Publications by authors named "Philip Harraka"

Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) has been associated with germline pathogenic or likely pathogenic (PLP) variants in recognised cancer susceptibility genes. Studies of RCC using gene panel sequencing have been highly variable in terms of study design, genes included, and reported prevalence of PLP variant carriers (4-26%). Studies that restricted their analysis to established RCC predisposition genes identified variants in 1-6% of cases.

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Clonal haematopoiesis of indeterminate potential (CHIP) has been associated with many adverse health outcomes. However, further research is required to understand the critical genes and pathways relevant to CHIP subtypes, evaluate how CHIP clones evolve with time, and further advance functional characterisation and therapeutic studies. Large epidemiological studies are well placed to address these questions but often collect saliva rather than blood from participants.

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Background: The genetic tubulopathies are rare and heterogenous disorders that are often difficult to identify. This study examined the tubulopathy-causing genes for ocular associations that suggested their genetic basis and, in some cases, the affected gene.

Methods: Sixty-seven genes from the Genomics England renal tubulopathy panel were reviewed for ocular features, and for retinal expression in the Human Protein Atlas and an ocular phenotype in mouse models in the Mouse Genome Informatics database.

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Introduction: Complement has been implicated in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) pathogenesis on the basis of the associations with inherited complement defects and genome-wide association study risk alleles, glomerular deposits, reduced serum levels, and occasional reports of retinal drusen. This study examined drusen in SLE and their clinical significance.

Methods: This cross-sectional observational study compared individuals with SLE recruited from renal and rheumatology clinics with hospital controls.

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Gitelman syndrome is a rare inherited renal tubular disorder with features that resemble thiazide use, including a hypokalemic metabolic alkalosis, hypomagnesemia, hypocalciuria and a low or normal blood pressure, hyperreninemia and hyperaldosteronism. Treatment is primarily correction of the potassium and magnesium levels. The diagnosis is confirmed with genetic testing but Gitelman syndrome is often not suspected.

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Massively parallel sequencing identifies pathogenic variants in the genes affected in Alport syndrome (COL4A3-COL4A5) in as many as 30% of individuals with focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS), 10% of those with kidney failure of unknown cause, and 20% with familial immunoglobulin A (IgA) glomerulonephritis. FSGS associated with COL4A3-COL4A5 variants is usually present by the onset of kidney failure and may develop because the abnormal glomerular membranes result in podocyte loss and secondary hyperfiltration. The association of COL4A3-COL4A5 variants with kidney failure or IgA glomerulonephritis may be coincidental.

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