregnancy termination and prenatal genetic testing in future pregnancies.
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- 2015
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45. Holt Oram syndrome: a registry-based study in Europe.
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Barisic I, Boban L, Greenlees R, Garne E, Wellesley D, Calzolari E, Addor MC, Arriola L, Bergman JE, Braz P, Budd JL, Gatt M, Haeusler M, Khoshnood B, Klungsoyr K, McDonnell B, Nelen V, Pierini A, Queisser-Wahrendorf A, Rankin J, Rissmann A, Rounding C, Tucker D, Verellen-Dumoulin C, and Dolk H
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Europe epidemiology, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Male, Middle Aged, Pregnancy, Young Adult, Abnormalities, Multiple diagnosis, Abnormalities, Multiple epidemiology, Heart Defects, Congenital diagnosis, Heart Defects, Congenital epidemiology, Heart Septal Defects, Atrial diagnosis, Heart Septal Defects, Atrial epidemiology, Lower Extremity Deformities, Congenital diagnosis, Lower Extremity Deformities, Congenital epidemiology, Population Surveillance methods, Registries, Upper Extremity Deformities, Congenital diagnosis, Upper Extremity Deformities, Congenital epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Holt-Oram syndrome (HOS) is an autosomal dominant disorder characterised by upper limb anomalies and congenital heart defects. We present epidemiological and clinical aspects of HOS patients using data from EUROCAT (European Surveillance of Congenital Anomalies) registries., Methods: The study was based on data collected during 1990-2011 by 34 registries. The registries are population-based and use multiple sources of information to collect data on all types of birth using standardized definitions, methodology and coding. Diagnostic criteria for inclusion in the study were the presence of radial ray abnormalities and congenital heart disease (CHD), or the presence of either radial ray anomaly or CHD, with family history of HOS., Results: A total of 73 cases of HOS were identified, including 11 (15.1%) TOPFA and 62 (84.9%) LB. Out of 73 HOS cases, 30.8% (20/65) were suspected prenatally, 55.4% (36/65) at birth, 10.7% (7/65) in the first week of life, and 3.1% (2/65) in the first year of life. The prenatal detection rate was 39.2% (20/51), with no significant change over the study period. In 55% (11/20) of prenatally detected cases, parents decided to terminate pregnancy. Thumb anomalies were reported in all cases. Agenesis/hypoplasia of radius was present in 49.2% (30/61), ulnar aplasia/hypoplasia in 24.6% (15/61) and humerus hypoplasia/phocomelia in 42.6% (26/61) of patients. Congenital heart defects (CHD) were recorded in 78.7% (48/61) of patients. Isolated septal defects were present in 54.2 (26/48), while 25% (12/48) of patients had complex/severe CHD. The mean prevalence of HOS diagnosed prenatally or in the early years of life in European registries was 0.7 per 100,000 births or 1:135,615 births., Conclusions: HOS is a rare genetic condition showing regional variation in its prevalence. It is often missed prenatally, in spite of the existence of major structural anomalies. When discovered, parents in 45% (9/20) of cases opt for the continuation of pregnancy. Although a quarter of patients have severe CHD, the overall first week survival is very good, which is important information for counselling purposes.
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- 2014
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46. A three generation X-linked family with Kabuki syndrome phenotype and a frameshift mutation in KDM6A.
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Lederer D, Shears D, Benoit V, Verellen-Dumoulin C, and Maystadt I
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- Adult, Facies, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Male, Middle Aged, Pedigree, Pregnancy, Prenatal Diagnosis, Abnormalities, Multiple diagnosis, Abnormalities, Multiple genetics, Face abnormalities, Frameshift Mutation, Genes, X-Linked, Hematologic Diseases diagnosis, Hematologic Diseases genetics, Histone Demethylases genetics, Nuclear Proteins genetics, Phenotype, Vestibular Diseases diagnosis, Vestibular Diseases genetics
- Abstract
Kabuki syndrome is a rare malformation syndrome characterized by a typical facial appearance, skeletal anomalies, cardiac malformation, and mild to moderate intellectual disability. In 55-80% of patients with Kabuki syndrome, a mutation in MLL2 is identified. Recently, eight patients with Kabuki syndrome and a mutation in KDM6A were described. In this report, we describe two brothers with a mutation in KDM6A inherited from their mother and maternal grandmother. The two boys have Kabuki-like phenotypes whereas the mother and grandmother present with attenuated phenotypes. This family represents the first instance of hereditary X-linked Kabuki syndrome. We present a short literature review of the patients described with a mutation in KDM6A., (© 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
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- 2014
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47. Seasonality of congenital anomalies in Europe.
