119 results on '"Roos RAC"'
Search Results
2. K03 Course of irritability, depression, and apathy in Huntingtonʼs disease during a 2-year follow-up period
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van Duijn, E, Reedeker, N, Giltay, EJ, Roos, RAC, and van der Mast, RC
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- 2012
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3. G12 From premanifest to manifest Huntingtonʼs disease: a 2-year follow-up study with magnetic resonance spectroscopy at 7 Tesla
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van den Bogaard, SJA, Dumas, EM, Teeuwisse, W, Kan, HE, Webb, A, van Buchem, MA, Roos, RAC, and van der Grond, J
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- 2012
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4. G08 A multicentre approach for the detection of patterns of impairment in Huntingtonʼs disease by using diffusion tensor imaging
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Mueller, H-P, Sprengelmeyer, R, Süssmuth, SD, Groen, G, Hobbs, NZ, Roos, RAC, Dürr, A, Schoonderbeek, A, ʼt Hart, E, Valabrègue, R, Landwehrmeyer, G B, Kassubek, J, and Tabrizi, SJ
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- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. G01 Evaluation of multi-modal, multi-site imaging measures in Huntingtonʼs disease: baseline results from the PADDINGTON study
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Hobbs, NZ, Cole, J, Farmer, RE, Rees, EM, Scahill, RI, Crawford, HE, Roos, RAC, Sprengelmeyer, R, Durr, A, Landwehrmeyer, B, Tabrizi, SJ, and Frost, C
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- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. 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
- Subjects
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).
- Published
- 2019
7. MSH3 modifies somatic instability and disease severity in Huntington's and myotonic dystrophy type 1
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Flower, M, Lomeikaite, V, Ciosi, M, Cumming, S, Morales, F, Lo, K, Hensman Moss, D, Jones, L, Holmans, P, Monckton, DG, Tabrizi, SJ, Kraus, P, Hoffman, R, Tobin, A, Borowsky, B, Keenan, S, Whitlock, KB, Queller, S, Campbell, C, Wang, C, Langbehn, D, Axelson, E, Johnson, H, Acharya, T, Cash, DM, Frost, C, Jones, R, Jurgens, C, Hart, EPT, Van Der Grond, J, Witjes- Ane, MNN, Roos, RAC, Dumas, EM, Van Den Bogaard, SJA, Stopford, C, Craufurd, D, Callaghan, J, Arran, N, Rosas, DD, Lee, S, Monaco, W, O'Regan, A, Milchman, C, Frajman, E, Labuschagne, I, Stout, J, Campbell, M, Andrews, SC, Bechtel, N, Reilmann, R, Bohlen, S, Kennard, C, Berna, C, Hicks, S, Durr, A, Pourchot, C, Bardinet, E, Nigaud, K, Valabrègue, R, Lehericy, S, Marelli, C, Jauffret, C, Justo, D, Leavitt, B, Decolongon, J, Sturrock, A, Coleman, A, Dar Santos, R, Patel, A, Gibbard, C, Whitehead, D, Wild, E, Owen, G, Crawford, H, Malone, I, Lahiri, N, Fox, NC, Hobbs, NZ, Scahill, RI, Ordidge, R, Pepple, T, Read, J, Say, MJ, Landwehrmeyer, B, Daidj, F, Bassez, G, Lignier, B, Couppey, F, Delmas, S, Deux, JF, Hankiewicz, K, Dogan, C, Minier, L, Chevalier, P, Hamadouche, A, Catt, M, Van Hees, V, Catt, S, Schwalber, A, Dittrich, J, Flower, M, Lomeikaite, V, Ciosi, M, Cumming, S, Morales, F, Lo, K, Hensman Moss, D, Jones, L, Holmans, P, Monckton, DG, Tabrizi, SJ, Kraus, P, Hoffman, R, Tobin, A, Borowsky, B, Keenan, S, Whitlock, KB, Queller, S, Campbell, C, Wang, C, Langbehn, D, Axelson, E, Johnson, H, Acharya, T, Cash, DM, Frost, C, Jones, R, Jurgens, C, Hart, EPT, Van Der Grond, J, Witjes- Ane, MNN, Roos, RAC, Dumas, EM, Van Den Bogaard, SJA, Stopford, C, Craufurd, D, Callaghan, J, Arran, N, Rosas, DD, Lee, S, Monaco, W, O'Regan, A, Milchman, C, Frajman, E, Labuschagne, I, Stout, J, Campbell, M, Andrews, SC, Bechtel, N, Reilmann, R, Bohlen, S, Kennard, C, Berna, C, Hicks, S, Durr, A, Pourchot, C, Bardinet, E, Nigaud, K, Valabrègue, R, Lehericy, S, Marelli, C, Jauffret, C, Justo, D, Leavitt, B, Decolongon, J, Sturrock, A, Coleman, A, Dar Santos, R, Patel, A, Gibbard, C, Whitehead, D, Wild, E, Owen, G, Crawford, H, Malone, I, Lahiri, N, Fox, NC, Hobbs, NZ, Scahill, RI, Ordidge, R, Pepple, T, Read, J, Say, MJ, Landwehrmeyer, B, Daidj, F, Bassez, G, Lignier, B, Couppey, F, Delmas, S, Deux, JF, Hankiewicz, K, Dogan, C, Minier, L, Chevalier, P, Hamadouche, A, Catt, M, Van Hees, V, Catt, S, Schwalber, A, and Dittrich, J
- Abstract
The mismatch repair gene MSH3 has been implicated as a genetic modifier of the CAG·CTG repeat expansion disorders Huntington's disease and myotonic dystrophy type 1. A recent Huntington's disease genome-wide association study found rs557874766, an imputed single nucleotide polymorphism located within a polymorphic 9 bp tandem repeat in MSH3/DHFR, as the variant most significantly associated with progression in Huntington's disease. Using Illumina sequencing in Huntington's disease and myotonic dystrophy type 1 subjects, we show that rs557874766 is an alignment artefact, the minor allele for which corresponds to a three-repeat allele in MSH3 exon 1 that is associated with a reduced rate of somatic CAG·CTG expansion (P = 0.004) and delayed disease onset (P = 0.003) in both Huntington's disease and myotonic dystrophy type 1, and slower progression (P = 3.86 × 10-7) in Huntington's disease. RNA-Seq of whole blood in the Huntington's disease subjects found that repeat variants are associated with MSH3 and DHFR expression. A transcriptome-wide association study in the Huntington's disease cohort found increased MSH3 and DHFR expression are associated with disease progression. These results suggest that variation in the MSH3 exon 1 repeat region influences somatic expansion and disease phenotype in Huntington's disease and myotonic dystrophy type 1, and suggests a common DNA repair mechanism operates in both repeat expansion diseases.
