Publications by authors named "Maria-Jose Trujillo-Tiebas"

, one of the most frequently inherited retinal dystrophy (IRD)-causing genes, implies a high phenotypic variability. This study aims to analyze the mutational spectrum in one of the largest cohorts worldwide, and to describe novel pathogenic variants and genotype-phenotype correlations. A study of 220 patients from 103 families recruited from a database of 5000 families.

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Unlabelled: Chorea can have a wide variety of causes including neurodegenerative, pharmacological, structural, metabolic, infectious, immunologic and paraneoplastic processes. We reviewed the clinical records of patients with apparently sporadic choreic movements and no relevant family history, who presented to our neurology department (Hospital Fundación Jimenez Diaz) between 1991 and 2022. We detected 38 cases of apparent sporadic chorea (ASC); Our analysis revealed 5 cases of genetic chorea (including 3 cases with Huntington's disease) while 6 cases were autoimmune/hematological; 6 drug-related chorea, 5 metabolic-vascular, 5 due to miscellaneous conditions and 4 were of mixed etiology.

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Purpose: To describe the genetic and clinical spectrum of GUCY2D-associated retinopathies and to accurately establish their prevalence in a large cohort of patients.

Design: Retrospective case series.

Methods: Institutional study of 47 patients from 27 unrelated families with retinal dystrophies carrying disease-causing GUCY2D variants from the Fundación Jiménez Díaz hospital dataset of 8000 patients.

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The introduction of NGS in genetic diagnosis has increased the repertoire of variants and genes involved and the amount of genomic information produced. We built an allelic-frequency (AF) database for a heterogeneous cohort of genetic diseases to explore the aggregated genomic information and boost diagnosis in inherited retinal dystrophies (IRD). We retrospectively selected 5683 index-cases with clinical exome sequencing tests available, 1766 with IRD and the rest with diverse genetic diseases.

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Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS) is an autosomal recessive ciliopathy characterized by extensive inter- and intra-familial variability, in which oligogenic interactions have been also reported. Our main goal is to elucidate the role of mutational load in the clinical variability of BBS. A cohort of 99 patients from 77 different families with biallelic pathogenic variants in a BBS-associated gene was retrospectively recruited.

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Purpose: To assess the potential of next-generation sequencing (NGS) technologies to characterize cases diagnosed with autosomal recessive (ar) or sporadic (s) macular dystrophies (ar/sMD) and describe their mutational spectrum.

Methods: A cohort of 1036 families was classified according to their suspected clinical diagnosis-Stargardt disease (STGD), cone and cone-rod dystrophy (CCRD) or other maculopathies (otherMD). Molecular studies included genotyping microarrays, Sanger sequencing, NGS, and sequencing of intronic regions of the ABCA4 gene.

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Clinical exome (CE) sequencing has become a first-tier diagnostic test for hereditary diseases; however, its diagnostic rate is around 30-50%. In this study, we aimed to increase the diagnostic yield of CE using a custom reanalysis algorithm. Sequencing data were available for three cohorts using two commercial protocols applied as part of the diagnostic process.

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Inversions are structural variants that are generally balanced. However, they could lead to gene disruptions or have positional effects leading to diseases. Mutations in the gene cause Nance-Horan syndrome, an X-linked disorder characterised by congenital cataracts and dental anomalies.

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Introduction: Biallelic pathogenic RPE65 variants are related to a spectrum of clinically overlapping inherited retinal dystrophies (IRD). Most affected individuals progress to severe disease, with 50% of patients becoming legally blind by 20 years of age. Deeper knowledge of the mutational spectrum and the phenotype-genotype correlation in RPE65-related IRD is needed.

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Article Synopsis
  • Congenital hypogonadotropic hypogonadism (CHH) can occur with or without anosmia and involves multiple genes affecting its inheritance and diagnosis.
  • Next generation sequencing (NGS) was analyzed for its effectiveness in diagnosing CHH using a clinical exome and virtual panels, but using microsmia as a criterion didn't enhance diagnosis rates.
  • The study found that a 34-gene virtual panel confirmed CHH in 55% of patients, suggesting that testing all related genes, regardless of microsmia, yields the best diagnostic results.
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Introduction: Congenital hypogonadotropic hypogonadism (CHH) can present alone or in association with anosmia or other congenital malformations. More than 30 genes have been identified as being involved in the pathogenesis of CHH with different patterns of inheritance, and the increasing availability of next generation sequencing (NGS) has increased the diagnostic yield.

Methods: We analysed the diagnostic yield of NGS in patients with CHH using the clinical exome filtered with virtual panels.

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Objective: To improve the differential diagnosis of osteopoikilosis in past populations using a clinical case as an example of this rare condition.

Materials: A patient referred to our Genetic Service with suspected Buschke Ollendorff Syndrome after finding a connective nevus.

Methods: Radiological images from different body regions were accompanied by a genetic study using next-generation sequencing.

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Most consensus recommendations for the genetic diagnosis of neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs) do not include the use of next generation sequencing (NGS) and are still based on chromosomal microarrays, such as comparative genomic hybridization array (aCGH). This study compares the diagnostic yield obtained by aCGH and clinical exome sequencing in NDD globally and its spectrum of disorders. To that end, 1412 patients clinically diagnosed with NDDs and studied with aCGH were classified into phenotype categories: global developmental delay/intellectual disability (GDD/ID); autism spectrum disorder (ASD); and other NDDs.

