34 results on '"Kurtz-Nelson, Evangeline C."'
Search Results
2. Characterizing Sensory Phenotypes of Subgroups with a Known Genetic Etiology Pertaining to Diagnoses of Autism Spectrum Disorder and Intellectual Disability
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Hudac, Caitlin M., Friedman, Nicole R., Ward, Victoria R., Estreicher, Rachel E., Dorsey, Grace C., Bernier, Raphael A., Kurtz-Nelson, Evangeline C., Earl, Rachel K., Eichler, Evan E., and Neuhaus, Emily
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- 2024
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3. Predicting Intervention Use in Youth with Rare Variants in Autism-Associated Genes
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Benavidez, Hannah R., Johansson, Margaret, Jones, Elizabeth, Rea, Hannah, Kurtz-Nelson, Evangeline C., Miles, Conor, Whiting, Alana, Eayrs, Curtis, Earl, Rachel, Bernier, Raphael A., Eichler, Evan E., and Neuhaus, Emily
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- 2024
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4. Family Empowerment: Predicting Service Utilization for Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
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Zemantic, Patricia K., Kurtz-Nelson, Evangeline C., Barton, Hannah, Safer-Lichtenstein, Jonathan, and McIntyre, Laura Lee
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Families of children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) often utilize a variety of services. Relatively few studies have examined the relationship between family empowerment and service utilization for this population. The present study investigated the relationship between family empowerment and service utilization in families of children with ASD from the Pacific Northwest. Family empowerment did not predict the use of behavioral services or established related services. However, higher family empowerment was reported for families who reported use of complementary and alternative medicine. Implications for future research and clinical practice are discussed.
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- 2022
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5. Genetic Ablation of GIGYF1, Associated With Autism, Causes Behavioral and Neurodevelopmental Defects in Zebrafish and Mice
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Ding, Zijiao, Huang, Guiyang, Wang, Tianyun, Duan, Weicheng, Li, Hua, Wang, Yirong, Jia, Huiting, Yang, Ziqian, Wang, Kang, Chu, Xufeng, Kurtz-Nelson, Evangeline C., Ahlers, Kaitlyn, Earl, Rachel K., Han, Yunyun, Feliciano, Pamela, Chung, Wendy K., Eichler, Evan E., Jiang, Man, and Xiong, Bo
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- 2023
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6. Examining the Role of Domain-General Skills in Mathematics Learning and Intervention Response in Kindergarten
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Shanley, Lina, Clarke, Ben, Smolkowski, Keith, Doabler, Christian T., Kurtz-Nelson, Evangeline C., and Fien, Hank
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Effective early mathematics instruction is critical to support long-term mathematics achievement. Given that student response to typical instruction varies, a range of mathematics interventions have been developed to support foundational mathematics development. However, not all students respond to these interventions. To better understand factors associated with intervention response, the current study explored how domain general cognitive skills were associated with intervention response for 621 kindergarten students with or at risk for mathematics difficulties. Results indicated that although domain general skills were associated with mathematics achievement, there was no evidence of differential response to intervention based on cognitive skills. When examining differences while holding initial mathematics skill constant, there was a non-significant, but potentially important pattern of students with higher domain general skills demonstrating greater mathematics gains as a result of intervention participation. Implications for mathematics intervention and curriculum development, including potentially impactful instructional approaches and cognitive scaffolds are discussed.
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- 2021
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7. Brief Report: Associations between Self-Injurious Behaviors and Abdominal Pain among Individuals with ASD-Associated Disruptive Mutations
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Kurtz-Nelson, Evangeline C., Tham, See Wan, Ahlers, Kaitlyn, Cho, Daniel, Wallace, Arianne S., Eichler, Evan E., Bernier, Raphael A., and Earl, Rachel K.
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Self-injurious behaviors (SIB) are elevated in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and related genetic disorders, but the genetic and biological mechanisms that contribute to SIB in ASD are poorly understood. This study examined rates and predictors of SIB in 112 individuals with disruptive mutations to ASD-risk genes. Current SIB were reported in 30% of participants and associated with poorer cognitive and adaptive skills. History of severe abdominal pain predicted higher rates of SIB and SIB severity after controlling for age and adaptive behavior; individuals with a history of severe abdominal pain were eight times more likely to exhibit SIB than those with no history. Future research is needed to examine associations between genetic risk, pain, and SIB in this population.
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- 2021
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8. Discovering a new part of the phenotypic spectrum of Coffin-Siris syndrome in a fetal cohort
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van der Sluijs, Pleuntje J., Joosten, Marieke, Alby, Caroline, Attié-Bitach, Tania, Gilmore, Kelly, Dubourg, Christele, Fradin, Mélanie, Wang, Tianyun, Kurtz-Nelson, Evangeline C., Ahlers, Kaitlyn P., Arts, Peer, Barnett, Christopher P., Ashfaq, Myla, Baban, Anwar, van den Born, Myrthe, Borrie, Sarah, Busa, Tiffany, Byrne, Alicia, Carriero, Miriam, Cesario, Claudia, Chong, Karen, Cueto-González, Anna Maria, Dempsey, Jennifer C., Diderich, Karin E.M., Doherty, Dan, Farholt, Stense, Gerkes, Erica H., Gorokhova, Svetlana, Govaerts, Lutgarde C.P., Gregersen, Pernille A., Hickey, Scott E., Lefebvre, Mathilde, Mari, Francesca, Martinovic, Jelena, Northrup, Hope, O’Leary, Melanie, Parbhoo, Kareesma, Patrier, Sophie, Popp, Bernt, Santos-Simarro, Fernando, Stoltenburg, Corinna, Thauvin-Robinet, Christel, Thompson, Elisabeth, Vulto-van Silfhout, Anneke T., Zahir, Farah R., Scott, Hamish S., Earl, Rachel K., Eichler, Evan E., Vora, Neeta L., Wilnai, Yael, Giordano, Jessica L., Wapner, Ronald J., Rosenfeld, Jill A., Haak, Monique C., and Santen, Gijs W.E.
