Publications by authors named "Shillington A"

E3 ubiquitin ligases have been linked to developmental diseases including autism, Angelman syndrome (UBE3A), and Johanson-Blizzard syndrome (JBS) (UBR1). Here, we report variants in the E3 ligase UBR5 in 29 individuals presenting with a neurodevelopmental syndrome that includes developmental delay, autism, intellectual disability, epilepsy, movement disorders, and/or genital anomalies. Their phenotype is distinct from JBS due to the absence of exocrine pancreatic insufficiency and the presence of autism, epilepsy, and, in some probands, a movement disorder.

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  • RORA is a gene linked to the development and function of the cerebellum, and this study explores the largest group of individuals with RORA-related neurodevelopmental disorders (RORA-NDD).
  • The study involved 40 participants with various pathogenic variants of RORA, revealing a range of clinical features including developmental and intellectual disabilities, as well as cerebellar symptoms that can vary in onset and severity.
  • Findings indicate that certain missense variants are associated with more severe cerebellar issues, and common elements of RORA-NDD include developmental disabilities, cerebellar symptoms, and different types of myoclonic epilepsy.
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Individuals with monoallelic pathogenic variants in the histone lysine methyltransferase DOT1L display global developmental delay and varying congenital anomalies. However, the impact of monoallelic loss of remains unclear. Here, we present a largely female cohort of 11 individuals with variants with developmental delays and dysmorphic facial features.

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  • The JAVELIN Bladder 100 trial demonstrated that avelumab, used as a first-line maintenance therapy, improves overall survival and progression-free survival in patients with advanced urothelial carcinoma after platinum-based chemotherapy.
  • The PATRIOT-II study analyzed real-world outcomes of avelumab in 160 patients across various healthcare centers, emphasizing survival, safety, and resource use over a median follow-up of 16 months.
  • Findings indicated a median progression-free survival of 5.4 months and overall survival of 24.4 months, with some patients experiencing treatment-related adverse effects, supporting the continued use of avelumab in similar patient populations.
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Despite the litany of pathogenic variants linked to neurodevelopmental disorders (NDD) including autism (ASD) and intellectual disability , our understanding of the underlying mechanisms caused by risk genes remain unclear. Here, we leveraged a human pluripotent stem cell model to uncover the neurodevelopmental consequences of mutations in , a newly implicated risk gene . ZMYND11, known for its tumor suppressor function, encodes a histone-reader that recognizes sites of transcriptional elongation and acts as a co-repressor .

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Introduction: Lateral meningocele syndrome (LMS), also known as Lehman syndrome, is caused by pathogenic variants in exon 33 of . Variants in this final exon of interrupt the regulatory PEST domain, leading to enhanced signaling due to prolonged cellular half-life. Individuals with LMS are expected to have multiple lateral meningoceles, developmental delay, neonatal hypotonia, dysmorphic facial features, and feeding difficulties.

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Purpose: Spastic paraplegia, intellectual disability, nystagmus, and obesity syndrome (SINO) is a rare autosomal dominant condition caused by heterozygous variants in KIDINS220. A total of 12 individuals are reported, comprising 8 with SINO and 4 with an autosomal recessive condition attributed to biallelic KIDINS220 variants.

Methods: In our international cohort, we have included 14 individuals, carrying 13 novel pathogenic KIDINS220 variants in heterozygous form.

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  • X-linked creatine transporter deficiency results from mutations in the SLC6A8 gene, leading to neuropsychiatric issues due to reduced creatine uptake in the body.
  • Treatment with creatine, arginine, and glycine is suggested to help manage symptoms, with limited prior cases documented for females.
  • A case study of a female patient showed significant improvement in symptoms and brain creatine levels after 8 months of supplementation, supporting its use in female patients with this condition.
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Major clinical events (MCEs) related to long-chain fatty acid oxidation disorders (LC-FAOD) in triheptanoin clinical trials include inpatient or emergency room (ER) visits for three major clinical manifestations: rhabdomyolysis, hypoglycemia, and cardiomyopathy. However, outcomes data outside of LC-FAOD clinical trials are limited. The non-interventional cohort LC-FAOD Odyssey study examines data derived from US medical records and patient reported outcomes to quantify LC-FAOD burden according to management strategy including MCE frequency and healthcare resource utilization (HRU).

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Objective: Catatonia is a distinct and severe medical syndrome comprising motor, somatic, and psychiatric symptoms that is reported in upwards of 17% of young patients with autism spectrum disorders. Clinical experience indicates catatonia is often under-recognized in this clinical population. Here we characterize the clinical presentation of catatonia in patients with and without neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs) including autism, including the time from symptom onset to diagnosis of catatonia.

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Current clinician-rated tardive dyskinesia (TD) symptom scales have not addressed the expanding clinical signs and functional impact of TD. The study objective was to develop and test the reliability of a new integrated instrument. A movement disorder neurologist devised the outline of the rating scale.

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The bromodomain adjacent to zinc finger 2B (BAZ2B) gene encodes a chromatin remodeling protein that has been shown to perform a variety of regulatory functions. It has been proposed that loss of BAZ2B function is associated with neurodevelopmental phenotypes, and some recurrent structural birth defects and dysmorphic features have been documented among individuals carrying heterozygous loss-of-function BAZ2B variants. However, additional evidence is needed to confirm that these phenotypes are attributable to BAZ2B deficiency.