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Luteijn JM, Dolk H, Addor MC, Arriola L, Barisic I, Bianchi F, Calzolari E, Draper E, Garne E, Gatt M, Haeusler M, Khoshnood B, McDonnell B, Nelen V, O'Mahony M, Mullaney C, Queisser-Luft A, Rankin J, Tucker D, Verellen-Dumoulin C, de Walle H, and Yevtushok L
- Subjects
- Europe epidemiology, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Retrospective Studies, Congenital Abnormalities epidemiology, Registries, Seasons
- Abstract
Background: This study describes seasonality of congenital anomalies in Europe to provide a baseline against which to assess the impact of specific time varying exposures such as the H1N1 pandemic influenza, and to provide a comprehensive and recent picture of seasonality and its possible relation to etiologic factors., Methods: Data on births conceived in 2000 to 2008 were extracted from 20 European Surveillance for Congenital Anomalies population-based congenital anomaly registries in 14 European countries. We performed Poisson regression analysis encompassing sine and cosine terms to investigate seasonality of 65,764 nonchromosomal and 12,682 chromosomal congenital anomalies covering 3.3 million births. Analysis was performed by estimated month of conception. Analyses were performed for 86 congenital anomaly subgroups, including a combined subgroup of congenital anomalies previously associated with influenza., Results: We detected statistically significant seasonality in prevalence of anomalies previously associated with influenza, but the conception peak was in June (2.4% excess). We also detected seasonality in congenital cataract (April conceptions, 27%), hip dislocation and/or dysplasia (April, 12%), congenital hydronephrosis (July, 12%), urinary defects (July, 5%), and situs inversus (December, 36%), but not for nonchromosomal anomalies combined, chromosomal anomalies combined, or other anomalies analyzed., Conclusion: We have confirmed previously described seasonality for congenital cataract and hip dislocation and/or dysplasia, and found seasonality for congenital hydronephrosis and situs inversus which have not previously been studied. We did not find evidence of seasonality for several anomalies which had previously been found to be seasonal. Influenza does not appear to be an important factor in the seasonality of congenital anomalies., (Copyright © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
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- 2014
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48. Epidemiology of multiple congenital anomalies in Europe: a EUROCAT population-based registry study.
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Calzolari E, Barisic I, Loane M, Morris J, Wellesley D, Dolk H, Addor MC, Arriola L, Bianchi F, Neville AJ, Budd JL, Klungsoyr K, Khoshnood B, McDonnell B, Nelen V, Queisser-Luft A, Rankin J, Rissmann A, Rounding C, Tucker D, Verellen-Dumoulin C, de Walle H, and Garne E
- Subjects
- Europe epidemiology, Female, Humans, Male, Pregnancy, Prevalence, Registries, Retrospective Studies, Abnormalities, Multiple metabolism, Algorithms, Electronic Data Processing
- Abstract
Background: This study describes the prevalence, associated anomalies, and demographic characteristics of cases of multiple congenital anomalies (MCA) in 19 population-based European registries (EUROCAT) covering 959,446 births in 2004 and 2010., Methods: EUROCAT implemented a computer algorithm for classification of congenital anomaly cases followed by manual review of potential MCA cases by geneticists. MCA cases are defined as cases with two or more major anomalies of different organ systems, excluding sequences, chromosomal and monogenic syndromes., Results: The combination of an epidemiological and clinical approach for classification of cases has improved the quality and accuracy of the MCA data. Total prevalence of MCA cases was 15.8 per 10,000 births. Fetal deaths and termination of pregnancy were significantly more frequent in MCA cases compared with isolated cases (p < 0.001) and MCA cases were more frequently prenatally diagnosed (p < 0.001). Live born infants with MCA were more often born preterm (p < 0.01) and with birth weight < 2500 grams (p < 0.01). Respiratory and ear, face, and neck anomalies were the most likely to occur with other anomalies (34% and 32%) and congenital heart defects and limb anomalies were the least likely to occur with other anomalies (13%) (p < 0.01). However, due to their high prevalence, congenital heart defects were present in half of all MCA cases. Among males with MCA, the frequency of genital anomalies was significantly greater than the frequency of genital anomalies among females with MCA (p < 0.001)., Conclusion: Although rare, MCA cases are an important public health issue, because of their severity. The EUROCAT database of MCA cases will allow future investigation on the epidemiology of these conditions and related clinical and diagnostic problems., (Copyright © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
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- 2014
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49. Intron 22 homologous regions are implicated in exons 1-22 duplications of the F8 gene.