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- 2022
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9. Characterizing executive functioning and associated behaviors in individuals with dual-specificity tyrosine phosphorylation-regulated kinase 1A (DYRK1A) syndrome.
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Rea, Hannah M., Webb, Sara Jane, Kurtz-Nelson, Evangeline C., Hudac, Caitlin M., Bernier, Raphael A., Miles, Conor, Earl, Rachel, Whiting, Alana, Eayrs, Curtis, Johansson, Margaret, Wang, Tianyun, Eichler, Evan E., and Neuhaus, Emily
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EXECUTIVE function ,HUMAN chromosomes ,ACTION theory (Psychology) ,PROTEIN kinases ,COGNITIVE ability - Abstract
Introduction: DYRK1A , a protein kinase located on human chromosome 21, plays a role in postembryonic neuronal development and degeneration. Alterations to DYRK1A have been consistently associated with cognitive functioning and neurodevelopmental disorders (e.g., autism, intellectual disability). However, the broader cognitive and behavioral phenotype of DYRK1A syndrome requires further characterization. Specifically, executive functioning, or cognitive processes that are necessary for goal-directed behavior, has not yet been characterized in this population. Methods: Individuals with DYRK1A variants (n = 29; ages 4 to 21 years) were assessed with a standardized protocol with multiple measures of executive functioning: Delis-Kaplan Executive Function Schedule, and chronologically age-appropriate caregiver-report forms of the Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function (BRIEF) and Achenbach System of Empirically Based Assessment (ASEBA). We first examined the feasibility and appropriateness of established executive functioning measures among participants with DYRK1A syndrome to inform selection of executive functioning tools in future research. We then characterized executive functioning among the group, including associations with other phenotypic features. Results: Neurocognitive assessments of executive functioning were deemed infeasible due to cognitive and verbal functioning. Caregiver-report revealed elevated executive functioning concerns related to self-monitoring, working memory, and planning/organization on the BRIEF, and attention and ADHD on the CBCL. Only two participants had existing ADHD diagnoses; however, 5 participants (out of 10 participants with data) exceeded the cutoff on the BRIEF, 13 individuals (out of 27 with data) exceeded the cutoff on the ASEBA ADHD subscale, and 18 exceeded the cutoff on the ASEBA attention subscale. There was concordance between ADHD diagnosis and the ASEBA, but not BRIEF. Executive functioning was correlated with nonverbal IQ and autism traits. Discussion: Objective measures of executive functioning are needed for individuals with intellectual disability who are nonverbal and/or have motor limitations. Diagnostic overshadowing, or the tendency to attribute all problems to intellectual disability and to leave other co-existing conditions, such as executive functioning challenges or ADHD, undiagnosed, is common. Phenotypic characterization of executive functioning is therefore important for our understanding of DYRK1A syndrome and for ensuring that caregivers' concerns are addressed, and individuals receive the clinical services that best meet their needs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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10. GIGYF1 disruption associates with autism and impaired IGF-1R signaling
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Chen, Guodong, Yu, Bin, Tan, Senwei, Tan, Jieqiong, Jia, Xiangbin, Zhang, Qiumeng, Zhang, Xiaolei, Jiang, Qian, Hua, Yue, Han, Yaoling, Luo, Shengjie, Hoekzema, Kendra, Bernier, Raphael A., Earl, Rachel K., Kurtz-Nelson, Evangeline C., Idleburg, Michaela J., Madan-Khetarpal, Suneeta, Clark, Rebecca, Sebastian, Jessica, Fernandez-Jaen, Alberto, Alvarez, Sara, King, Staci D., Ramos, Luiza L.P., Santos, Mara Lucia S.F., Martin, Donna M., Brooks, Dan, Symonds, Joseph D., Cutcutache, Ioana, Pan, Qian, Hu, Zhengmao, Yuan, Ling, Eichler, Evan E., Xia, Kun, and Guo, Hui
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Gene mutations -- Health aspects ,Pervasive developmental disorders -- Diagnosis -- Care and treatment -- Genetic aspects ,Insulin-like growth factor 1 -- Analysis ,Neurophysiology -- Methods ,Health care industry - Abstract
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) represents a group of neurodevelopmental phenotypes with a strong genetic component. An excess of likely gene-disruptive (LGD) mutations in GIGYF1 was implicated in ASD. Here, we report that GIGYF1 is the second-most mutated gene among known ASD high-confidence risk genes. We investigated the inheritance of 46 GIGYF1 LGD variants, including the highly recurrent mutation c.333del:p.L111Rfs*234. Inherited GIGYF1 heterozygous LGD variants were 1.8 times more common than de novo mutations. Among individuals with ASD, cognitive impairments were less likely in those with GIGYF1 LGD variants relative to those with other high-confidence gene mutations. Using a Gigyf1 conditional KO mouse model, we showed that haploinsufficiency in the developing brain led to social impairments without significant cognitive impairments. In contrast, homozygous mice showed more severe social disability as well as cognitive impairments. Gigyf1 deficiency in mice led to a reduction in the number of upper-layer cortical neurons, accompanied by a decrease in proliferation and increase in differentiation of neural progenitor cells. We showed that GIGYF1 regulated the recycling of IGF-1R to the cell surface. KO of GIGYF1 led to a decreased level of IGF-1R on the cell surface, disrupting the IGF-1R/ERK signaling pathway. In summary, our findings show that GIGYF1 is a regulator of IGF-1R recycling. Haploinsufficiency of GIGYF1 was associated with autistic behavior, likely through interference with IGF-1R/ERK signaling pathway., Introduction Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a highly heritable neurodevelopmental condition characterized by impaired social communication and repetitive behaviors (1). Previous studies have identified over 200 high-confidence ASD risk genes--most [...]