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Rett Syndrome (RTT) is a neurodevelopmental disorder caused by pathogenic variants in the gene. While the majority of RTT-causing variants are clustered in the methyl-CpG binding domain and NCoR/SMRT interaction domain, we report a female patient with a functionally uncharacterized variant in the C-terminal domain, c.1030C>T (R344W).

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Background: Data regarding care access and outcomes in Black/Indigenous/People of Color/Hispanic (BIPOC/H) individuals is limited. This study evaluated care barriers, disease status, and outcomes among a diverse population of White/non-Hispanic (W/NH) and BIPOC/H inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients at a large U.S.

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Catatonia occurs at high rates in idiopathic and syndromic neurodevelopmental disorders. At our institution's multidisciplinary catatonia clinic, clinical genetic testing (including microarray, fragile X PCR and methylation, autism/ID expanded panels, and exome sequencing) was commonly completed as part of clinical workup on patients with co-occurring neurodevelopmental disorders and catatonia (performed in 36/48 cases or 75%). This testing identified a pathogenic or likely pathogenic finding in 15/36 patients (42%).

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Purpose: Coffin-Siris and Nicolaides-Baraitser syndromes are recognizable neurodevelopmental disorders caused by germline variants in BAF complex subunits. The SMARCC2 BAFopathy was recently reported. Herein, we present clinical and molecular data on a large cohort.

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Ryanodine receptor type 1-related disorder (RYR1-RD) is the most common subgroup of congenital myopathies with a wide phenotypic spectrum ranging from mild hypotonia to lethal fetal akinesia. Genetic testing for myopathies is imperative as the diagnosis informs counseling regarding prognosis and recurrence risk, treatment options, monitoring, and clinical management. However, diagnostic challenges exist as current options are limited to clinical suspicion prompting testing including: single gene sequencing or familial variant testing, multi-gene panels, exome, genome sequencing, and invasive testing including muscle biopsy.

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Introduction: The patterns of care and attrition of locally advanced or metastatic urothelial carcinoma (la/mUC) patients eligible for systemic therapy following PD-1/L1 inhibitors are unclear. The objective of this study was to evaluate the clinical characteristics and treatment patterns among patients with la/mUC following discontinuation of first-line (1L) or second-line (2L) PD-1/L1 inhibitor therapy.

Methods: An ambispective, multisite, chart review study was conducted in the United States, including patients with la/mUC.

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Neurodevelopmental disorders including autism spectrum disorder, intellectual disability, and global developmental delay are among the most common indications for referral to clinical genetics evaluation; and clinical genetic testing is indicated for people with neurodevelopmental disorders. There are known barriers to care in accessing clinical genetics evaluation for this patient population. We created a collaborative psychiatric-genetics consultation service and psychiatric-genetics outpatient clinic with the goal to improve care delivery to patients with neurodevelopmental disorders.

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Objective: To describe a family with primary familial brain calcifications (PFBCs) and leukoencephalopathy associated with a novel variant in .

Methods: We present 3 generations of a family with PFBC associated with a previously unreported variant in .

Results: A 24-year-old woman with migraine, bipolar disorder, and functional neurologic disorder was found to have bilateral calcifications of the basal ganglia and frontally predominant periventricular white matter disease.

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The purpose of this study was to quantitate motor performance in 196 genetically confirmed steroid-naïve boys with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), to evaluate the test-retest reliability of measures of motor performance in young DMD boys, and to assess correlations among the different functional outcomes including timed tests. Boys aged 4-7 years were recruited in the FOR-DMD study, a comparative effectiveness study of different steroid regimens in DMD. Eligible boys had to be able to rise from the floor independently and to perform pulmonary function testing consistently.

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Background: A neurodevelopmental syndrome was recently reported in four patients with heterozygous missense variants in the high-mobility-group (HMG) DNA-binding domain. The present study aimed to consolidate clinical and genetic knowledge of this syndrome.

Methods: We newly identified 17 patients with variants, predicted variant pathogenicity using in silico tests and in vitro functional assays and analysed the patients' phenotypes.

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Background: Defects in the RYR1 (OMIM#180901) gene lead to Ryanodine receptor type 1-related myopathies (RYR1-RM); the most common subgroup of congenital myopathies.

Methods: Congenital myopathy presents a diagnostic challenge due to the need for multiple testing modalities to identify the many different genetic etiologies. In this case, the patient remained undiagnosed after whole-exome sequencing (WES), chromosomal microarray, methylation analysis, targeted deletion and duplication studies, and targeted repeat expansion studies.

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The dynein axonemal heavy chain 5 gene codes for a subunit of axonemal dynein necessary for ciliary motor function. Though research has elucidated the consequences of some variants in this gene, it is still unclear whether many variants in the locus are benign or pathogenic due to the rarity of primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD, of which Kartagener's syndrome is a subset). Here, we introduce the case of an infant boy presenting with the classical findings of PCD along with visceral heterotaxia and neonatal cholestasis.

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ZMYND11 is the critical gene in chromosome 10p15.3 microdeletion syndrome, a syndromic cause of intellectual disability. The phenotype of ZMYND11 variants has recently been extended to autism and seizures.

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