Publications by authors named "Patricia Delbeke"

Article Synopsis
  • This study investigates the effectiveness of adalimumab, an anti-TNFα agent, for treating childhood noninfectious uveitis (NIU) and aims to establish a therapeutic range for its trough levels.
  • The research involved analyzing serum trough levels in 36 children treated with adalimumab, finding that those who fully responded had higher levels (average 11.8 μg/mL) than partial or non-responders (average 9.2 μg/mL).
  • The suggested therapeutic range for optimal clinical effects was determined to be between 9.6 to 13 μg/mL, highlighting the importance of therapeutic drug monitoring to enhance treatment outcomes for these pediatric patients.
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Objective: To describe a cohort of paediatric patients who underwent unilateral or bilateral lens extractions at Ghent University hospital using the Dutch Ophthalmic Research Center (D.O.R.

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Mosaic RASopathies are a molecularly heterogeneous group of (neuro)cutaneous syndromes with high phenotypical variability. Postzygotic variants in have been described in oculoectodermal syndrome (OES), encephalocraniocutaneous lipomatosis (ECCL) and epidermal nevus syndrome (ENS). This study confirms the continuum of mosaic neurocutaneous RASopathies showing codon 146 variants in an individual with OES and, for the first time, in an individual with (isolated) epidermal nevus.

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We describe a four-year-old girl with bilateral severe iris hypoplasia and secondary ocular hypertension. Genetic testing revealed a de novo deletion in the FOXC1 gene, establishing the diagnosis of Axenfeld-Rieger syndrome (ARS). The girl developed a gradually increasing exotropia, up to 95 prism diopters by the age of 3 years wherefore strabismus surgery was performed.

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Purpose: To describe the structural and functional characteristics of oxalate retinopathy.

Methods: Five patients with molecularly confirmed primary hyperoxaluria (PH) Type 1 underwent multimodal retinal imaging (spectral-domain optical coherence tomography, white light, and HRA multispectral imaging) and functional testing, including color vision testing, Goldmann perimetry, and International Society for Clinical Electrophysiology of Vision standard electrophysiological testing.

Results: Four distinct retinal phenotypes are presented.

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VPS45 mutations cause severe congenital neutropenia (SCN). We report on a girl with SCN and neurological impairment harboring a homozygous p.E238K mutation in VPS45 (vacuolar sorting protein 45).

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Purpose: Idiopathic infantile nystagmus (IIN; OMIM 31700) with X-linked inheritance is one of the most common forms of infantile nystagmus. Up to date, three X-linked loci have been identified, Xp11.4-p11.

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Congenital fixed dilated pupils (congenital mydriasis) is characterized by hypoplasia or aplasia of the iris muscles, with absence of iris between the collarette and pupillary border, creating a scalloped pupillary margin. This condition has been reported in a multisystemic smooth muscle cell dysfunction syndrome, combined with congenital patent ductus arteriosus, cerebrovascular disease (Moya-moya-like), coronary artery disease, thoracic aorta aneurysm, and dysfunction of smooth muscle cells in organs throughout the body. All affected individuals carry a p.

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A 7-month-old Caucasian girl presented with an acquired, spasmodic torticollis to the right side with the head tilted downwards, photophobia and epiphora. Diagnostic work-out revealed a posterior fossa pilocytic astrocytoma. The symptoms improved after surgical resection.

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Blepharophimosis syndrome (BPES) is caused by loss-of-function mutations in the single-exon forkhead transcription factor gene FOXL2 and by genomic rearrangements of the FOXL2 locus. Here, we focus on 92 new intragenic FOXL2 mutations, 34 of which are novel. Specifically, we found 10 nonsense mutations (11%), 13 missense mutations (14%), 40 deletions or insertions leading to a frameshift (43%), and 29 in-frame changes (32%), of which 28 (30%) lead to a polyalanine expansion.

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