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- 2022
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11. Measuring Psychiatric Symptoms in Individuals With Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
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Ahlers, Kaitlyn P., primary, Kurtz-Nelson, Evangeline C., additional, Grebe, Stacey C., additional, Samaco, Rodney C., additional, and Storch, Eric A., additional
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- 2021
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12. Optimism, Parent Feelings, and Parenting Behavior over Time for Children with Developmental Delay
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Kurtz-Nelson, Evangeline C.
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Young children with intellectual and developmental disabilities are at increased risk of developing persistent mental health and behavior problems. While the link between parenting behavior and the development of problem behavior is well understood in this population, there is a need for examination of key parent factors that affect parenting behavior and child problem behavior over time in families of children with developmental delay (DD). Private events such as parents' feelings about their children and levels of dispositional optimism may impact parenting behavior through a variety of mechanisms, including experiential avoidance and relational schemas. As such, this study proposed to examine relations between parent feelings, optimism, parenting behavior, and child problem behavior for young children with developmental delay in a longitudinal context. Parents' positive and negative feelings about their young children with developmental delay, dispositional optimism, and child problem behavior were assessed at three timepoints in 132 parent-child dyads. In addition, measures of observed effective parenting behavior during parent-child play interactions were collected at each timepoint. Negative feelings about the child significantly predicted child problem behavior across timepoints, with higher negative feelings predicting higher problem behavior. Positive feelings and optimism did not significantly predict problem behavior in the model including negative feelings, suggesting that correlations between these constructs and reduced problem behavior are primarily explained by reduced negative feelings. Increased negative feelings also significantly predicted a lower rate of praise across timepoints, indicating that parents with high negative feelings about their child with DD engaged in fewer praise statements during parent-child play interactions. These findings suggest that a strong and stable relationship between negative feelings and child problem behavior is present at a very early age for young children with developmental delay and that negative feelings may impact parents' use of effective and positive parenting strategies. Future research should examine interventions designed to address both parent private events and child problem behavior as well as how these constructs develop both earlier and later in life. [The dissertation citations contained here are published with the permission of ProQuest LLC. Further reproduction is prohibited without permission. Copies of dissertations may be obtained by Telephone (800) 1-800-521-0600. Web page: http://www.proquest.com/en-US/products/dissertations/individuals.shtml.]
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- 2018
13. Rhythmic attentional sampling in autism.
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Fan, Xiaoxu, Kolodny, Tamar, Woodard, Kristin M., Tasevac, Aydin, Ganz, Wesley R., Rea, Hannah M., Kurtz‐Nelson, Evangeline C., Webb, Sara Jane, and Murray, Scott O.
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Individuals diagnosed with autism often display alterations in visual spatial attention toward visual stimuli, but the underlying cause of these differences remains unclear. Recent evidence has demonstrated that covert spatial attention, rather than remaining constant at a cued location, samples stimuli rhythmically at a frequency of 4–8 Hz (theta). Here we tested whether rhythmic sampling of attention is altered in autism. Participants were asked to monitor three locations to detect a brief target presented 300–1200 ms after a spatial cue. Visual attention was oriented to the cue and modified visual processing at the cued location, consistent with previous studies. We measured detection performance at different cue‐target intervals when the target occurred at the cued location. Significant oscillations in detection performance were identified using both a traditional time‐shuffled approach and a new autoregressive surrogate method developed by Brookshire in 2022. We found that attention enhances behavioral performance rhythmically at the same frequency in both autism and control group at the cued location. However, rhythmic temporal structure was not observed in a subgroup of autistic individuals with co‐occurring attention‐deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Our results imply that intrinsic brain rhythms which organize neural activity into alternating attentional states is functional in autistic individuals, but may be altered in autistic participants who have a concurrent ADHD diagnosis. Lay Summary: Many people with autism struggle with shifting their attention from one task or object to another, which can make it challenging for them to switch between different topics or activities. However, our study showed that attention switches between objects in the same way in adults with and without autism. These results imply that a fundamental temporal property of spatial attention is not changed in autistic adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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14. Characterizing Sensory Phenotypes of Subgroups with a Known Genetic Etiology Pertaining to Diagnoses of Autism Spectrum Disorder and Intellectual Disability
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Hudac, Caitlin M., primary, Friedman, Nicole R., additional, Ward, Victoria R., additional, Estreicher, Rachel E., additional, Dorsey, Grace C., additional, Bernier, Raphael A., additional, Kurtz-Nelson, Evangeline C., additional, Earl, Rachel K., additional, Eichler, Evan E., additional, and Neuhaus, Emily, additional
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- 2023