- Published
- 2019
8. Bioenergetics in fibroblasts of patients with Huntington disease are associated with age at onset
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Gardiner, SL, Milanese, Chiara, Boogaard, MW, Buijsen, RAM, Hogenboom, M, Roos, RAC, Mastroberardino, Pier, van Roon-Mom, WMC, Aziz, NA, Gardiner, SL, Milanese, Chiara, Boogaard, MW, Buijsen, RAM, Hogenboom, M, Roos, RAC, Mastroberardino, Pier, van Roon-Mom, WMC, and Aziz, NA
- Published
- 2018
9. Cognitive decline in Huntington's disease expansion gene carriers
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Baake, V, Reijntjes, Rham, Dumas, Em, Thompson, Jc, Roos, Rac, Bentivoglio, Anna Rita, Biunno, I., Bronzova, J., Dunnett, S. B., Frich, J., Giuliano, J., Illarioshkin, S., Illmann, T., Klempír, J. j., Landwehrmeyer, G. B., Levey, J., Mclean, T., Nielsen, J. E., Päivärinta, M., Pålhagen, S., Ramos-Arroyo, M., Tabrizi, S. J., Vandenberghe, W., Uhrova, T., Bernard, T., Betz, S., Bentivoglio, AR (ORCID:0000-0002-9663-095X), Baake, V, Reijntjes, Rham, Dumas, Em, Thompson, Jc, Roos, Rac, Bentivoglio, Anna Rita, Biunno, I., Bronzova, J., Dunnett, S. B., Frich, J., Giuliano, J., Illarioshkin, S., Illmann, T., Klempír, J. j., Landwehrmeyer, G. B., Levey, J., Mclean, T., Nielsen, J. E., Päivärinta, M., Pålhagen, S., Ramos-Arroyo, M., Tabrizi, S. J., Vandenberghe, W., Uhrova, T., Bernard, T., Betz, S., and Bentivoglio, AR (ORCID:0000-0002-9663-095X)
- Abstract
Background: In Huntington's Disease (HD) cognitive decline can occur before unequivocal motor signs become apparent. As cognitive decline often starts early in the course of the disease and has a progressive nature over time, cognition can be regarded as a key target for symptomatic treatment. The specific progressive profile of cognitive decline over time is unknown.Objective: The aim of this study is to quantify the progression of cognitive decline across all HD stages, from pre-motormanifest to advanced HD, and to investigate if CAG length mediates cognitive decline.Methods: In the European REGISTRY study 2669 HD expansion gene carriers underwent annual cognitive assessment. General linear mixed models were used to model the cognitive decline for each cognitive task across all disease stages. Additionally, a model was developed to evaluate the cognitive decline based on CAG length and age rather than disease stage.Results: There was significant cognitive decline on all administered tasks throughout pre-motormanifest (close to estimated disease onset) participants and the subsequent motormanifest participants from stage 1 to stage 4. Performance on the Stroop Word and Stroop Color tests additionally declined significantly across the two pre-motormanifest groups: far and close to estimated disease onset.The evaluation of cognition performance in relation to CAG length and age revealed a more rapid cognitive decline in participants with longer CAG length than participants with shorter CAG length over time.Conclusion: Cognitive performance already shows decline in pre-motormanifest HD gene expansion carriers and gradually worsens to late stage HD. HD gene expansion carriers with certain CAG length have their own cognitive profile, i.e., longer CAG length is associated with more rapid decline. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2017
10. Quantitative motor phenotype assessment in pre-manifest and symptomatic Huntington's disease: tongue force analysis differentiates between disease stages and provides high phenotype correlation. Cross sectional results from the TRACK-HD Study
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Say, M, Bechtel, N, Sturrock, A, van den Bogaard, S, Jauffret, C, Bohlen, S, Langbehn, DR, Mills, JA, Archarya, TP, Johnson, H, Borowsky, B, Durr, A, Leavitt, BR, Roos, RAC, Tabrizi, SJ, Landwehrmeyer, B, and Reilmann, R
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. A Randomized, Double-blind, Placebo-Controlled Study of Latrepirdine in Patients With Mild to Moderate Huntington Disease
- Author
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Kieburtz, K, Landwehrmeyer, GB, Cudkowicz, M, Dorsey, ER, Feigin, A, Hunt, V, Kayson, E, McDermott, M, Noonberg, S, Seitz, W, Soliveri, P, Walker, F, Burgunder, J-M, Romero, I, Magara, A, Stebler, Y, Rickards, H, Wright, J, De Souza, J, Barker, RA, Mason, S, Di Pietro, A, Goodman, A, O'Keeffe, D, Langlois, M, Ferland, G, Verret, L, Chouinard, S, Paris, S, LePage, C, Nemeth, AH, Merritt, C, Cox, C, Astbury, T, Murphy, S, Ahmed, A, St Marie, P, Berila, RA, Kubu, C, Segro, V, Kumar, R, Erickson, D, Schneiders, J, Frucht, S, Wasserman, P, Moskowitz, C, Scott, B, Perry-Trice, P, Wyne, S, Parida, D, Redaelli, V, Soltan, W, Robowski, P, Nowak, M, Schinwelski, M, Dziadkiewicz, A, Andrews, T, Ruddy, D, Dougherty, A, Boelmans, K, Schmalfeld, J, Muenchau, A, Zittel, S, Mallonee, W, Suter, G, Tan, J, Seeberger, L, Harris, J, Champion, J, Wojcieszek, J, Belden, J, Price, K, Hughes-Gay, M, Sprehn, G, Squitieri, F, Martino, T, De Gregorio, F, De Nicola, A, Elifani, F, Rosenblatt, A, Yoritomo, N, Margolis, R, Nichols, P, Palhagen, SE, Hoglund, AV, Paucar, M, Reza-Soltani, TW, Beister, A, Raab, T, Kieni, J, Schrenk, C, Banaszkiewicz, K, Misztela, J, Wojcik, M, Szczygiel, E, Golosz, M, Rudzinska, M, Roos, RAC, van den Bogaard, SJA, Bos, R, Booij, SJ, Hyson, C, Megens, J, Makaji, E, Jenkins, M, Hersch, S, Maya, S, Dresser, C, Rosas, D, Blindauer, K, Schindler, C, Hung, S, McNees, AA, Tabrizi, S, Novak, M, Say, M, Patel, A, Panegyres, P, Lewis, N, Jukich, S, Faull, C, Hjermind, LE, Jakobsen, O, Vogel, A, Nielsen, TR, Nielsen, JE, Kostyk, S, Seward, A, Agrawal, P, Kraakevik, J, Hogarth, P, Wilson, A, Lear, J, Kraus, PH, Saft, C, Steiner, T, Hoffmann, R, Stamm, C, Schollhammer, J, Uhl, I, Kaminski, B, O'Donovan, K, Quarrell, O, Nevitt, L, Kipps, C, Hare, A, Gunner, K, Hayward, E, Nance, M, Hamerlinck, J, Wielinski, C, Yastrubetskaya, O, Chiu, E, Chua, P, Mannaa, B, de Tommaso, M, Serpino, C, Cormio, C, Sciruicchio, V, De Michele, G, Di Maio, L, Russo, CV, Sacca, F, Salvatore, E, Tucci, T, Wolz, M, Klingelhoefer, L, Wolz, A, Schmidt, S, Storch, A, Spruth, E, Thiel, S, Neumann, B, Gelderblom, H, Priller, J, Sass, C, Probst, D, Werner, C, Leavitt, BR, Coleman, A, Raymond, L, Wheelock, V, Tempkin, T, Baynes, K, Hermanowicz, N, Niswonger, S, Haske-Palomino, M, Bordelon, Y, Gratiano, A, Johnson, A, Corey-Bloom, J, Goldstein, J, Peavy, G, Geschwind, M, Gooblar, J, Barton, C, Fernandez, H, Rodriguez, R, Suelter, M, Daniels, M, Romrell, J, Swartz, C, Beglinger, L, Epping, E, Waterman, E, Smith, MM, Dubinsky, R, Dubinsky, H, Gray, C, Craufurd, D, Howard, E, Jones, M, Murphy, H, Anderson, K, Nickerson, C, De Santo, J, Rigaud, T, Zappala, N, Robottom, B, Singer, C, Quesada, M, Rodriguez-Spengler, K, Cardenache, RH, Reilmann, R, Bohlen, S, Hoelzner, E-M, Colcher, A, Maccarone, H, Altin, L, Siderowf, A, Greenamyre, TJ, Lucarelli, N, Ivanco, L, Marshall, F, Hickey, C, Deuel, L, Biglan, K, Sussmuth, SD, Orth, M, Trautmann, S, Eschenbach, C, Samii, A, Macaraeg, A, Zielonka, D, Ciesielska, A, Marcinkowski, JT, Sempolowicz, J, Karaskiewicz, H, O'Neill, C, Haq, I, Witkowski, G, Antczak, J, Rola, R, Richter, P, Rakowicz, M, Jachinska, K, Criswell, S, Deppen, P, Wharton, K, Mahant, N, McCusker, E, Griffith, J, Loy, C, Stewart, L, Fisher, D, Holt, D, Orme, C, Watts, A, Weber, J, White, K, Hauser, RA, Albin, R, Coffey, C, Fischer, W, Miyasaki, J, Investigators, HORIZON, HORIZON Investigators of the Huntington Disease Study, Group, European Huntington's Disease, Network, Salvatore, Elena, DE MICHELE, Giuseppe, and Sacca', Francesco
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Indoles ,Placebo-controlled study ,Comorbidity ,Placebo ,Severity of Illness Index ,law.invention ,Placebos ,Randomized controlled trial ,Double-Blind Method ,law ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Dementia ,Humans ,Donepezil ,Adverse effect ,Rivastigmine ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,business.industry ,Australia ,Latrepirdine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Huntington Disease ,Treatment Outcome ,North America ,Physical therapy ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
BACKGROUND Latrepirdine is an orally administered experimental small molecule that was initially developed as an antihistamine and subsequently was shown to stabilize mitochondrial membranes and function, which might be impaired in Huntington disease. OBJECTIVE To determine the effect of latrepirdine on cognition and global function in patients with mild to moderate Huntington disease. DESIGN Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study. SETTING Sixty-four research centers in Australia, Europe, and North America. PATIENTS Four hundred three patients with mild to moderate Huntington disease and baseline cognitive impairment (Mini-Mental State Examination score, 10-26). INTERVENTION Latrepirdine (20 mg) vs matching placebo administered orally 3 times daily for 26 weeks. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES The co-primary outcome measures were cognition as measured by the change in Mini-Mental State Examination score from baseline to week 26 and global function at week 26 as measured by the Clinician Interview-Based Impression of Change, plus carer interview, which ranges from 1 (marked improvement) to 7 (marked worsening). Secondary efficacy outcome measures included behavior, daily function, motor function, and safety. RESULTS The mean change in Mini-Mental State Examination score among participants randomized to latrepirdine (1.5-point improvement) did not differ significantly from that among participants randomized to placebo (1.3-point improvement) (P = .39). Similarly, the distribution of the Clinician Interview-Based Impression of Change, plus carer interview did not differ significantly among those randomized to latrepirdine compared with placebo (P = .84). No significant treatment effects were detected on the secondary efficacy outcome measures. The incidence of adverse events was similar between those randomized to latrepirdine (68.5%) and placebo (68.0%). CONCLUSION In patients with mild to moderate Huntington disease and cognitive impairment, treatment with latrepirdine for 6 months was safe and well tolerated but did not improve cognition or global function relative to placebo. TRIAL REGISTRATION clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00920946.
