60 results on '"Mistry, Pramod"'
Search Results
2. Osteonecrosis in Gaucher disease in the era of multiple therapies: Biomarker set for risk stratification from a tertiary referral center.
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Basiri, Mohsen, Ghaffari, Mohammad E., Jiapeng Ruan, Murugesan, Vagishwari, Kleytman, Nathaniel, Belinsky, Glenn, Akhavan, Amir, Lischuk, Andrew, Lilu Guo, Klinger, Katherine, and Mistry, Pramod K.
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- 2023
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3. The Two Substrate Reduction Therapies for Type 1 Gaucher Disease Are Not Equivalent. Comment on Hughes et al. Switching between Enzyme Replacement Therapies and Substrate Reduction Therapies in Patients with Gaucher Disease: Data from the Gaucher Outcome Survey (GOS). J. Clin. Med. 2022, 11 , 5158
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Mistry, Pramod K., Kishnani, Priya S., Balwani, Manisha, Charrow, Joel M., Hull, Judy, Weinreb, Neal J., and Cox, Timothy M.
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GAUCHER'S disease - Published
- 2023
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4. Venglustat combined with imiglucerase for neurological disease in adults with Gaucher disease type 3: the LEAP trial.
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Schiffmann, Raphael, Cox, Timothy M, Dedieu, Jean-François, Gaemers, Sebastiaan J M, Hennermann, Julia B, Ida, Hiroyuki, Mengel, Eugen, Minini, Pascal, Mistry, Pramod, Musholt, Petra B, Scott, David, Sharma, Jyoti, and Peterschmitt, M Judith
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GAUCHER'S disease ,NEUROLOGICAL disorders ,GLYCOGEN storage disease type II ,ENZYME replacement therapy ,DRUG dosage ,FUNCTIONAL magnetic resonance imaging ,THROMBOPOIETIN receptors - Abstract
Gaucher disease type 3 is a chronic neuronopathic disorder with wide-ranging effects, including hepatosplenomegaly, anaemia, thrombocytopenia, skeletal disease and diverse neurological manifestations. Biallelic mutations in GBA1 reduce lysosomal acid β-glucosidase activity, and its substrates, glucosylceramide and glucosylsphingosine, accumulate. Enzyme replacement therapy and substrate reduction therapy ameliorate systemic features of Gaucher disease, but no therapies are approved for neurological manifestations. Venglustat is an investigational, brain-penetrant, glucosylceramide synthase inhibitor with potential to improve the disease by rebalancing influx of glucosylceramide with impaired lysosomal recycling. The Phase 2, open-label LEAP trial (NCT02843035) evaluated orally administered venglustat 15 mg once-daily in combination with maintenance dose of imiglucerase enzyme replacement therapy during 1 year of treatment in 11 adults with Gaucher disease type 3. Primary endpoints were venglustat safety and tolerability and change in concentration of glucosylceramide and glucosylsphingosine in CSF from baseline to Weeks 26 and 52. Secondary endpoints included change in plasma concentrations of glucosylceramide and glucosylsphingosine, venglustat pharmacokinetics in plasma and CSF, neurologic function, infiltrative lung disease and systemic disease parameters. Exploratory endpoints included changes in brain volume assessed with volumetric MRI using tensor-based morphometry, and resting functional MRI analysis of regional brain activity and connectivity between resting state networks. Mean (SD) plasma venglustat AUC
0-24 on Day 1 was 851 (282) ng•h/ml; Cmax of 58.1 (26.4) ng/ml was achieved at a median tmax 2.00 h. After once-daily venglustat, plasma concentrations (4 h post-dose) were higher compared with Day 1, indicating ∼2-fold accumulation. One participant (Patient 9) had low-to-undetectable venglustat exposure at Weeks 26 and 52. Based on mean plasma and CSF venglustat concentrations (excluding Patient 9), steady state appeared to be reached on or before Week 4. Mean (SD) venglustat concentration at Week 52 was 114 (65.8) ng/ml in plasma and 6.14 (3.44) ng/ml in CSF. After 1 year of treatment, median (inter-quartile range) glucosylceramide decreased 78% (72, 84) in plasma and 81% (77, 83) in CSF; median (inter-quartile range) glucosylsphingosine decreased 56% (41, 60) in plasma and 70% (46, 76) in CSF. Ataxia improved slightly in nine patients: mean (SD, range) total modified Scale for Assessment and Rating of Ataxia score decreased from 2.68 [1.54 (0.0 to 5.5)] at baseline to 1.55 [1.88 (0.0 to 5.0)] at Week 52 [mean change: −1.14 (95% CI: −2.06 to −0.21)]. Whole brain volume increased slightly in patients with venglustat exposure and biomarker reduction in CSF (306.7 ± 4253.3 mm3 ) and declined markedly in Patient 9 (−13894.8 mm3 ). Functional MRI indicated stronger connectivity at Weeks 26 and 52 relative to baseline between a broadly distributed set of brain regions in patients with venglustat exposure and biomarker reduction but not Patient 9, although neurocognition, assessed by Vineland II, deteriorated in all domains over time, which illustrates disease progression despite the intervention. There were no deaths, serious adverse events or discontinuations. In adults with Gaucher disease type 3 receiving imiglucerase, addition of once-daily venglustat showed acceptable safety and tolerability and preliminary evidence of clinical stability with intriguing but intrinsically inconsistent signals in selected biomarkers, which need to be validated and confirmed in future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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5. Cancer risk and gammopathies in 2123 adults with Gaucher disease type 1 in the International Gaucher Group Gaucher Registry.
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Rosenbloom, Barry E., Cappellini, Maria Domenica, Weinreb, Neal J., Dragosky, Marta, Revel‐Vilk, Shoshana, Batista, Julie L., Sekulic, Davorka, and Mistry, Pramod K.
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- 2022
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6. Neuroinflammation in neuronopathic Gaucher disease: Role of microglia and NK cells, biomarkers, and response to substrate reduction therapy.
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Boddupalli, Chandra Sekhar, Nair, Shiny, Belinsky, Glenn, Gans, Joseph, Teeple, Erin, Tri-Hung Nguyen, Mehta, Sameet, Lilu Guo, Kramer, Martin L., Jiapeng Ruan, Honggge Wang, Davison, Matthew, Kumar, Dinesh, Vidyadhara, D. J., Bailin Zhang, Klinger, Katherine, and Mistry, Pramod K.
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- 2022
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7. Transformative effect of a Humanitarian Program for individuals affected by rare diseases: building support systems and creating local expertise.
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Verma, I. C., El-Beshlawy, A., Tylki-Szymańska, A., Martins, A., Duan, Y.-L., Collin-Histed, T., van der Linde, M. Schoneveld, Mansour, R., Dũng, V. C., and Mistry, Pramod K.
- Abstract
Rare diseases affect > 400 million people globally with a disproportionate burden falling on children, resulting in high morbidity and mortality rates. Affected individuals in some under-resourced countries have limited access to expert care or treatments; moreover, they suffer long diagnostic journeys during which debilitating and life-threatening complications occur. Lysosomal storage disorders (LSD) are prototype rare diseases due, in the main, to inherited deficiencies of lysosomal enzymes/transporters that affect up to 1 in 5000 newborns. Recognizing the need to provide treatment access to people with LSDs everywhere, a collaborative partnership was pioneered and set up 30 years ago. Partnering with local authorities, non-government organizations across six continents, local as well as international experts, a robust, sustainable Humanitarian Program emerged that now represents the most enduring charitable access program for LSD treatment. Here we present the history, process, lasting beneficial effect of the program to develop healthcare systems and infrastructures, and the lessons learned from addressing major unmet needs for LSDs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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8. Clinical outcomes after 4.5 years of eliglustat therapy for Gaucher disease type 1: Phase 3 ENGAGE trial final results.
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Mistry, Pramod K., Lukina, Elena, Ben Turkia, Hadhami, Shankar, Suma P., Baris Feldman, Hagit, Ghosn, Marwan, Mehta, Atul, Packman, Seymour, Lau, Heather, Petakov, Milan, Assouline, Sarit, Balwani, Manisha, Danda, Sumita, Hadjiev, Evgueniy, Ortega, Andres, Foster, Meredith C., Gaemers, Sebastiaan J. M., and Peterschmitt, M. Judith
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- 2021
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9. Real‐world effectiveness of eliglustat in treatment‐naïve and switch patients enrolled in the International Collaborative Gaucher Group Gaucher Registry.