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15. Discovering a new part of the phenotypic spectrum of Coffin-Siris syndrome in a fetal cohort
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van der Sluijs, Pleuntje J., primary, Joosten, Marieke, additional, Alby, Caroline, additional, Attié-Bitach, Tania, additional, Gilmore, Kelly, additional, Dubourg, Christele, additional, Fradin, Mélanie, additional, Wang, Tianyun, additional, Kurtz-Nelson, Evangeline C., additional, Ahlers, Kaitlyn P., additional, Arts, Peer, additional, Barnett, Christopher P., additional, Ashfaq, Myla, additional, Baban, Anwar, additional, van den Born, Myrthe, additional, Borrie, Sarah, additional, Busa, Tiffany, additional, Byrne, Alicia, additional, Carriero, Miriam, additional, Cesario, Claudia, additional, Chong, Karen, additional, Cueto-González, Anna Maria, additional, Dempsey, Jennifer C., additional, Diderich, Karin E.M., additional, Doherty, Dan, additional, Farholt, Stense, additional, Gerkes, Erica H., additional, Gorokhova, Svetlana, additional, Govaerts, Lutgarde C.P., additional, Gregersen, Pernille A., additional, Hickey, Scott E., additional, Lefebvre, Mathilde, additional, Mari, Francesca, additional, Martinovic, Jelena, additional, Northrup, Hope, additional, O’Leary, Melanie, additional, Parbhoo, Kareesma, additional, Patrier, Sophie, additional, Popp, Bernt, additional, Santos-Simarro, Fernando, additional, Stoltenburg, Corinna, additional, Thauvin-Robinet, Christel, additional, Thompson, Elisabeth, additional, Vulto-van Silfhout, Anneke T., additional, Zahir, Farah R., additional, Scott, Hamish S., additional, Earl, Rachel K., additional, Eichler, Evan E., additional, Vora, Neeta L., additional, Wilnai, Yael, additional, Giordano, Jessica L., additional, Wapner, Ronald J., additional, Rosenfeld, Jill A., additional, Haak, Monique C., additional, and Santen, Gijs W.E., additional
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- 2023
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16. Characterizing the autism spectrum phenotype in DYRK1A‐related syndrome.
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Kurtz‐Nelson, Evangeline C., Rea, Hannah M., Petriceks, Aiva C., Hudac, Caitlin M., Wang, Tianyun, Earl, Rachel K., Bernier, Raphael A., Eichler, Evan E., and Neuhaus, Emily
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Likely gene‐disrupting (LGD) variants in DYRK1A are causative of DYRK1A syndrome and associated with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and intellectual disability (ID). While many individuals with DYRK1A syndrome are diagnosed with ASD, they may present with a unique profile of ASD traits. We present a comprehensive characterization of the ASD profile in children and young adults with LGDs in DYRK1A. Individuals with LGD variants in DYRK1A (n = 29) were compared to children who had ASD with no known genetic cause, either with low nonverbal IQ (n = 14) or average or above nonverbal IQ (n = 41). ASD was assessed using the ADOS‐2, ADI‐R, SRS‐2, SCQ, and RBS‐R. Quantitative score comparisons were conducted, as were qualitative analyses of clinicians' behavioral observations. Diagnosis of ASD was confirmed in 85% and ID was confirmed in 89% of participants with DYRK1A syndrome. Individuals with DYRK1A syndrome showed broadly similar social communication behaviors to children with idiopathic ASD and below‐average nonverbal IQ, with specific challenges noted in social reciprocity and nonverbal communication. Children with DYRK1A syndrome also showed high rates of sensory‐seeking behaviors. Phenotypic characterization of individuals with DYRK1A syndrome may provide additional information on mechanisms contributing to co‐occurring ASD and ID and contribute to the identification of genetic predictors of specific ASD traits. Lay Summary: DYRK1A syndrome has been identified as a genetic cause of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). We found that individuals with DYRK1A syndrome had high rates of ASD and intellectual disability (ID). Individuals with DYRK1A syndrome showed many similarities in ASD traits when compared to individuals with ASD and ID without a known genetic cause, but individuals with DYRK1A syndrome showed particular differences in social reciprocity, nonverbal communication, and sensory‐seeking behaviors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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17. De novo variants in genes regulating stress granule assembly associate with neurodevelopmental disorders
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Jia, Xiangbin, primary, Zhang, Shujie, additional, Tan, Senwei, additional, Du, Bing, additional, He, Mei, additional, Qin, Haisong, additional, Chen, Jia, additional, Duan, Xinyu, additional, Luo, Jingsi, additional, Chen, Fei, additional, Ouyang, Luping, additional, Wang, Jian, additional, Chen, Guodong, additional, Yu, Bin, additional, Zhang, Ge, additional, Zhang, Zimin, additional, Lyu, Yongqing, additional, Huang, Yi, additional, Jiao, Jian, additional, Chen, Jin Yun (Helen), additional, Swoboda, Kathryn J., additional, Agolini, Emanuele, additional, Novelli, Antonio, additional, Leoni, Chiara, additional, Zampino, Giuseppe, additional, Cappuccio, Gerarda, additional, Brunetti-Pierri, Nicola, additional, Gerard, Benedicte, additional, Ginglinger, Emmanuelle, additional, Richer, Julie, additional, McMillan, Hugh, additional, White-Brown, Alexandre, additional, Hoekzema, Kendra, additional, Bernier, Raphael A., additional, Kurtz-Nelson, Evangeline C., additional, Earl, Rachel K., additional, Meddens, Claartje, additional, Alders, Marielle, additional, Fuchs, Meredith, additional, Caumes, Roseline, additional, Brunelle, Perrine, additional, Smol, Thomas, additional, Kuehl, Ryan, additional, Day-Salvatore, Debra-Lynn, additional, Monaghan, Kristin G., additional, Morrow, Michelle M., additional, Eichler, Evan E., additional, Hu, Zhengmao, additional, Yuan, Ling, additional, Tan, Jieqiong, additional, Xia, Kun, additional, Shen, Yiping, additional, and Guo, Hui, additional
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- 2022
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18. Emotion Understanding (and Misunderstanding) in Clinically Referred Preschoolers: The Role of Child Language and Maternal Depressive Symptoms
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Martin, Sarah E., Williamson, Lauren R., Kurtz-Nelson, Evangeline C., and Boekamp, John R.