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- 2013
12. Behavioural problems in Huntington's disease using the problem behaviours assessment
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Kingma, EM, van Duijn, E, Timman, Reinier, van der Mast, RC, Roos, RAC, and Psychiatry
- Abstract
Objective: To investigate behavioural problems in Huntington's disease (HD). Method: In 152 HD mutation carriers and a control group of 56 noncarriers at initial 50% risk, the Dutch version of the Problem Behaviours Assessment (PBA) was administered. Mutation carriers were divided into three groups according to the motor section of the Unified Huntington's Disease Rating Scale (UHDRS): pre-(motor) symptomatic, early and advanced symptomatic subjects. The factor structure and interrater reliability of the PBA were investigated. Results: The clinically relevant interrater reliability of the PBA was 0.82 for severity scores and 0.73 for frequency scores. The PBA showed a three-factor solution: apathy, depression and irritability. Mutation carriers, including presymptomatic subjects, portrayed more apathy, depression and irritability than noncarriers. Early symptomatic subjects had more apathy, but not more depression or irritability, compared to presymptomatic subjects. Advanced symptomatic subjects had more apathy than early symptomatic subjects. Conclusions: The PBA is a reliable and sensitive instrument. Behavioural problems occur in all stages of HD and arise before the onset of motor symptoms. Apathy is related to disease severity, whereas depression and irritability are not. The broad clinical phenotype of HD therefore requires adequate service delivery with integrated and multidisciplinary patient care. (C) 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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- 2008
13. Striatal dopamine D2 receptors, metabolism, and volume in preclinical Huntington disease
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van Oostrom, JCH, Maguire, RP, Verschuuren-Bemelmans, CC, van der Duin, LV, Pruim, J, Roos, RAC, Leenders, KL, and Guided Treatment in Optimal Selected Cancer Patients (GUTS)
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ONSET ,DYSFUNCTION - Abstract
Among 27 preclinical carriers of the Huntington disease mutation (PMC), the authors found normal striatal values for MRI volumetry in 88% and for fluorodesoxyglucose PET metabolic index in 67%. Raclopride PET binding potential (RAC-BP) was decreased in 50% and correlated with increases in the product of age and CAG repeat length (p
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- 2005
14. Autosomal dominant adult neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis: a novel form of NCL with granular osmiophilic deposits without palmitoylprotein thioesterase 1 deficiency
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Nijssen, PC, Ceuterick, C, Diggelen, Otto, Elleder, M, Martin, JJ, Teepen, JLJM, Tyynela, J, Roos, RAC, and Clinical Genetics
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- 2003
15. Antipsychotic-induced extrapyramidal syndromes - Risperidone compared with low- and high-potency conventional antipsychotic drugs
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Schillevoort, [No Value], de Boer, A, Herings, RMC, Roos, RAC, Jansen, PAF, and Leufkens, HGM
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extrapyramidal syndromes ,RISK ,risperidone ,SCHIZOPHRENIA ,antipsychotic agents ,EXPOSURE ,parkinsonism - Abstract
Aim: To compare the risk of extrapyramidal syndromes (EPS) between patients using risperidone and those using low-potency conventional antipsychotic drugs (APDs) in outpatient clinical practice, as measured by the use of anticholinergic medication. We tried to replicate results from previous clinical trials that compared risperidone with high-potency APDs. Method: Data was obtained from the PHARMO database containing filled prescriptions of 450,000 community-dwelling people in The Netherlands from 1986 to 1998. From the patients aged 15-54 years who had been newly treated with APDs, we defined mutually exclusive cohorts according to the APD first prescribed to a patient. APD exposure was followed until the first prescription of anticholinergic medication and was censored when APD prescribing was interrupted or switched. We estimated relative risks between risperidone and commonly used low-potency and high-potency APDs using Cox proportional hazards models, adjusting for age, gender, dose and other potential confounders. Results: In 4094 patients who had been newly prescribed antipsychotic drugs, the overall incidence rate of anticholinergic drug therapy was 556 per 1000 person-years, which was dose dependent. Prescribed doses of all antipsychotics were low. While, in accordance with previous trials, risperidone showed a lower risk of EPS than the high potency APDs such as haloperidol (RR 0.26; 95% CI 0.10-0.64), we did not observe a lower EPS rate than low-potency APDs (risperidone vs thioridazine RR 1.73, 95% CI 0.49-6.13; risperidone vs pipamperone RR 2.50, 95% CI 0.78-8.04). Conclusion: The reduced EPS rates observed when comparing risperidone with high-potency antipsychotics such as haloperidol may not apply to comparisons with low-potency drugs.
