Publications by authors named "P D Gorevic"

Article Synopsis
  • Yao syndrome (YAOS) is an autoinflammatory disease linked to specific genetic variants, with this study analyzing a large group of adult patients diagnosed with related conditions.
  • Out of 194 patients studied, 152 were diagnosed with YAOS, while the remainder had mixed autoinflammatory diseases, often showing multiple genetic variants.
  • The findings highlight the diverse presentations of YAOS and aim to increase awareness and understanding of this often underrecognized disease among healthcare professionals.
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Systemic autoinflammatory diseases (SAIDs) are distinct from autoimmune diseases. The former primarily results from abnormal innate immune response and genetic testing is crucial for disease diagnosis. Similar cutaneous involvement is a main feature for both SAID and dermatomyositis (DM), so they can be confused with each other.

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In genomic medicine, the concept of genetically transitional disease (GTD) refers to cases in which gene mutation is necessary but not sufficient to cause disease. In this Perspective, we apply this novel concept to rheumatic diseases, which have been linked to hundreds of genetic variants via association studies. These variants are in the 'grey zone' between monogenic variants with large effect sizes and common susceptibility alleles with small effect sizes.

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Objectives: Cryopyrin-associated periodic syndrome or NLRP3-associated autoinflammatory disease (NLRP3-AID) and NLRP12-AID are both Mendelian disorders with autosomal dominant inheritance. Both diseases are rare, primarily reported in the pediatric population, and are thought to be phenotypically indistinguishable. We provide the largest cohort of adult-onset patients and compared these diseases and the gene variant frequency to population controls.

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NOD-like receptors (NLRs) are intracellular sensors associated with systemic autoinflammatory diseases (SAIDs). We investigated the largest monocentric cohort of patients with adult-onset SAIDs for coinheritance of low frequency and rare mutations in and other autoinflammatory genes. Sixty-three patients underwent molecular testing for SAID gene panels after extensive clinical workups.

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