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Lannoy N, Grisart B, Eeckhoudt S, Verellen-Dumoulin C, Lambert C, Vikkula M, and Hermans C
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Preschool, Comparative Genomic Hybridization, DNA Mutational Analysis, Exons, Genetic Association Studies, Humans, Male, Segmental Duplications, Genomic, Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid, Factor VIII genetics, Hemophilia A genetics, Intellectual Disability genetics
- Abstract
The intron 22 inversion found in up to 50% of severe hemophilia A patients results from a recombination between three intron 22 homologous copies (int22h). This study evaluated the implication of these copies in the formation of extended duplications comprising exons 1-22 of the factor 8 (F8) gene and their association with hemophilia and mental retardation. Two hemophilic patients with moderate and severe phenotypes and a third nonhemophilic patient with developmental delay were studied. All exhibited a duplication of F8 gene exons 1-22 identified by multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification along with abnormal patterns on Southern blotting and unexpected long-range PCR amplification. Breakpoint analysis using array comparative genomic hybridization was performed to delimit the extent of these rearrangements. These duplications were bounded on one side by the F8 intragenic int22h-1 repeat and on the other side by extragenic int22h-2 or int22h-3 copies. However, the simultaneous identification of a second duplication containing F8 gene exons 2-14 for the moderate patient and the classical intron 22 inversion for the severe patient are considered in this study as the genetic causal defects of hemophilia. This study shows that the well-known int22h copies are involved in extended duplications comprising F8 gene exons 1-22. These specific duplications are probably not responsible for hemophilia and intellectual disability, but should be carefully considered in genetic counseling, while continuing to investigate the causal mutation of hemophilia.
- Published
- 2013
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50. Fraser syndrome: epidemiological study in a European population.
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Barisic I, Odak L, Loane M, Garne E, Wellesley D, Calzolari E, Dolk H, Addor MC, Arriola L, Bergman J, Bianca S, Boyd PA, Draper ES, Gatt M, Haeusler M, Khoshnood B, Latos-Bielenska A, McDonnell B, Pierini A, Rankin J, Rissmann A, Queisser-Luft A, Verellen-Dumoulin C, Stone D, and Tenconi R
- Subjects
- Epidemiologic Studies, Europe epidemiology, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Male, Pregnancy, Prevalence, Registries, Fraser Syndrome epidemiology
- Abstract
Fraser syndrome is a rare autosomal recessive disorder characterized by cryptophthalmos, cutaneous syndactyly, laryngeal, and urogenital malformations. We present a population-based epidemiological study using data provided by the European Surveillance of Congenital Anomalies (EUROCAT) network of birth defect registries. Between January 1990 and December 2008, we identified 26 cases of Fraser syndrome in the monitored population of 12,886,464 births (minimal estimated prevalence of 0.20 per 100,000 or 1:495,633 births). Most cases (18/26; 69%) were registered in the western part of Europe, where the mean prevalence is 1 in 230,695 births, compared to the prevalence 1 in 1,091,175 for the rest of Europe (P = 0.0003). Consanguinity was present in 7/26 (27%) families. Ten (38%) cases were liveborn, 14 (54%) pregnancies were terminated following prenatal detection of a serious anomaly, and 2 (8%) were stillborn. Eye anomalies were found in 20/24 (83%), syndactyly in 14/24 (58%), and laryngeal anomalies in 5/24 (21%) patients. Ambiguous genitalia were observed in 3/24 (13%) cases. Bilateral renal agenesis was present in 12/24 (50%) and unilateral in 4/24 (17%) cases. The frequency of anorectal anomalies was particularly high (42%). Most cases of Fraser syndrome (85%) are suspected prenatally, often due to the presence of the association of renal agenesis and cryptophthalmos. In the European population, a high proportion (82%) of pregnancies is terminated, thus reducing the live birth prevalence to a third of the total prevalence rate., (Copyright © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2013
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