Publications by authors named "Colin Ellis"

: Hyperkinetic movement disorders involve excessive, involuntary movements such as ataxia, chorea, dystonia, myoclonus, tics, and tremor. Recent advances in artificial intelligence (AI) allow investigators to integrate multimodal instrumented movement measurements and imaging techniques and to analyze these data together at scale. In this systematic review, we aim to characterize AI's performance in diagnosing and quantitatively phenotyping these disorders.

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  • The study investigated how polygenic risk factors influence the severity and occurrence of epilepsy within families that have a known genetic cause, particularly focusing on families with genetic epilepsy with febrile seizures plus (GEFS+).
  • Researchers analyzed data from 304 individuals, finding that a higher polygenic risk score (PRS) was linked to a greater likelihood of an epilepsy diagnosis and was associated with more severe epilepsy phenotypes.
  • The results suggest that the genetic background can modify how rare pathogenic variants express themselves in terms of disease severity, highlighting the role of polygenic risk in understanding familial epilepsy.
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Polygenic risk scores (PRSs) are an important tool for understanding the role of common genetic variants in human disease. Standard best practices recommend that PRSs be analyzed in cohorts that are independent of the genome-wide association study (GWAS) used to derive the scores without sample overlap or relatedness between the two cohorts. However, identifying sample overlap and relatedness can be challenging in an era of GWASs performed by large biobanks and international research consortia.

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Background: Germline genetic testing is recommended for an increasing number of conditions with underlying genetic etiologies, the results of which impact medical management. However, genetic testing is underutilized in clinics due to system, clinician, and patient level barriers. Behavioral economics provides a framework to create implementation strategies, such as nudges, to address these multi-level barriers and increase the uptake of genetic testing for conditions where the results impact medical management.

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  • Before next-generation sequencing (NGS), neuropathy evaluations relied on limited genetic tests and screening for acquired causes, particularly for patients with a family history and earlier symptom onset.
  • In this study of 6,849 adults, researchers used NGS to examine a wider range of genes related to peripheral neuropathy, resulting in a molecular diagnosis for 8.4% of patients.
  • The findings indicate that many significant diagnoses and potential clinical interventions would have been overlooked under previous testing guidelines, underscoring the need to update genetic testing practices to include more genes and better distinguish between hereditary and acquired neuropathy.
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  • Visual impairment (VI) is linked to dementia, depression, and hallucinations in older adults, but previous research didn't account for genetic influences.
  • A comprehensive analysis using data from the Health and Retirement Study found that while VI consistently correlated with dementia and depression, the link with hallucinations varied based on genetic risk for schizophrenia.
  • Specifically, high genetic risk increased the association between VI and hallucinations, showing that genetics do not fully explain the neuropsychiatric outcomes related to VI in older adults.
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Purpose: An early genetic diagnosis can guide the time-sensitive treatment of individuals with genetic epilepsies. However, most genetic diagnoses occur long after disease onset. We aimed to identify early clinical features suggestive of genetic diagnoses in individuals with epilepsy through large-scale analysis of full-text electronic medical records.

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  • Temporal encephaloceles (TE) are a lesser-known cause of epilepsy that can be surgically treated, and this systematic review compiles data on their clinical characteristics and treatment outcomes.
  • The analysis included 24 studies with a total of 423 patients, finding that TE patients typically have later seizure onset, different seizure patterns, and a greater incidence of idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH) compared to those without TE.
  • Surgical interventions show promising outcomes, with a 75-85% success rate for different surgical techniques, indicating that better recognition and understanding of TE could improve epilepsy management.
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Objective: To assess the possible effects of genetics on seizure outcome by estimating the familial aggregation of three outcome measures: seizure remission, history of ≥4 tonic-clonic seizures, and seizure control for individuals taking antiseizure medication.

Methods: We analyzed families containing multiple persons with epilepsy in four previously collected retrospective cohorts. Seizure remission was defined as being 5 and 10 years seizure-free at last observation.

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Objective: Large-language models (LLMs) can potentially revolutionize health care delivery and research, but risk propagating existing biases or introducing new ones. In epilepsy, social determinants of health are associated with disparities in care access, but their impact on seizure outcomes among those with access remains unclear. Here we (1) evaluated our validated, epilepsy-specific LLM for intrinsic bias, and (2) used LLM-extracted seizure outcomes to determine if different demographic groups have different seizure outcomes.

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Background And Objectives: Genetic testing is now the standard of care for many neurologic conditions. Health care disparities are unfortunately widespread in the US health care system, but disparities in the utilization of genetic testing for neurologic conditions have not been studied. We tested the hypothesis that access to and results of genetic testing vary according to race, ethnicity, sex, socioeconomic status, and insurance status for adults with neurologic conditions.

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Rationale: Seizure induction techniques are used in the epilepsy monitoring unit (EMU) to increase diagnostic yield and reduce length of stay. There are insufficient data on the efficacy of alcohol as an induction technique.

Methods: We performed a retrospective cohort study using six years of EMU data at our institution.