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- 2001
16. Het HD gen en de ziekten van Huntington
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Maat-Kievit, JA, Losekoot, M, Roos, RAC, and Clinical Genetics
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- 2001
17. Evaluation of antiparkinsonian drugs in pharmacy records as a marker for Parkinson's disease
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van de Vijver, David, Stricker, Bruno, Breteler, Monique, Roos, RAC, Porsius, AJ, Boer, A, and Epidemiology
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- 2001
18. The relationship between types and severity of repetitive behaviors in Gilles de la Tourette's disorder and obsessive-compulsive disorder
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Cath, DC, Spinhoven, Ph, Wetering, BJM, Hoogduin, CAH, Landman, AD, van Woerkom, TCAM, Roos, RAC, Rooijmans, HGM, and Psychiatry
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- 2000
19. Antiparkinsonian drugs causing inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion
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van Laar, T, Lammers, GJ, Roos, RAC, Gerritsen, JJ, and Meinders, AE
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HYPONATREMIA - Published
- 1998
20. Prenatal testing for Huntington's disease in the Netherlands from 1998 to 2008
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van Rij, MC, primary, de Koning Gans, PAM, additional, Aalfs, CM, additional, Elting, M, additional, Ippel, PF, additional, Maat-Kievit, JA, additional, Vermeer, S, additional, Verschuuren-Bemelmans, CC, additional, van Belzen, MJ, additional, Belfroid, RDM, additional, Losekoot, M, additional, Geraedts, JPM, additional, Roos, RAC, additional, Tibben, A, additional, de Die-Smulders, CEM, additional, and Bijlsma, EK, additional
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- 2013
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21. The uptake and outcome of prenatal and pre-implantation genetic diagnosis for Huntington's disease in the Netherlands (1998-2008)
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van Rij, MC, primary, de Koning Gans, PAM, additional, van Belzen, MJ, additional, Roos, RAC, additional, Geraedts, JPM, additional, De Rademaeker, M, additional, Bijlsma, EK, additional, and de Die-Smulders, CEM, additional
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- 2013
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22. Early Cognitive and Motor Symptoms in Identified Carriers of the Gene for Huntington Disease
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de Boo, GM (Gerly), Tibben, Aad, Lanser, JBK, Jennekens - Schinkel, A, Hermans, J, Maat, A.P.W.M., Roos, RAC, Psychiatry, and Cardiothoracic Surgery
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- 1997
23. Evaluation of exclusion prenatal and exclusion preimplantation genetic diagnosis for Huntington's disease in the Netherlands
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van Rij, MC, primary, de Die‐Smulders, CEM, additional, Bijlsma, EK, additional, de Wert, GMWR, additional, Geraedts, JP, additional, Roos, RAC, additional, and Tibben, A, additional
- Published
- 2012
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24. OCULOMOTOR DEFICITS IN PREMANIFEST AND EARLY HUNTINGTON'S DISEASE AND THEIR STRUCTURAL BRAIN CORRELATES: THE LONGITUDINAL TRACK-HD STUDY
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Hicks, S, primary, Scahill, RI, additional, Dumas, E, additional, Durr, A, additional, Blair, R, additional, Levitt, BR, additional, Roos, RAC, additional, Tabrizi, SJ, additional, and Kennard, C, additional
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- 2012
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25. IDIOPATHIC SPASMODIC TORTICOLLIS - A SURVEY OF THE CLINICAL SYNDROMES AND PATIENTS EXPERIENCES
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VANHERWAARDEN, GMFM, ANTEN, HWM, HOOGDUIN, CAL, NIEWOLD, JUR, ROOS, RAC, SPEELMAN, JD, VANWEERDEN, TW, HORSTINK, MWIM, and Faculteit Medische Wetenschappen/UMCG
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CERVICAL DYSTONIA ,HISTORY ,SPASMODIC TORTICOLLIS ,PATIENT EXPERIENCE ,DIAGNOSIS ,PATHO-PHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
We evaluated the medical and psychosocial experiences of 59 patients with idiopathic spasmodic torticollis (ST) by means of a structured questionnaire. The results generally corresponded with those of other studies in the literature. Diagnosis is delayed in many patients, and ST negatively influences the patients' social lives, Because drug treatment and physiotherapy are only of sufficient value in a minority, most patients seek benefit from numerous other therapies, none of which has been shown to improve ST.
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- 1994
26. THE INFLUENCE OF A STANDARD MEAL ON SINEMET CR ABSORPTION IN PATIENTS WITH PARKINSONS-DISEASE
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ROOS, RAC, de Koning-Tijssen, Marina, VANDERVELDE, EA, and BREIMER, DD
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SLOW RELEASE LEVODOPA ,PHARMACOKINETICS ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,CLINICAL EFFICACY ,ON-OFF FLUCTUATIONS ,MOTOR FLUCTUATIONS ,PARKINSONS DISEASE ,PROTEIN INTAKE ,CENTRAL PATHOPHYSIOLOGICAL MECHANISMS ,nervous system diseases ,CARBIDOPA LEVODOPA - Abstract
We studied the influence of dietary protein intake on the plasma level profile of levodopa, carbidopa, and 3-O-methyldopa and clinical efficacy in 12 patients with idiopathic Parkinson's disease after intake of one levodopacarbidopa 200/50 controlled release tablet (Sinemet CR; LC-CR). The tablet was given 1 h before the protein rich meal on one day (fasted) and together with the meal on an other day (non-fasted). Higher levodopa and carbidopa concentrations were reached when the LC-CR was taken 1 h before the meal, but the plasma level profile for levodopa was flatter in the non-fasted state. The area under the curve for levodopa was slightly higher in the fasted condition. For the clinical variables walking and tapping slightly better clinical results (P = 0.08) were found in the fasted condition with the higher levodopa levels. If the patient on levodopa is in a clinically satisfactory condition, then non-fasted condition could be preferred because of the smooth plasma level profile demonstrated. However, if the initial levodopa concentrations are not in the critical range to be effective for the patient, the advice should be to take the drug in a fasted condition.
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- 1993
27. Quantitative motor phenotype assessment in pre-manifest and symptomatic Huntington's disease: tongue force analysis differentiates between disease stages and provides high phenotype correlation. Cross sectional results from the TRACK-HD Study
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Say, M, primary, Bechtel, N, additional, Sturrock, A, additional, van den Bogaard, S, additional, Jauffret, C, additional, Bohlen, S, additional, Langbehn, DR, additional, Mills, JA, additional, Archarya, TP, additional, Johnson, H, additional, Borowsky, B, additional, Durr, A, additional, Leavitt, BR, additional, Roos, RAC, additional, Tabrizi, SJ, additional, Landwehrmeyer, B, additional, and Reilmann, R, additional
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- 2009
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28. H01 Significant biological and clinical change detected over 1 year in premanifest and early stage Huntington's disease in the TRACK-HD study
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D Craufurd, H. D. Rosas, Julie C. Stout, D.R. Langbehn, Hans J. Johnson, Investigators Track-Hd., Blair R. Leavitt, Chris Frost, Sarah J. Tabrizi, Stephen Hicks, Georg Bernhard Landwehrmeyer, RI Scahill, Roos Rac., Randi Jones, R Reilmann, Christopher Kennard, and A Duerr
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Pediatrics ,Neurology ,Cognition ,Disease ,medicine.disease ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Atrophy ,Huntington's disease ,medicine ,Surgery ,Observational study ,Neurology (clinical) ,Stage (cooking) ,Psychology ,Disease burden - Abstract
Background/aims TRACK-HD is a multinational prospective, observational study of Huntington9s disease (HD) that aims to examine longitudinal change in premanifest carriers of the mutant HTT gene and subjects with early stage disease (Tabrizi et al. Lancet Neurology 2009). New data from the first follow-up assessment are reported here, and build on previous findings from baseline 3T MRI and novel clinical, cognitive, quantitative motor, oculomotor and neuropsychiatric assessments. Of 366 subjects enrolled at baseline, 345 (115 controls, 116 premanifest (preHD) and 114 early HD) completed 12 months of follow-up. Statistical analysis was performed to assess annualised change in all modalities. Methods/techniques Annualised rates of global and regional atrophy were higher in both the pre- and early HD groups than in controls (p≤0.007). Whole brain atrophy rates were 0.3%, 0.5% and 0.9%, and caudate atrophy rates 0.6%, 2.0% and 3.5%, in controls, pre and early HD, respectively, over 1 year. Whole brain image analysis techniques also revealed striking cortical and subcortical grey and white matter atrophy over just 1 year even in subjects furthest from predicted disease onset. Quantitative imaging showed significant associations with disease burden and total functional capacity, a widely used clinical measure of disease severity. Cognitive deterioration was detectable in both HD groups. However, rates of decline in cognitive, quantitative motor and oculomotor tasks were greater after onset of motor signs. Results/outcome HD is characterised by a long premanifest state, slow progression and a disease course of around 20 years. After 1 year, we have identified robust change in a range of measures across modalities in both premanifest and early stage HD. Quantitative imaging showed the greatest differentiation across the spectrum of the disease and a number of functional measures of decline were sensitive in early HD with cognitive impairment also detectable in the pre-HD group. Conclusions TRACK-HD is the first multi-site study to report whole brain, regional and subcortical atrophy in premanifest subjects many years from predicted disease onset using 3T MR imaging; and demonstrates the feasibility of obtaining quantifiable endpoints which show robust change over just 1 year thus showing potential as endpoints for future therapeutic trials.