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- 2015
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19. Family Empowerment: Predicting Service Utilization for Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
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Zemantic, Patricia K., primary, Kurtz-Nelson, Evangeline C., additional, Barton, Hannah, additional, Safer-Lichtenstein, Jonathan, additional, and McIntyre, Laura Lee, additional
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- 2021
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20. SPEN haploinsufficiency causes a neurodevelopmental disorder overlapping proximal 1p36 deletion syndrome with an episignature of X chromosomes in females
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Radio, Francesca Clementina, Pang, Kaifang, Ciolfi, Andrea, Levy, Michael A., Hernández-García, Andrés, Pedace, Lucia, Pantaleoni, Francesca, Liu, Zhandong, de Boer, Elke, Jackson, Adam, Bruselles, Alessandro, McConkey, Haley, Stellacci, Emilia, Lo Cicero, Stefania, Motta, Marialetizia, Carrozzo, Rosalba, Dentici, Maria Lisa, McWalter, Kirsty, Desai, Megha, Monaghan, Kristin G., Telegrafi, Aida, Philippe, Christophe, Vitobello, Antonio, Au, Margaret, Grand, Katheryn, Sanchez-Lara, Pedro A., Baez, Joanne, Lindstrom, Kristin, Kulch, Peggy, Sebastian, Jessica, Madan-Khetarpal, Suneeta, Roadhouse, Chelsea, MacKenzie, Jennifer J., Monteleone, Berrin, Saunders, Carol J., Jean Cuevas, July K., Cross, Laura, Zhou, Dihong, Hartley, Taila, Sawyer, Sarah L., Monteiro, Fabíola Paoli, Secches, Tania Vertemati, Kok, Fernando, Schultz-Rogers, Laura E., Macke, Erica L., Morava, Eva, Klee, Eric W., Kemppainen, Jennifer, Iascone, Maria, Selicorni, Angelo, Tenconi, Romano, Amor, David J., Pais, Lynn, Gallacher, Lyndon, Turnpenny, Peter D., Stals, Karen, Ellard, Sian, Cabet, Sara, Lesca, Gaetan, Pascal, Joset, Steindl, Katharina, Ravid, Sarit, Weiss, Karin, Castle, Alison M.R., Carter, Melissa T., Kalsner, Louisa, de Vries, Bert B.A., van Bon, Bregje W., Wevers, Marijke R., Pfundt, Rolph, Stegmann, Alexander P.A., Kerr, Bronwyn, Kingston, Helen M., Chandler, Kate E., Sheehan, Willow, Elias, Abdallah F., Shinde, Deepali N., Towne, Meghan C., Robin, Nathaniel H., Goodloe, Dana, Vanderver, Adeline, Sherbini, Omar, Bluske, Krista, Hagelstrom, R. Tanner, Zanus, Caterina, Faletra, Flavio, Musante, Luciana, Kurtz-Nelson, Evangeline C., Earl, Rachel K., Anderlid, Britt-Marie, Morin, Gilles, van Slegtenhorst, Marjon, Diderich, Karin E.M., Brooks, Alice S., Gribnau, Joost, Boers, Ruben G., Finestra, Teresa Robert, Carter, Lauren B., Rauch, Anita, Gasparini, Paolo, Boycott, Kym M., Barakat, Tahsin Stefan, Graham, John M., Jr., Faivre, Laurence, Banka, Siddharth, Wang, Tianyun, Eichler, Evan E., Priolo, Manuela, Dallapiccola, Bruno, Vissers, Lisenka E.L.M., Sadikovic, Bekim, Scott, Daryl A., Holder, Jimmy Lloyd, Jr., and Tartaglia, Marco
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- 2021
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21. The CHD8/CHD7/Kismet family links blood-brain barrier glia and serotonin to ASD-associated sleep defects
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Coll-Tané, Mireia, primary, Gong, Naihua N., additional, Belfer, Samuel J., additional, van Renssen, Lara V., additional, Kurtz-Nelson, Evangeline C., additional, Szuperak, Milan, additional, Eidhof, Ilse, additional, van Reijmersdal, Boyd, additional, Terwindt, Isabel, additional, Durkin, Jaclyn, additional, Verheij, Michel M. M., additional, Kim, Chang N., additional, Hudac, Caitlin M., additional, Nowakowski, Tomasz J., additional, Bernier, Raphael A., additional, Pillen, Sigrid, additional, Earl, Rachel K., additional, Eichler, Evan E., additional, Kleefstra, Tjitske, additional, Kayser, Matthew S., additional, and Schenck, Annette, additional
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- 2021
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22. Brief Report: Associations Between Self-injurious Behaviors and Abdominal Pain Among Individuals with ASD-Associated Disruptive Mutations
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Kurtz-Nelson, Evangeline C., primary, Tham, See Wan, additional, Ahlers, Kaitlyn, additional, Cho, Daniel, additional, Wallace, Arianne S., additional, Eichler, Evan E., additional, Bernier, Raphael A., additional, and Earl, Rachel K., additional
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- 2020
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23. Developmental Predictors of Cognitive and Adaptive Outcomes in Genetic Subtypes of Autism Spectrum Disorder
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Arnett, Anne B., primary, Beighley, Jennifer S., additional, Kurtz‐Nelson, Evangeline C., additional, Hoekzema, Kendra, additional, Wang, Tianyun, additional, Bernier, Raphe A., additional, and Eichler, Evan E., additional
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- 2020
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24. Co-occurring medical conditions among individuals with ASD-associated disruptive mutations
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Kurtz-Nelson, Evangeline C., primary, Beighley, Jennifer S., additional, Hudac, Caitlin M., additional, Gerdts, Jennifer, additional, Wallace, Arianne S., additional, Hoekzema, Kendra, additional, Eichler, Evan E., additional, and Bernier, Raphael A., additional
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- 2020
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25. Measuring Psychiatric Symptoms in Individuals With Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
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Ahlers, Kaitlyn P., Kurtz-Nelson, Evangeline C., Grebe, Stacey C., Samaco, Rodney C., and Storch, Eric A.