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  • * This review offers practical guidance for clinicians on identifying which patients should undergo genetic testing, what tests to order, and how these tests can benefit patient care, especially concerning common neurologic conditions.
  • * The review discusses recent developments in gene-specific treatments and clinical trials, emphasizing how genetic diagnoses can enhance prognosis, family planning, and potentially lead to better patient outcomes through targeted therapies.
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Acute short-term noninvasive ventilation (NIV) for hypercapnic respiratory failure in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) has well-established benefits; however, the role of long-term home NIV remains controversial. In the past decade, studies utilizing aggressive NIV settings to maximally reduce carbon dioxide levels (PaCO) have resulted in several positive clinical trials and led to updated guidelines on home NIV for stable hypercapnic COPD patients. This clinical respiratory review discusses the high-intensity NIV approach, summarizes recent key trials and guidelines pertaining to home NIV in COPD, and considers key clinical questions for future research and application in the Canadian context.

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Objective: Large-language models (LLMs) in healthcare have the potential to propagate existing biases or introduce new ones. For people with epilepsy, social determinants of health are associated with disparities in access to care, but their impact on seizure outcomes among those with access to specialty care remains unclear. Here we (1) evaluated our validated, epilepsy-specific LLM for intrinsic bias, and (2) used LLM-extracted seizure outcomes to test the hypothesis that different demographic groups have different seizure outcomes.

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  • Progressive Myoclonus Epilepsy (PME) is a rare epilepsy syndrome that leads to worsening symptoms like myoclonus, ataxia, and seizures over time.
  • Approximately 80% of PME cases can now be genetically diagnosed, with nearly fifty identified genetic causes, though some are very rare.
  • The review discusses common clinical features and genetic backgrounds of PMEs, along with a case study to illustrate clinical investigations and treatment options for this challenging condition.
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Objective: We have previously developed a natural language processing pipeline using clinical notes written by epilepsy specialists to extract seizure freedom, seizure frequency text, and date of last seizure text for patients with epilepsy. It is important to understand how our methods generalize to new care contexts.

Materials And Methods: We evaluated our pipeline on unseen notes from nonepilepsy-specialist neurologists and non-neurologists without any additional algorithm training.

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Rab GTPases are important regulators of intracellular vesicular trafficking. RAB5C is a member of the Rab GTPase family that plays an important role in the endocytic pathway, membrane protein recycling and signaling. Here we report on 12 individuals with nine different heterozygous de novo variants in RAB5C.

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Objective: Epilepsy is largely a treatable condition with antiseizure medication (ASM). Recent national administrative claims data suggest one third of newly diagnosed adult epilepsy patients remain untreated 3 years after diagnosis. We aimed to quantify and characterize this treatment gap within a large US academic health system leveraging the electronic health record for enriched clinical detail.

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Objective: Electronic medical records allow for retrospective clinical research with large patient cohorts. However, epilepsy outcomes are often contained in free text notes that are difficult to mine. We recently developed and validated novel natural language processing (NLP) algorithms to automatically extract key epilepsy outcome measures from clinic notes.

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Identifying genetic risk factors for highly heterogeneous disorders like epilepsy remains challenging. Here, we present the largest whole-exome sequencing study of epilepsy to date, with >54,000 human exomes, comprising 20,979 deeply phenotyped patients from multiple genetic ancestry groups with diverse epilepsy subtypes and 33,444 controls, to investigate rare variants that confer disease risk. These analyses implicate seven individual genes, three gene sets, and four copy number variants at exome-wide significance.

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Objective: Evaluating patients with drug-resistant epilepsy often requires inducing seizures by tapering antiseizure medications (ASMs) in the epilepsy monitoring unit (EMU). The relationship between ASM taper strategy, seizure timing, and severity remains unclear. In this study, we developed and validated a pharmacokinetic model of total ASM load and tested its association with seizure occurrence and severity in the EMU.

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There is a pressing need for greater understanding and focus on cancer survivorship and informal cancer caring of trans people (binary and non-binary), across tumor types, to inform culturally safe trans inclusive cancer information and care. This qualitative study, part of the mixed methods Out with Cancer project, examined experiences of trans embodiment and identity after cancer diagnosis and treatment. We drew on open-ended survey responses from 63 trans cancer survivors and 23 trans cancer carers, as well as interviews and a photo-elicitation activity with a subset of 22 participants (15 cancer survivors, 7 cancer carers).

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Objective: Epileptiform activity is common in critically ill patients, but movement-related artifacts-including electromyography (EMG) and myoclonus-can obscure EEG, limiting detection of epileptiform activity. We sought to determine the ability of pharmacologic paralysis and quantitative artifact reduction (AR) to improve epileptiform discharge detection.

Methods: Retrospective analysis of patients who underwent continuous EEG monitoring with pharmacologic paralysis.

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Germline mutations in tubulin beta class I (TUBB), which encodes one of the β-tubulin isoforms, were previously associated with neurological and cutaneous abnormalities. Here, we describe the first case of inherited bone marrow (BM) failure, including marked thrombocytopenia, morphological abnormalities, and cortical dysplasia, associated with a de novo p.D249V variant in TUBB.

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