- Published
- 2010
29. The uptake and outcome of prenatal and pre-implantation genetic diagnosis for Huntington's disease in the Netherlands (1998-2008).
- Author
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van Rij, MC, de Koning Gans, PAM, van Belzen, MJ, Roos, RAC, Geraedts, JPM, De Rademaeker, M, Bijlsma, EK, and de Die‐Smulders, CEM
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PREIMPLANTATION genetic diagnosis ,HUNTINGTON disease ,PRENATAL diagnosis ,SUBSEQUENT pregnancy - Abstract
We aimed to study reproductive behaviour of couples opting for prenatal diagnosis ( PND) and pre-implantation genetic diagnosis ( PGD) for Huntington's disease ( HD). In the Netherlands, exclusion PND is available for persons at 50% risk, whereas exclusion PGD is not allowed. All 162 couples who underwent PND or PGD for HD between 1998 and 2008 and referrals for exclusion PGD to Belgium were included. Couples' reproductive information was collected until December 2010; 132 couples (81.5%) underwent PND in 262 pregnancies, 54 (33.3%) started PGD, and 25 used both. Sixteen percent of PND couples used exclusion PND and 6% used exclusion PGD. The outcomes were 76.5% of PND couples delivered ≥1 unaffected child(ren) after PND, and 44.4% of PGD couples delivered ≥1 PGD child(ren) (mean 2.5 cycles/couple). Couples opting for PGD secondarily (after a previous pregnancy) had more frequently terminated a pregnancy for HD (87.0%) compared with couples secondarily opting for PND (55.2%; p = 0.015). At-risk or HD expansion carrier males were underrepresented in the group of couples primarily opting for PGD (25%) and overrepresented in the secondary PGD group (64%). We conclude that couples reconsider their choices in every subsequent pregnancy based on their previous experience, personal beliefs and the gender of the at-risk partner. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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30. Prenatal testing for Huntington's disease in the Netherlands from 1998 to 2008.
- Author
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van Rij, MC, de Koning Gans, PAM, Aalfs, CM, Elting, M, Ippel, PF, Maat‐Kievit, JA, Vermeer, S, Verschuuren‐Bemelmans, CC, van Belzen, MJ, Belfroid, RDM, Losekoot, M, Geraedts, JPM, Roos, RAC, Tibben, A, de Die‐Smulders, CEM, and Bijlsma, EK
- Subjects
PRENATAL diagnosis ,HUNTINGTON disease ,FETAL development ,ALLELES ,HIGH-risk pregnancy ,MISCARRIAGE - Abstract
This study aims to give an overview of the number of prenatal tests for Huntington's disease ( HD), test results, and pregnancy outcomes in the Netherlands between 1998 and 2008 and to compare them with available data from the period 1987 to 1997. A total of 126 couples underwent prenatal diagnosis ( PND) on 216 foetuses: 185 (86%) direct tests and 31 (14%) exclusion tests. In 9% of direct tests the risk for the foetus was 25%. Four at-risk parents (4%) carried intermediate alleles. Ninety-one foetuses had CAG expansions ≥36% or 50% risk haplotypes: 75 (82%) were terminated for HD, 12 (13%) were carried to term; four pregnancies were miscarried, terminated for other reasons or lost to follow-up. Unaffected pregnancies (122 foetuses) resulted in the birth of 112 children. The estimated uptake of PND was 22% of CAG expansion carriers (≥36 repeats) at reproductive age. PND was used by two new subgroups: carriers of intermediate alleles and 50% at-risk persons opting for a direct prenatal test of the foetus. A significant number of HD expansion or 50% risk pregnancies were continued. Speculations were made on causative factors contributing to these continuations. Further research on these couples' motives is needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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31. Psychological consequences of presymptomatic testing for Huntington's disease
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Tibben, A, primary, Roos, RAC, additional, and Niermeijer, MF, additional
- Published
- 1997
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32. Evaluation of exclusion prenatal and exclusion preimplantation genetic diagnosis for Huntington's disease in the Netherlands.
- Author
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van Rij, MC, de Die‐Smulders, CEM, Bijlsma, EK, de Wert, GMWR, Geraedts, JP, Roos, RAC, and Tibben, A
- Subjects
HUNTINGTON'S chorea diagnosis ,PREIMPLANTATION genetic diagnosis ,PRENATAL diagnosis ,COUPLES - Abstract
van Rij MC, de Die-Smulders CEM, Bijlsma EK, de Wert GMWR, Geraedts JP, Roos RAC, Tibben A. Evaluation of exclusion prenatal and exclusion preimplantation genetic diagnosis for Huntington's disease in the Netherlands. Individuals at 50% risk of Huntington's disease (HD) who prefer not to know their carrier status, might opt for exclusion prenatal diagnosis (ePND) or exclusion preimplantation genetic diagnosis (ePGD). This study aims to provide a better understanding of couples' motives for choosing ePND or ePND, and surveys couples' experiences in order to make recommendations for the improvement of counselling for exclusion testing. This qualitative retrospective interview study focussed on couples who underwent ePND or ePGD for HD in the period 1996-2010. Seventeen couples were included of which 13 had experienced ePND and 6 ePGD. Mean time-interval since exclusion-testing was 3.9 years. Couples' moral reservations regarding termination of pregnancy (TOP) or discarding healthy embryos were counterbalanced by the wish to protect their future child against HD. Seven couples had terminated a total of 11 pregnancies with a 50% HD risk, none showed regret. ePGD was used by couples who wanted to avoid (another) TOP. ePND and ePGD are acceptable reproductive options for a specific group of counsellees. To guarantee sound standards of care, it is imperative that candidate couples be given in-depth non-directive counselling about all possible scenarios, and adequate professional and psychological support prior to, during and after ePND/ePGD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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33. Hyponatraemia due to amantadine hydrochloride and L-dopa/carbidopa
- Author
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Lammers, G.J., primary and Roos, Rac, additional
- Published
- 1993
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34. Hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis — dutch type
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Haan, J., primary and Roos, Rac, additional
- Published
- 1990
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35. Living with Huntington's disease: illness perceptions, coping mechanisms, and spouses' quality of life.
- Author
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Helder DI, Kaptein AA, Van Kempen GMJ, Weinman J, Van Houwelingen JC, and Roos RAC
- Abstract
Chronic illness not only affects the life of those suffering from Huntington's disease but also threatens the quality of life (QOL) of their spouses. In this study, we focus on Huntington's disease (HD). The impact of HD on the QOL of spouses has been hardly studied from a behavioral medicine or health psychology perspective. We hypothesize that spouses' illness perceptions and coping mechanisms will contribute significantly to the prediction of their QOL. Illness perceptions, coping mechanisms, and the QOL of 90 spouses of patients with HD were assessed by means of the Illness Perception Questionnaire, the COPE, and the Medical Outcome Study 36-item Short Form Health Survey, respectively. After controlling for demographic and illness-related variables, coping mechanisms explained a significant amount of variance of spouses' role functioning. Given our results, more empirical and longitudinal research is justified on coping mechanisms and illness perceptions of spouses living with Huntington's disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2002
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36. Clinical and genetic analysis of a large Dutch family with autosomal dominant vascular retinopathy, migraine and Raynaud's phenomenon.
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Terwindt, GM, Haan, J, Ophoff, RA, Groenen, SMA, Storimans, CWJM, Lanser, JBK, Roos, RAC, Bleeker-Wagemakers, EM, Frants, RR, and Ferrari, MD
- Published
- 1998
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37. Medication Use and Treatment Indications in Huntington's Disease; Analyses from a Large Cohort.