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- 2017
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26. Emotion Understanding (and Misunderstanding) in Clinically Referred Preschoolers: The Role of Child Language and Maternal Depressive Symptoms
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Martin, Sarah E., primary, Williamson, Lauren R., additional, Kurtz-Nelson, Evangeline C., additional, and Boekamp, John R., additional
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- 2013
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27. Stress, Depression, and Parenting in Mothers of Preschoolers With Delays
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Kurtz-Nelson, Evangeline C., primary
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- 2013
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28. Discovering a new part of the phenotypic spectrum of Coffin-Siris syndrome in a fetal cohort
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Jantine van der Sluijs, Pleuntje, Joosten, Marieke, Alby, Caroline, Attié-Bitach, Tania, Gilmore, Kelly, Dubourg, Christele, Fradin, Mélanie, Wang, Tianyun, Kurtz-Nelson, Evangeline C., Ahlers, Kaitlyn P., Arts, Peer, Barnett, Christopher P., Ashfaq, Myla, Baban, Anwar, van den Born, Myrthe, Borrie, Sarah, Busa, Tiffany, Byrne, Alicia, Carriero, Miriam, Cesario, Claudia, Chong, Karen, Cueto-González, Anna Maria, Dempsey, Jennifer C., Diderich, Karin E.M., Doherty, Dan, Farholt, Stense, Gerkes, Erica H., Gorokhova, Svetlana, Govaerts, Lutgarde C.P., Gregersen, Pernille A., Hickey, Scott E., Lefebvre, Mathlide, Mari, Francesca, Martinovic, Jelena, Northrup, Hope, O’Leary, Melanie, Parbhoo, Kareesma, Patrier, Sophie, Popp, Bernt, Santos-Simarro, Fernando, Stoltenburg, Corinna, Thauvin, Christel, Thompson, Elisabeth, Silfhout, A.T. Vulto-van, Zahir, Farah R., Scott, Hamish, Earl, Rachel K., Eichler, Evan E., Vora, Neeta L., Wilnai, Yael, Giordano, Jessica L., Wapner, Ronald J., Rosenfeld, Jill, Haak, Monique C., and Santen, Gijs W.E.
- Abstract
Genome-wide sequencing is increasingly being performed during pregnancy to identify the genetic cause of congenital anomalies. The interpretation of prenatally identified variants can be challenging and is hampered by our often limited knowledge of prenatal phenotypes. To better delineate the prenatal phenotype of Coffin-Siris syndrome (CSS), we collected clinical data from patients with a prenatal phenotype and a pathogenic variant in one of the CSS-associated genes.
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- 2022
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29. SPEN haploinsufficiency causes a neurodevelopmental disorder overlapping proximal 1p36 deletion syndrome with an episignature of X chromosomes in females
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Radio, Francesca Clementina, Pang, Kaifang, Ciolfi, Andrea, Levy, Michael A., Pedace, Lucia, Boer, Elke, Jackson, Adam, Stellacci, Emilia, Lo Cicero, Stefania, Dentici, Maria Lisa, Mcwalter, Kirsty, Sanchez-Lara, Pedro A., Lindstrom, Kristin, Madan-Khetarpal, Suneeta, Mackenzie, Jennifer J., Monteleone, Berrin, Zhou, Dihong, Sawyer, Sarah L., Monteiro, Fabiola Paoli, Macke, Erica L., Maria Iascone, Selicorni, Angelo, Tenconi, Romano, Amor, David J., Stals, Karen, Cabet, Sara, Steindl, Katharina, Weiss, Karin, Castle, Alison M. R., Kalsner, Louisa, Chandler, Kate E., Sheehan, Willow, Shinde, Deepali N., Goodloe, Dana, Bluske, Krista, Faletra, Flavio, Kurtz-Nelson, Evangeline C., Anderlid, Britt-Marie, Barakat, Tahsin Stefan, Graham, John M., Faivre, Laurence, Banka, Siddharth, Wang, Tianyun, Priolo, Manuela, Dallapiccola, Bruno, Vissers, Lisenka E. L. M., Sadikovic, Bekim, Scott, Daryl A., Holder, Jimmy Lloyd, and Tartaglia, Marco
30. De novo variants in genes regulating stress granule assembly associate with neurodevelopmental disorders