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Mistry, Pramod K., Balwani, Manisha, Charrow, Joel, Kishnani, Priya, Niederau, Claus, Underhill, Lisa H., and McClain, Monica R.
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- 2020
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10. Update on Alpha‐1 Antitrypsin Deficiency in Liver Disease.
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Narayanan, Praveena and Mistry, Pramod K.
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- 2020
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11. Organic Solute Transporter Alpha Deficiency: A Disorder With Cholestasis, Liver Fibrosis, and Congenital Diarrhea.
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Gao, Emily, Cheema, Huma, Waheed, Nadia, Mushtaq, Iqra, Erden, Nihan, Nelson‐Williams, Carol, Jain, Dhanpat, Soroka, Carol J., Boyer, James L., Khalil, Youssef, Clayton, Peter T., Mistry, Pramod K., Lifton, Richard P., and Vilarinho, Sílvia
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- 2020
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12. The road to biosimilars in rare diseases ‐ ongoing lessons from Gaucher disease.
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Drelichman, Guillermo, Castañeda‐Hernández, Gilberto, Cem Ar, Muhlis, Dragosky, Marta, Garcia, Ricardo, Lee, Howard, Moiseev, Sergey, Naderi, Majid, Rosenbaum, Hanna, Žnidar, Irena, Zuluaga, Andrés Felipe, Freisens, Selena, and Mistry, Pramod K.
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- 2020
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13. P1588: LONG‐TERM REAL‐WORLD EFFECTIVENESS OF ELIGLUSTAT IN TREATMENT‐NAÏVE AND SWITCH PATIENTS ENROLLED IN THE INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATIVE GAUCHER GROUP (ICGG) GAUCHER REGISTRY.
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Mistry, Pramod, Balwani, Manisha, Charrow, Joel, Lorber, Jeremy, Niederau, Claus, Carwile, Jenny, Uslu, Sefika, and Kishnani, Priya S.
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- 2023
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14. Exome Sequencing in Clinical Hepatology.
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Vilarinho, Sílvia and Mistry, Pramod K.
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- 2019
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15. Hepatocellular carcinoma in Gaucher disease: an international case series.
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Regenboog, Martine, van Dussen, Laura, Verheij, Joanne, Weinreb, Neal J., Santosa, David, vom Dahl, Stephan, Häussinger, Dieter, Müller, Meike N., Canbay, Ali, Rigoldi, Miriam, Piperno, Alberto, Dinur, Tama, Zimran, Ari, Mistry, Pramod K., Salah, Karima Yousfi, Belmatoug, Nadia, Kuter, David J., and Hollak, Carla E. M.
- Abstract
Gaucher disease (GD) is associated with an increased risk for malignancies. Next to hematological malignancies, the development of solid tumors in several organs has been described. The liver is one of the major storage sites involved in GD pathogenesis, and is also affected by liver-specific complications. In this case series, we describe 16 GD type 1 (GD1) patients from eight different referral centers around the world who developed hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Potential factors contributing to the increased HCC risk in GD patients are studied. Eleven patients had undergone a splenectomy in the past. Liver cirrhosis, one of the main risk factors for the development of HCC, was present in nine out of 14 patients for whom data was available. Three out of seven examined patients showed a transferrin saturation > 45%. In these three patients the presence of iron overload after histopathological examination of the liver was shown. Chronic hepatitis C infection was present in three of 14 examined cases. We summarized all findings and made a comparison to the literature. We recommend that GD patients, especially those with prior splenectomy or iron overload, be evaluated for signs of liver fibrosis and if found to be monitored for HCC development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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16. Diagnosis and Management of Gaucher Disease in India - Consensus Guidelines of the Gaucher Disease Task Force of the Society for Indian Academy of Medical Genetics and the Indian Academy of Pediatrics.