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Feleus S, Skotnicki LEM, Roos RAC, and de Bot ST
- Abstract
Background: Huntington's Disease is a rare neurodegenerative disorder in which appropriate medication management is essential. While many medications are prescribed based on expert knowledge, overviews of actual medication use in HD are sparse., Objectives: We provide a detailed overview of medication use and associated indications across HD disease stages, considering sex and regional differences., Methods: Data from the largest observational HD study, ENROLL-HD, were used. We created HD-related medication and indication classes to identify medication trends in manifest, premanifest and control subjects. We studied medication use in adult, childhood- and adolescent-onset HD, incorporating disease stage (including phenoconverters), sex and regional differences., Results: In 8546 manifest HD patients, 84.6% used medication (any type), with the average number of medications per user rising from 2.5 in premanifest HD to 5.2 in end stage disease. Antipsychotics (29.2%), SSRIs (27.5%) and painkillers (21.8%) were most often used. Medication use varied with disease progression. Several differences were observed between the sexes, and notably between Europe and Northern America as well. Medication use increased after phenoconversion (from 64.8% to 70.6%, P < 0.05), with the largest difference in antipsychotic use (4.4%-7.8%, P < 0.05). Medication patterns were different in childhood-onset HD, with no use of painkillers, less use of anti-chorea and antidepressant drugs, and more for aggression and irritability., Conclusions: Medication use in HD increases with disease progression, with varying types of medications prescribed based on disease stage, sex, and region of living. Recognizing these medication trends is vital for further personalized HD management., (© 2024 The Author(s). Movement Disorders Clinical Practice published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.)
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- 2024
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38. Prevalence of Juvenile-Onset and Pediatric Huntington's Disease and Their Availability and Ability to Participate in Trials: A Dutch Population and Enroll-HD Observational Study.
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Bakels HS, Feleus S, Rodríguez-Girondo M, Losekoot M, Bijlsma EK, Roos RAC, and de Bot ST
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- Humans, Netherlands epidemiology, Prevalence, Adolescent, Male, Child, Female, Adult, Young Adult, Clinical Trials as Topic, Incidence, Child, Preschool, Middle Aged, Huntington Disease epidemiology, Age of Onset
- Abstract
Background: Juvenile-onset Huntington's disease (JHD) represents 1-5% of Huntington's disease (HD) patients, with onset before the age of 21. Pediatric HD (PHD) relates to a proportion of JHD patients that is still under 18 years of age. So far, both populations have been excluded from interventional trials., Objective: Describe the prevalence and incidence of JHD and PHD in the Netherlands and explore their ability to participate in interventional trials., Methods: The prevalence and incidence of PHD and JHD patients in the Netherlands were analyzed. In addition, we explored proportions of JHD patients diagnosed at pediatric versus adult age, their diagnostic delay, and functional and modelled (CAP100) disease stage in JHD and adult-onset HD patients at diagnosis., Results: The prevalence of JHD and PHD relative to the total manifest HD population in January 2024 was between 0.84-1.25% and 0.09-0.14% respectively. The mean incidence of JHD patients being diagnosed was between 0.85-1.28 per 1000 patient years and of PHD 0.14 per 1.000.000 under-aged person years. 55% of JHD cases received a clinical diagnosis on adult age. At diagnosis, the majority of JHD patients was functionally compromised and adolescent-onset JHD patients were significantly less independent compared to adult-onset HD patients., Conclusions: In the Netherlands, the epidemiology of JHD and PHD is lower than previously suggested. More than half of JHD cases are not eligible for trials in the PHD population. Furthermore, higher functional dependency in JHD patients influences their ability to participate in trials. Lastly, certain UHDRS functional assessments and the CAP100 score do not seem appropriate for this particular group.
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- 2024
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39. Genetic topography and cortical cell loss in Huntington's disease link development and neurodegeneration.
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Estevez-Fraga C, Altmann A, Parker CS, Scahill RI, Costa B, Chen Z, Manzoni C, Zarkali A, Durr A, Roos RAC, Landwehrmeyer B, Leavitt BR, Rees G, Tabrizi SJ, and McColgan P
- Subjects
- Humans, Endothelial Cells metabolism, Brain pathology, Gray Matter pathology, Atrophy pathology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Huntington Disease diagnostic imaging, Huntington Disease genetics, Huntington Disease metabolism
- Abstract
Cortical cell loss is a core feature of Huntington's disease (HD), beginning many years before clinical motor diagnosis, during the premanifest stage. However, it is unclear how genetic topography relates to cortical cell loss. Here, we explore the biological processes and cell types underlying this relationship and validate these using cell-specific post-mortem data. Eighty premanifest participants on average 15 years from disease onset and 71 controls were included. Using volumetric and diffusion MRI we extracted HD-specific whole brain maps where lower grey matter volume and higher grey matter mean diffusivity, relative to controls, were used as proxies of cortical cell loss. These maps were combined with gene expression data from the Allen Human Brain Atlas (AHBA) to investigate the biological processes relating genetic topography and cortical cell loss. Cortical cell loss was positively correlated with the expression of developmental genes (i.e. higher expression correlated with greater atrophy and increased diffusivity) and negatively correlated with the expression of synaptic and metabolic genes that have been implicated in neurodegeneration. These findings were consistent for diffusion MRI and volumetric HD-specific brain maps. As wild-type huntingtin is known to play a role in neurodevelopment, we explored the association between wild-type huntingtin (HTT) expression and developmental gene expression across the AHBA. Co-expression network analyses in 134 human brains free of neurodegenerative disorders were also performed. HTT expression was correlated with the expression of genes involved in neurodevelopment while co-expression network analyses also revealed that HTT expression was associated with developmental biological processes. Expression weighted cell-type enrichment (EWCE) analyses were used to explore which specific cell types were associated with HD cortical cell loss and these associations were validated using cell specific single nucleus RNAseq (snRNAseq) data from post-mortem HD brains. The developmental transcriptomic profile of cortical cell loss in preHD was enriched in astrocytes and endothelial cells, while the neurodegenerative transcriptomic profile was enriched for neuronal and microglial cells. Astrocyte-specific genes differentially expressed in HD post-mortem brains relative to controls using snRNAseq were enriched in the developmental transcriptomic profile, while neuronal and microglial-specific genes were enriched in the neurodegenerative transcriptomic profile. Our findings suggest that cortical cell loss in preHD may arise from dual pathological processes, emerging as a consequence of neurodevelopmental changes, at the beginning of life, followed by neurodegeneration in adulthood, targeting areas with reduced expression of synaptic and metabolic genes. These events result in age-related cell death across multiple brain cell types., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain.)
- Published
- 2023
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40. Progressive alterations in white matter microstructure across the timecourse of Huntington's disease.
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Estevez-Fraga C, Elmalem MS, Papoutsi M, Durr A, Rees EM, Hobbs NZ, Roos RAC, Landwehrmeyer B, Leavitt BR, Langbehn DR, Scahill RI, Rees G, Tabrizi SJ, and Gregory S
- Subjects
- Humans, Diffusion Tensor Imaging methods, Brain diagnostic imaging, Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, White Matter diagnostic imaging, Huntington Disease diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Background: Whole-brain longitudinal diffusion studies are crucial to examine changes in structural connectivity in neurodegeneration. Here, we investigated the longitudinal alterations in white matter (WM) microstructure across the timecourse of Huntington's disease (HD)., Methods: We examined changes in WM microstructure from premanifest to early manifest disease, using data from two cohorts with different disease burden. The TrackOn-HD study included 67 controls, 67 premanifest, and 10 early manifest HD (baseline and 24-month data); the PADDINGTON study included 33 controls and 49 early manifest HD (baseline and 15-month data). Longitudinal changes in fractional anisotropy (FA), mean diffusivity (MD), axial diffusivity, and radial diffusivity from baseline to last study visit were investigated for each cohort using tract-based spatial statistics. An optimized pipeline was employed to generate participant-specific templates to which diffusion tensor imaging maps were registered and change maps were calculated. We examined longitudinal differences between HD expansion-carriers and controls, and correlations with clinical scores, including the composite UHDRS (cUHDRS)., Results: HD expansion-carriers from TrackOn-HD, with lower disease burden, showed a significant longitudinal decline in FA in the left superior longitudinal fasciculus and an increase in MD across subcortical WM tracts compared to controls, while in manifest HD participants from PADDINGTON, there were significant widespread longitudinal increases in diffusivity compared to controls. Baseline scores in clinical scales including the cUHDRS predicted WM microstructural change in HD expansion-carriers., Conclusion: The present study showed significant longitudinal changes in WM microstructure across the HD timecourse. Changes were evident in larger WM areas and across more metrics as the disease advanced, suggesting a progressive alteration of WM microstructure with disease evolution., (© 2023 The Authors. Brain and Behavior published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2023
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41. The Many Faces of Huntington's Chorea Treatment: The Impact of Sudden Withdrawal of Tiapride after 40 Years of Use and a Systematic Review.