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Article Synopsis
  • Inherited retinal dystrophies (IRD) are complex, rare genetic disorders with over 50% successful molecular diagnoses, but reclassifying uncertain genetic variants remains a challenge.
  • A study of 668 IRD cases revealed that experienced geneticists identified more variants of uncertain significance (VUS), particularly in dominant cases, with certain genes showing notably low or high frequencies of VUS.
  • Analysis using pathogenicity predictors showed that a majority of VUS can be reclassified as pathogenic, helping to streamline diagnosis and treatment in IRD cases.
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Purpose: To define genotype-phenotype correlations in the largest cohort study worldwide of patients with biallelic ABCA4 variants, including 434 patients with Stargardt disease (STGD1) and 72 with cone-rod dystrophy (CRD).

Design: Cohort study.

Methods: We characterized 506 patients with ABCA4 variants using conventional genetic tools and next-generation sequencing technologies.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigated the genetic origins of sporadic retinitis pigmentosa (sRP) in a large group of 877 unrelated Spanish patients with no family history of the disease.
  • Using advanced genetic techniques, they identified causative genetic variants in about 38% of the patients, with a significant number being de novo mutations.
  • The findings underscore the importance of next-generation sequencing (NGS) for diagnosing sRP and highlight the need for thorough gene screening to improve family counseling and potential gene therapy options.
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Microarray technology, recently implemented in international prenatal diagnosis systems, has become one of the main techniques in this field in terms of detection rate and objectivity of the results. This guideline attempts to provide background information on this technology, including technical and diagnostic aspects to be considered. Specifically, this guideline defines: the different prenatal sample types to be used, as well as their characteristics (chorionic villi samples, amniotic fluid, fetal cord blood or miscarriage tissue material); variant reporting policies (including variants of uncertain significance) to be considered in informed consents and prenatal microarray reports; microarray limitations inherent to the technique and which must be taken into account when recommending microarray testing for diagnosis; a detailed clinical algorithm recommending the use of microarray testing and its introduction into routine clinical practice within the context of other genetic tests, including pregnancies in families with a genetic history or specific syndrome suspicion, first trimester increased nuchal translucency or second trimester heart malformation and ultrasound findings not related to a known or specific syndrome.

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Chromosomal deletions at 11p13 are a frequent cause of congenital Aniridia, a rare pan-ocular genetic disease, and of WAGR syndrome, accounting up to 30% of cases. First-tier genetic testing for newborn with aniridia, to detect 11p13 rearrangements, includes Multiplex Ligation-dependent Probe Amplification (MLPA) and karyotyping. However, neither of these approaches allow obtaining a complete picture of the high complexity of chromosomal deletions and breakpoints in aniridia.

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Background/aims: Idiopathic central precocious puberty (ICPP) is the premature activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis in the absence of organic disease. Up to now, just gain-of-function mutations of KISS1/KISS1R and loss-of-function mutations of the maternally imprinted gene MKRN3 are the known genetic causes of ICPP. Our intention is to evaluate variants present in genes related to the pubertal onset pathway that could act as disease-causing or predisposing variants.

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The expansion of CAG repeats (≥36 CAG) in the HTT gene is the only known genetic cause of Huntington's disease (HD) and the main determinant of the course of the disease. The length of the expanded CAG repeats correlates inversely with the age of onset (AOO) but does not completely determine it. We investigated the role of the melanocortin 1 receptor (MC1R) gene as a modifier factor of AOO in 600 HD patients from Spain.

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For diagnostic purposes, we screened for the C9ORF72 mutation in a) 162 FTLD cases, and b) 145 cases with other diagnoses but with some frontotemporal features or manifestations previously reported in C9 carriers. Ten cases (onset 50 to 75 years) harbored the expansion: seven had FTLD syndromes (4.3% of total, 11% of familial cases), and three (2%) had a different diagnosis.

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Epidermolysis bullosa with pyloric atresia (EB-PA) is a rare autosomal recessive hereditary disease with a variable prognosis from lethal to very mild. EB-PA is classified into Simplex form (EBS-PA: OMIM #612138) and Junctional form (JEB-PA: OMIM #226730), and it is caused by mutations in ITGA6, ITGB4 and PLEC genes. We report the analysis of six patients with EB-PA, including two dizygotic twins.

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Campomelic dysplasia is a rare disorder characterized by skeletal and extraskeletal defects. Up to two-thirds of affected XY individuals have a gradation of genital defects or may develop as phenotypic females. This syndrome is caused by alterations in SRY-related HMG-Box Gene 9 (SOX9), a transcription factor essential in both chondrocyte differentiation and sex determination.

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Acromesomelic dysplasia, Grebe type is a very rare skeletal dysplasia characterized by severe dwarfism with marked micromelia and deformation of the upper and lower limbs, with a proximodistal gradient of severity. CDMP1 gene mutations have been associated with Grebe syndrome, Hunter-Thompson syndrome, Du Pan syndrome and brachydactyly type C. The proband is a 4-year-old boy, born of consanguineous Pakistani parents.

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Patients with rare deletions in 16q12 and a duplication of 17p, both interstitial and de novo. Only seven cases have been described with these deletions and none of them presented other chromosomal abnormalities. The proband showed a complex phenotype with features found in patients with dup17p11.

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