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Puri, Ratna Dua, Kapoor, Seema, Kishnani, Priya S., Dalal, Ashwin, Gupta, Neerja, Muranjan, Mamta, Phadke, Shubha R., Sachdeva, Anupam, Verma, Ishwar C., Mistry, Pramod K., and Gaucher Disease Task Force
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GAUCHER'S disease diagnosis ,MEDICAL genetics ,JUVENILE diseases ,PEDIATRICS ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Justification: Gaucher disease (GD) is amongst the most frequently occurring lysosomal storage disorder in all ethnicities. The clinical manifestations and natural history of GD is highly heterogeneous with extreme geographic and ethnic variations. The literature on GD has paucity of information and optimal management guidelines for Indian patients.Process: Gaucher Disease Task Force was formed under the auspices of the Society for Indian Academy of Medical Genetics. Invited experts from various specialties formulated guidelines for the management of patients with GD. A writing committee was formed and the draft guidelines were circulated by email to all members for comments and inputs. The guidelines were finalized in December 2016 at the annual meeting of the Indian Academy of Medical Genetics.Objectives: These guidelines are intended to serve as a standard framework for treating physicians and the health care systems for optimal management of Gaucher disease in India and to define unique needs of this patient population.Recommendations: Manifestations of GD are protean and a high index of suspicion is essential for timely diagnosis. Patients frequently experience diagnostic delays during which severe irreversible complications occur. Leucocyte acid β-glucosidase activity is mandatory for establishing the diagnosis of Gaucher disease; molecular testing can help identify patients at risk of neuronopathic disease. Enzyme replacement therapy for type 1 and type 3 Gaucher disease is the standard of care. Best outcomes are achieved by early initiation of therapy before onset of irreversible complications. However, in setting of progressive neurological symptoms such as seizures and or/neuroregression, ERT is not recommended, as it cannot cross the blood brain barrier. The recommendations herein are for diagnosis, for initiation of therapy, therapeutic goals, monitoring and follow up of patients. We highlight that prevention of recurrence of the disease through genetic counseling and prenatal diagnosis is essential in India, due to uniformly severe phenotypes encountered in our population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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17. Inherited Metabolic Disorders: Efficacy of Enzyme Assays on Dried Blood Spots for the Diagnosis of Lysosomal Storage Disorders.
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Verma, Jyotsna, Thomas, Divya C., Kasper, David C., Sharma, Sandeepika, Puri, Ratna D., Bijarnia-Mahay, Sunita, Mistry, Pramod K., and Verma, Ishwar C.
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- 2017
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18. Outcomes after 18 months of eliglustat therapy in treatment-naïve adults with Gaucher disease type 1: The phase 3 ENGAGE trial.
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Mistry, Pramod K., Lukina, Elena, Ben Turkia, Hadhami, Shankar, Suma P., Baris, Hagit, Ghosn, Marwan, Mehta, Atul, Packman, Seymour, Pastores, Gregory, Petakov, Milan, Assouline, Sarit, Balwani, Manisha, Danda, Sumita, Hadjiev, Evgueniy, Ortega, Andres, Gaemers, Sebastiaan J. M., Tayag, Regina, and Peterschmitt, M. Judith
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- 2017
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19. Glucosylsphingosine Promotes α-Synuclein Pathology in Mutant GBA-Associated Parkinson's Disease.
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Taguchi, Yumiko V., Jun Liu, Jiapeng Ruan, Pacheco, Joshua, Xiaokui Zhang, Abbasi, Justin, Keutzer, Joan, Mistry, Pramod K., and Chandra, Sreeganga S.
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PARKINSON'S disease patients ,PARKINSON'S disease treatment ,ALPHA-synuclein ,PATHOLOGY ,GAUCHER'S disease ,SPHINGOLIPIDS - Abstract
Glucocerebrosidase 1 (GBA) mutations responsible for Gaucher disease (GD) are the most common genetic risk factor for Parkinson's disease (PD). Although the genetic link between GD and PD is well established, the underlying molecular mechanism(s) are not well understood. We propose that glucosylsphingosine, a sphingolipid accumulating in GD, mediates PD pathology in GBA-associated PD. We show that, whereas GD-related sphingolipids (glucosylceramide, glucosylsphingosine, sphingosine, sphingosine-1 -phosphate) promote α-synuclein aggregation in vitro, glucosylsphingosine triggers the formation of oligomeric α-synuclein species capable of templating in human cells and neurons. Using newly generated GD/PD mouse lines of either sex [Gba mutant (N370S, L444P, KO) crossed to α-synuclein transgenics], we show that Gba mutations predispose to PD through a loss-of-function mechanism. We further demonstrate that glucosylsphingosine specifically accumulates in young GD/PD mouse brain. With age, brains exhibit glucosylceramide accumulations colocalized with α-synuclein pathology. These findings indicate that glucosylsphingosine promotes pathological aggregation of α-synuclein, increasing PD risk in GD patients and carriers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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20. Transformation in pretreatment manifestations of Gaucher disease type 1 during two decades of alglucerase/imiglucerase enzyme replacement therapy in the International Collaborative Gaucher Group (ICGG) Gaucher Registry.