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Feleus S, van Schaijk M, Roos RAC, and de Bot ST
- Abstract
Huntington's Disease (HD) is a rare, neurodegenerative disorder characterized by chorea, cognitive decline, and behavioral changes. Despite wide clinical use since the mid-1980s, tiapride was recently withdrawn from the Dutch market without rationale. Although alternatives are available, many patients experienced dysregulation after this unwanted change. We provide insight into the impact of sudden tiapride withdrawal by reviewing medical records of HD patients who were using tiapride at the time of withdrawal. In addition, we performed a systematic search in five databases on tiapride efficacy and its safety profile in HD. Original research and expert opinions were included. In our patient group on tiapride, 50% required tiapride import from abroad. Regarding the review, 12 articles on original datasets and three expert opinions were included. The majority of studies showed an improvement in chorea while patients were on tiapride. Due to limited sample sizes, not all studies performed statistical tests on their results. Fifty percent of clinical experts prefer tiapride as initial chorea monotherapy, especially when comorbid behavioral symptoms are present. Side effects are often rare and mild. No safety concerns were reported. In conclusion, tiapride is almost irreplaceable for some patients and is an effective and safe chorea treatment in HD.
- Published
- 2022
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42. Reader Response: Timing and Impact of Psychiatric, Cognitive, and Motor Abnormalities in Huntington Disease.
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Bird TD, Lange H, Cruickshank T, Dose M, Eddy C, Oosterloo M, Paulsen JS, Reilmann R, Rickards H, Roos RAC, and Weindl A
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- Cognition, Humans, Neuropsychological Tests, Huntington Disease complications, Huntington Disease psychology
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- 2022
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43. Huntington's disease influences employment before and during clinical manifestation: A systematic review.
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van der Zwaan KF, Mentink MDC, Jacobs M, Roos RAC, and de Bot ST
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- Adult, Employment, Humans, Middle Aged, Prodromal Symptoms, Apathy, Huntington Disease genetics, Neurodegenerative Diseases
- Abstract
Huntington's disease (HD) is an inherited neurodegenerative disease. People at risk for HD can choose to get predictive testing years before the clinical onset. HD is characterized by motor, cognitive and psychiatric symptoms and has a mean age at onset between 30 and 50 years, an age at which people are usually still working. This systematic review focuses on summarizing which disease-specific characteristics influence employment and working capacity in HD. Twenty-three studies were identified and showed that while employment and working capacity in HD are negatively influenced by cognitive decline and motor impairments, apathy already plays a role in the prodromal stage. Moreover, the influence of HD transcends the clinical manifestation of the disease, as some people at risk are already experiencing the impact of HD on employment through fear of or actual genetic discrimination. Employment and working capacity are not influenced by predictive testing for HD in and of itself., (Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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44. Juvenile-Onset Huntington Disease Pathophysiology and Neurodevelopment: A Review.
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Bakels HS, Roos RAC, van Roon-Mom WMC, and de Bot ST
- Subjects
- Adult, Age of Onset, Brain pathology, Humans, Huntingtin Protein genetics, Young Adult, Huntington Disease, Movement Disorders pathology, Neurodegenerative Diseases pathology
- Abstract
Huntington disease is an autosomal dominant inherited brain disorder that typically becomes manifest in adulthood. Juvenile-onset Huntington disease refers to approximately 5% of patients with symptom onset before the age of 21 years. The causal factor is a pathologically expanded CAG repeat in the Huntingtin gene. Age at onset is inversely correlated with CAG repeat length. Juvenile-onset patients have distinct symptoms and signs with more severe pathology of involved brain structures in comparison with disease onset in adulthood. The aim of this review is to compare clinical and pathological features in juvenile- and adult-onset Huntington disease and to explore which processes potentially contribute to the observed differences. A specific focus is placed on molecular mechanisms of mutant huntingtin in early neurodevelopment and the interaction of a neurodegenerative disease and postnatal brain maturation. The importance of a better understanding of pathophysiological differences between juvenile- and adult-onset Huntington disease lies in development and implementation of new therapeutic strategies. © 2021 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society., (© 2021 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.)
- Published
- 2022
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45. Dysphagia, Fear of Choking and Preventive Measures in Patients with Huntington's Disease: The Perspectives of Patients and Caregivers in Long-Term Care.
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Kalkers K, Schols JMGA, van Zwet EW, and Roos RAC
- Subjects
- Caregivers, Cross-Sectional Studies, Fear, Humans, Long-Term Care, Airway Obstruction complications, Deglutition Disorders epidemiology, Deglutition Disorders etiology, Deglutition Disorders prevention & control, Huntington Disease complications, Huntington Disease diagnosis, Huntington Disease epidemiology
- Abstract
Objectives: To explore the prevalence of dysphagia and fear of choking in patients with Huntington's disease (HD) as well as preventive measures, both those applied and those not included in managing dysphagia. Also, to investigate related problems encountered by their formal and informal caregivers., Design: A multi-center observational cross-sectional study., Setting and Participants: 158 HD patients, recruited from six Dutch nursing homes specialized in HD, and their formal and informal caregivers., Measurements: Patients were assessed by means of questionnaires enquiring about dysphagia, fear of choking and measures to manage dysphagia. Also, questionnaires were administered about awareness of dysphagia symptoms, cognition and anxiety. Because we expected individuals with greater care dependency to have a higher severity of dysphagia, we distinguished between a care-independent and a care-dependent group of HD patients., Results: In the total group, 90.5% of HD patients had one or more dysphagia symptoms. The prevalence of FoC in HD patients and the formal and informal caregivers' fears about choking in HD patients was 45.7%, 19.0% and 59.5%, respectively, for care-independent patients and 58.7%, 50.1% and 77.5% for care-dependent patients. The score on the Huntington's Disease Dysphagia Scale was a predictor for fear of FoC in care-independent patients. Speech-language therapy, supervision during eating and drinking and adaptation of food and drink consistency were the most frequently applied measures to manage dysphagia, a combination was used in most HD patients., Conclusions: In HD patients, the prevalence of dysphagia is high and fear of choking is common among both patients and caregivers. A more severe degree of dysphagia is a predictor of FoC in care-independent HD patients. A combination of measures was used to manage dysphagia in most HD patients., Competing Interests: The authors have no conflict of interest to report.
- Published
- 2022
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46. The prevalence of pain in Huntington's disease in a large worldwide cohort.
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Sprenger GP, Roos RAC, van Zwet E, Reijntjes RH, Achterberg WP, and de Bot ST
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- Activities of Daily Living, Adult, Aged, Analgesics therapeutic use, Cross-Sectional Studies, Databases, Factual, Female, Humans, Huntington Disease genetics, Male, Middle Aged, Pain drug therapy, Prevalence, Disease Progression, Huntington Disease complications, Huntington Disease epidemiology, Pain epidemiology, Pain etiology
- Abstract
Introduction: Pain could be an unknown non-motor symptom in Huntington's Disease (HD). The aim is therefore, to study the prevalence of pain interference, painful conditions and analgesic use across the different stages of HD and compare these levels to non-HD gene mutation carriers., Methods: A cross-sectional analysis of the Enroll-HD study was conducted in premanifest, manifest HD gene mutation carriers (n = 3989 and n = 7,485, respectively) and in non-HD gene mutation carriers (n = 3719). To investigate group differences, multivariable logistic regression analysis was performed with pairwise comparisons., Results: In the HD mutation carriers, the overall prevalence of pain interference was 34% (95% CI 31%-35%), of painful conditions 17% (95% CI 15%-19%) and analgesic use 13% (95% CI 11%-15%). Compared to non-mutation carriers, the prevalence of pain interference was significantly higher in the middle stage of HD (33% [95% CI 31%-35%] vs 42% [95% CI 39%-45%], P = 0,02), whereas the prevalence of painful conditions was significant lower in the late and middle stage of HD (17% [95% CI 16%-18%] vs 12% [95% CI 10%-14%], 15% [95% CI 13%-17%], P < 0,01]. No significant group difference was present in analgesic use., Conclusions: The prevalence of pain interference increases as HD progresses, however, the prevalence of painful conditions and analgesics do not increase accordingly. Further studies are necessary to investigate the aetiology of pain in HD and the risk for undertreatment of pain., (Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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47. Composite UHDRS Correlates With Progression of Imaging Biomarkers in Huntington's Disease.