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Xiangbin Jia, Shujie Zhang, Senwei Tan, Bing Du, Mei He, Haisong Qin, Jia Chen, Xinyu Duan, Jingsi Luo, Fei Chen, Luping Ouyang, Jian Wang, Guodong Chen, Bin Yu, Ge Zhang, Zimin Zhang, Yongqing Lyu, Yi Huang, Jian Jiao, Jin Yun (Helen) Chen, Kathryn J. Swoboda, Emanuele Agolini, Antonio Novelli, Chiara Leoni, Giuseppe Zampino, Gerarda Cappuccio, Nicola Brunetti-Pierri, Benedicte Gerard, Emmanuelle Ginglinger, Julie Richer, Hugh McMillan, Alexandre White-Brown, Kendra Hoekzema, Raphael A. Bernier, Evangeline C. Kurtz-Nelson, Rachel K. Earl, Claartje Meddens, Marielle Alders, Meredith Fuchs, Roseline Caumes, Perrine Brunelle, Thomas Smol, Ryan Kuehl, Debra-Lynn Day-Salvatore, Kristin G. Monaghan, Michelle M. Morrow, Evan E. Eichler, Zhengmao Hu, Ling Yuan, Jieqiong Tan, Kun Xia, Yiping Shen, Hui Guo, Human Genetics, ARD - Amsterdam Reproduction and Development, ACS - Pulmonary hypertension & thrombosis, Jia, Xiangbin, Zhang, Shujie, Tan, Senwei, Du, Bing, He, Mei, Qin, Haisong, Chen, Jia, Duan, Xinyu, Luo, Jingsi, Chen, Fei, Ouyang, Luping, Wang, Jian, Chen, Guodong, Yu, Bin, Zhang, Ge, Zhang, Zimin, Lyu, Yongqing, Huang, Yi, Jiao, Jian, Chen, Jin Yun Helen, Swoboda, Kathryn J, Agolini, Emanuele, Novelli, Antonio, Leoni, Chiara, Zampino, Giuseppe, Cappuccio, Gerarda, Brunetti-Pierri, Nicola, Gerard, Benedicte, Ginglinger, Emmanuelle, Richer, Julie, Mcmillan, Hugh, White-Brown, Alexandre, Hoekzema, Kendra, Bernier, Raphael A, Kurtz-Nelson, Evangeline C, Earl, Rachel K, Meddens, Claartje, Alders, Marielle, Fuchs, Meredith, Caumes, Roseline, Brunelle, Perrine, Smol, Thoma, Kuehl, Ryan, Day-Salvatore, Debra-Lynn, Monaghan, Kristin G, Morrow, Michelle M, Eichler, Evan E, Hu, Zhengmao, Yuan, Ling, Tan, Jieqiong, Xia, Kun, Shen, Yiping, and Guo, Hui
- Subjects
Multidisciplinary ,Animal ,DNA Helicases ,RNA Helicase ,DNA Helicase ,Stress Granule ,Stress Granules ,Mice ,RNA Recognition Motif Proteins ,Neurodevelopmental Disorders ,RNA Recognition Motif Protein ,Animals ,Poly-ADP-Ribose Binding Proteins ,RNA Helicases ,Poly-ADP-Ribose Binding Protein - Abstract
Stress granules (SGs) are cytoplasmic assemblies in response to a variety of stressors. We report a new neurodevelopmental disorder (NDD) with common features of language problems, intellectual disability, and behavioral issues caused by de novo likely gene-disruptive variants in UBAP2L , which encodes an essential regulator of SG assembly. Ubap2l haploinsufficiency in mouse led to social and cognitive impairments accompanied by disrupted neurogenesis and reduced SG formation during early brain development. On the basis of data from 40,853 individuals with NDDs, we report a nominally significant excess of de novo variants within 29 genes that are not implicated in NDDs, including 3 essential genes ( G3BP1 , G3BP2 , and UBAP2L ) in the core SG interaction network. We validated that NDD-related de novo variants in newly implicated and known NDD genes, such as CAPRIN1 , disrupt the interaction of the core SG network and interfere with SG formation. Together, our findings suggest the common SG pathology in NDDs.
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- 2022
31. Visual and auditory attention in individuals with DYRK1A and SCN2A disruptive variants.
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Hudac CM, Dommer K, Mahony M, DesChamps TD, Cairney B, Earl R, Kurtz-Nelson EC, Bradshaw J, Bernier RA, Eichler EE, Neuhaus E, Webb SJ, and Shic F
- Abstract
This preliminary study sought to assess biomarkers of attention using electroencephalography (EEG) and eye tracking in two ultra-rare monogenic populations associated with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Relative to idiopathic ASD (n = 12) and neurotypical comparison (n = 49) groups, divergent attention profiles were observed for the monogenic groups, such that individuals with DYRK1A (n = 9) exhibited diminished auditory attention condition differences during an oddball EEG paradigm whereas individuals with SCN2A (n = 5) exhibited diminished visual attention condition differences noted by eye gaze tracking when viewing social interactions. Findings provide initial support for alignment of auditory and visual attention markers in idiopathic ASD and neurotypical development but not monogenic groups. These results support ongoing efforts to develop translational ASD biomarkers within the attention domain., (© 2024 The Author(s). Autism Research published by International Society for Autism Research and Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2024
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32. Rhythmic attentional sampling in autism.
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Fan X, Kolodny T, Woodard KM, Tasevac A, Ganz WR, Rea HM, Kurtz-Nelson EC, Webb SJ, and Murray SO
- Subjects
- Humans, Brain, Visual Perception, Reaction Time, Cues, Autistic Disorder, Autism Spectrum Disorder complications
- Abstract
Individuals diagnosed with autism often display alterations in visual spatial attention toward visual stimuli, but the underlying cause of these differences remains unclear. Recent evidence has demonstrated that covert spatial attention, rather than remaining constant at a cued location, samples stimuli rhythmically at a frequency of 4-8 Hz (theta). Here we tested whether rhythmic sampling of attention is altered in autism. Participants were asked to monitor three locations to detect a brief target presented 300-1200 ms after a spatial cue. Visual attention was oriented to the cue and modified visual processing at the cued location, consistent with previous studies. We measured detection performance at different cue-target intervals when the target occurred at the cued location. Significant oscillations in detection performance were identified using both a traditional time-shuffled approach and a new autoregressive surrogate method developed by Brookshire in 2022. We found that attention enhances behavioral performance rhythmically at the same frequency in both autism and control group at the cued location. However, rhythmic temporal structure was not observed in a subgroup of autistic individuals with co-occurring attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Our results imply that intrinsic brain rhythms which organize neural activity into alternating attentional states is functional in autistic individuals, but may be altered in autistic participants who have a concurrent ADHD diagnosis., (© 2023 International Society for Autism Research and Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2023
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33. Characterizing the autism spectrum phenotype in DYRK1A-related syndrome.
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Kurtz-Nelson EC, Rea HM, Petriceks AC, Hudac CM, Wang T, Earl RK, Bernier RA, Eichler EE, and Neuhaus E
- Subjects
- Humans, Phenotype, Social Behavior, Dyrk Kinases, Autism Spectrum Disorder complications, Autistic Disorder genetics, Autistic Disorder complications, Intellectual Disability epidemiology, Intellectual Disability genetics, Intellectual Disability complications
- Abstract
Likely gene-disrupting (LGD) variants in DYRK1A are causative of DYRK1A syndrome and associated with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and intellectual disability (ID). While many individuals with DYRK1A syndrome are diagnosed with ASD, they may present with a unique profile of ASD traits. We present a comprehensive characterization of the ASD profile in children and young adults with LGDs in DYRK1A. Individuals with LGD variants in DYRK1A (n = 29) were compared to children who had ASD with no known genetic cause, either with low nonverbal IQ (n = 14) or average or above nonverbal IQ (n = 41). ASD was assessed using the ADOS-2, ADI-R, SRS-2, SCQ, and RBS-R. Quantitative score comparisons were conducted, as were qualitative analyses of clinicians' behavioral observations. Diagnosis of ASD was confirmed in 85% and ID was confirmed in 89% of participants with DYRK1A syndrome. Individuals with DYRK1A syndrome showed broadly similar social communication behaviors to children with idiopathic ASD and below-average nonverbal IQ, with specific challenges noted in social reciprocity and nonverbal communication. Children with DYRK1A syndrome also showed high rates of sensory-seeking behaviors. Phenotypic characterization of individuals with DYRK1A syndrome may provide additional information on mechanisms contributing to co-occurring ASD and ID and contribute to the identification of genetic predictors of specific ASD traits., (© 2023 International Society for Autism Research and Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2023
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34. CHD8 -Related Neurodevelopmental Disorder with Overgrowth
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Mitchel MW, Myers SM, Heidlebaugh AR, Taylor CM, Rea H, Neuhaus E, Kurtz-Nelson EC, Earl R, Bernier R, Ledbetter DH, Martin CL, Eichler EE, Adam MP, Everman DB, Mirzaa GM, Pagon RA, Wallace SE, Bean LJH, Gripp KW, and Amemiya A
- Abstract
Clinical Characteristics: CHD8 -related neurodevelopmental disorder with overgrowth ( CHD8 -NDD) is characterized by generalized overgrowth, developmental delay / intellectual disability (DD/ID), autism spectrum disorder (ASD), neuropsychiatric issues, neurologic problems, sleep disturbance, and gastrointestinal issues The most common findings are the development of macrocephaly (most often during infancy) and tall stature (most typically during puberty), which is often accompanied by ASD and/or DD/ID. Most, if not all, affected individuals have some degree of DD, most commonly speech and motor delays. When present, ID is most often in the mild-to-moderate range. Sleep disturbance is characterized by difficulty with both initiation (delayed sleep onset) and maintenance (frequent night awakenings) of sleep. The most common gastrointestinal issue is constipation with or without periods of diarrhea. Less common features are hypotonia (about 30% of affected individuals), seizures (10%-15%), dystonia (rare), and Chiari I malformation (rare)., Diagnosis/testing: The diagnosis of CHD8- NDD is established in a proband by identification of a heterozygous pathogenic (or likely pathogenic) variant in CHD8 by molecular genetic testing., Management: Treatment of manifestations : Sleep disturbance may be addressed through behavioral interventions and/or pharmacologic treatment; if Chiari I malformation is present, surgical treatment may be required; standard treatment for DD/ID, seizures, and bowel dysfunction. Surveillance : At each visit: measurement of growth parameters (including head circumference); assessment of developmental progress and educational needs; monitor for signs and symptoms of anxiety, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, and aggressive or self-injurious behavior; assess for new manifestations, such as seizures, changes in tone, and signs/symptoms of cerebrospinal fluid obstruction and/or spinal cord dysfunction; screen for signs/symptoms of sleep disturbance; monitor for constipation. Consider serial imaging for asymptomatic or minimally symptomatic Chiari I malformation as clinically indicated., Genetic Counseling: CHD8 -NDD is inherited in an autosomal dominant fashion. However, most probands reported to date whose parents have undergone molecular genetic testing have the disorder as the result of a de novo CHD8 pathogenic variant. Each child of an individual with CHD8- NDD has a 50% chance of inheriting the CHD8 pathogenic variant. Once the CHD8 pathogenic variant has been identified in an affected family member, prenatal and preimplantation genetic testing are possible., (Copyright © 1993-2022, University of Washington, Seattle. GeneReviews is a registered trademark of the University of Washington, Seattle. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 1993
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