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Estevez-Fraga C, Scahill RI, Durr A, Leavitt BR, Roos RAC, Langbehn DR, Rees G, Gregory S, and Tabrizi SJ
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- Anisotropy, Atrophy pathology, Biomarkers, Disease Progression, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Huntington Disease diagnostic imaging, Huntington Disease pathology, White Matter diagnostic imaging, White Matter pathology
- Abstract
Background: The composite Unified Huntington's Disease Rating Scale (cUHDRS) is a multidimensional measure of progression in Huntington's disease (HD) being used as a primary outcome in clinical trials investigating potentially disease-modifying huntingtin-lowering therapies., Objective: Evaluating volumetric and structural connectivity correlates of the cUHDRS., Methods: One hundred and nineteen premanifest and 119 early-HD participants were included. Gray and white matter (WM) volumes were correlated with cUHDRS cross-sectionally and longitudinally using voxel-based morphometry. Correlations between baseline fractional anisotropy (FA); mean, radial, and axial diffusivity; and baseline cUHDRS were examined using tract-based spatial statistics., Results: Worse performance in the cUHDRS over time correlated with longitudinal volume decreases in the occipito-parietal cortex and centrum semiovale, whereas lower baseline scores correlated with decreased volume in the basal ganglia and surrounding WM. Lower cUHDRS scores were also associated with reduced FA and increased diffusivity at baseline., Conclusion: The cUHDRS correlates with imaging biomarkers and tracks atrophy progression in HD supporting its biological relevance. © 2021 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society., (© 2021 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.)
- Published
- 2021
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48. Safety, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of SBT-020 in patients with early stage Huntington's disease, a 2-part study.
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van Diemen MPJ, Hart EP, Abbruscato A, Mead L, van Beelen I, Bergheanu SC, Hameeteman PW, Coppen E, Winder JY, Moerland M, Kan H, van der Grond J, Webb A, Roos RAC, and Groeneveld GJ
- Subjects
- Humans, Leukocytes, Mononuclear, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Huntington Disease drug therapy, Neurodegenerative Diseases
- Abstract
Aims: Huntington's disease (HD) is a neurodegenerative disease with cognitive, motor and psychiatric symptoms. Toxic accumulation of misfolded mutant huntingtin protein induces mitochondrial dysfunction, leading to a bioenergetic insufficiency in neuronal and muscle cells. We evaluated the safety, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of SBT-020, a novel compound to improve mitochondrial function, in a 2-part study in early stage HD patients., Methods: Part 1 consisted of 7-day multiple ascending dose study to select the highest tolerable dose for Part 2, a 28-day multiple dose study. Mitochondrial function was measured in the visual cortex and calf muscle, using phosphorous magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and in circulating peripheral blood mononuclear cells., Results: Treatment-emergent adverse events were mild and more present in the SBT-020 group. Injection site reactions occurred in 91% in Part 1 and 97% in Part 2. Mitochondrial function in calf muscle, peripheral blood mononuclear cells or visual cortex was not changed overall due to treatment with SBT-020. In a posthoc analysis, patients with a higher degree of mitochondrial dysfunction (below the median [∆Ψ
m < 3412 and τPCr > 42.5 s]) showed more improvement than patients with a relatively lower level of mitochondrial dysfunction., Conclusion: SBT-020 was safe at all doses, but no significant differences in any of the pharmacodynamic measurements between the treatment groups and placebo group could be demonstrated. The data suggest that the better than expected mitochondrial function in our patient population at baseline might explain the lack of effect of SBT-020., (© 2020 The Authors. British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Pharmacological Society.)- Published
- 2021
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49. Validating Automated Segmentation Tools in the Assessment of Caudate Atrophy in Huntington's Disease.
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Mansoor NM, Vanniyasingam T, Malone I, Hobbs NZ, Rees E, Durr A, Roos RAC, Landwehrmeyer B, Tabrizi SJ, Johnson EB, and Scahill RI
- Abstract
Background: Neuroimaging shows considerable promise in generating sensitive and objective outcome measures for therapeutic trials across a range of neurodegenerative conditions. For volumetric measures the current gold standard is manual delineation, which is unfeasible for samples sizes required for large clinical trials. Methods: Using a cohort of early Huntington's disease (HD) patients ( n = 46) and controls ( n = 35), we compared the performance of four automated segmentation tools (FIRST, FreeSurfer, STEPS, MALP-EM) with manual delineation for generating cross-sectional caudate volume, a region known to be vulnerable in HD. We then examined the effect of each of these baseline regions on the ability to detect change over 15 months using the established longitudinal Caudate Boundary Shift Integral (cBSI) method, an automated longitudinal pipeline requiring a baseline caudate region as an input. Results: All tools, except Freesurfer, generated significantly smaller caudate volumes than the manually derived regions. Jaccard indices showed poorer levels of overlap between each automated segmentation and manual delineation in the HD patients compared with controls. Nevertheless, each method was able to demonstrate significant group differences in volume ( p < 0.001). STEPS performed best qualitatively as well as quantitively in the baseline analysis. Caudate atrophy measures generated by the cBSI using automated baseline regions were largely consistent with those derived from a manually segmented baseline, with STEPS providing the most robust cBSI values across both control and HD groups. Conclusions: Atrophy measures from the cBSI were relatively robust to differences in baseline segmentation technique, suggesting that fully automated pipelines could be used to generate outcome measures for clinical trials., Competing Interests: ER was employed by UCL during the period of data collection and image processing. She now works for IXICO plc. The remaining 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 Mansoor, Vanniyasingam, Malone, Hobbs, Rees, Durr, Roos, Landwehrmeyer, Tabrizi, Johnson and Scahill.)
- Published
- 2021
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50. Disease Onset in Huntington's Disease: When Is the Conversion?
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Oosterloo M, de Greef BTA, Bijlsma EK, Durr A, Tabrizi SJ, Estevez-Fraga C, de Die-Smulders CEM, and Roos RAC
- Abstract
Background: Determination of disease onset in Huntington's disease is made by clinical experience. The diagnostic confidence level is an assessment regarding the certainty about the clinical diagnosis based on motor signs. A level of 4 means the rater has ≥99% confidence motor abnormalities are unequivocal signs of disease. However, it does not state which motor abnormalities are signs of disease and how many must be present., Objective: Our aim is to explore how accurate the diagnostic confidence level is in estimating disease onset using the Enroll-HD data set. For clinical disease onset we use a cut-off total motor score >5 of the Unified Huntington's Disease Rating Scale. This score is used in the TRACK-HD study, with ≤5 indicating no substantial motor signs in premanifests., Methods: At baseline premanifest participants who converted to manifest (converters) and non-converters were compared for clinical symptoms and diagnostic confidence level. Clinical symptoms and diagnostic confidence levels were longitudinally displayed in converters., Results: Of 3731 eligible participants, 455 were converters and 3276 non-converters. Baseline diagnostic confidence levels were significantly higher in converters compared to non-converters ( P < 0.001). 232 (51%) converters displayed a baseline motor score >5 (mean = 6.7). Converters had significantly more baseline clinical symptoms, and higher disease burden compared to non-converters ( P < 0.001). Diagnostic confidence level before disease onset ranged between 1 and 3 in converters., Conclusions: According to this data the diagnostic confidence level is not an accurate instrument to determine phenoconversion. With trials evaluating disease modifying therapies it is important to develop more reliable diagnostic criteria., Competing Interests: No specific funding was received for this research. The authors declare that there is no conflict of interest., (© 2021 The Authors. Movement Disorders Clinical Practice published by Wiley Periodicals LLC. on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.)
- Published
- 2021
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