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Mistry, Pramod K., Batista, Julie L., Andersson, Hans C., Balwani, Manisha, Burrow, Thomas Andrew, Charrow, Joel, Kaplan, Paige, Khan, Aneal, Kishnani, Priya S., Kolodny, Edwin H., Rosenbloom, Barry, Scott, C. Ronald, and Weinreb, Neal
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- 2017
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21. Plasma chitotriosidase activity versus CCL18 level for assessing type I Gaucher disease severity: protocol for a systematic review with meta-analysis of individual participant data.
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Raskovalova, Tatiana, Deegan, Patrick B., Yang, Ruby, Pavlova, Elena, Stirnemann, Jérome, Labarère, José, Zimran, Ari, Mistry, Pramod K., and Berger, Marc
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GAUCHER'S disease ,LYSOSOMES ,GLUCOSIDASES ,ENZYMES ,CHEMOKINES - Abstract
Background: Gaucher disease (GD) is an autosomal recessive lysosomal storage disorder caused by deficiency in acid beta-glucosidase. GD exhibits a wide clinical spectrum of disease severity with an unpredictable natural course. Plasma chitotriosidase activity and CC chemokine ligand 18 (CCL18) have been exchangeably used for monitoring GD activity and response to enzyme replacement therapy in conjunction with clinical assessment. Yet, a large-scale head-to-head comparison of these two biomarkers is currently lacking. We propose a collaborative systematic review with meta-analysis of individual participant data (IPD) to compare the accuracy of plasma chitotriosidase activity and CCL18 in assessing type I (i.e., non-neuropathic) GD severity. Methods: Eligible studies include cross-sectional, cohort, and randomized controlled studies recording both plasma chitotriosidase activity and CCL18 level at baseline and/or at follow-up in consecutive children or adult patients with type I GD. Pre-specified surrogate outcomes reflecting GD activity include liver and spleen volume, hemoglobin concentration, platelet count, and symptomatic bone events with imaging confirmation. Primary studies will be identified by searching Medline (1995 onwards), EMBASE (1995 onwards), and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL). Electronic search will be complemented by contacting research groups in order to identify unpublished relevant studies. Where possible, IPD will be extracted from published articles. Corresponding authors will be invited to collaborate by supplying IPD. The methodological quality of retrieved studies will be appraised for each study outcome, using a checklist adapted from the Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies-2 tool. The primary outcome will be a composite of liver volume >1.25 multiple of normal (MN), spleen volume >5 MN, hemoglobin concentration <11 g/dL, or platelet count <100 x 10
9 /L. Effect size estimates for biomarker comparative accuracy in predicting outcomes will be reported as differences in areas under receiver operating characteristic curves along with 95% confidence intervals. Effect size estimates will be reported as (weighted) mean differences along with 95% confidence intervals for each biomarker according to outcomes. IPD meta-analysis will be conducted with both one- and two-stage approaches. Discussion: Valid and precise accuracy estimates will be derived for CCL18 relative to plasma chitotriosidase activity in discriminating patients according to GD severity. Systematic review registration: PROSPERO 2015 CRD42015027243 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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22. Glucosylsphingosine is a key biomarker of Gaucher disease.
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Murugesan, Vagishwari, Chuang, Wei-Lien, Liu, Jun, Lischuk, Andrew, Kacena, Katherine, Lin, Haiqun, Pastores, Gregory M., Yang, Ruhua, Keutzer, Joan, Zhang, Kate, and Mistry, Pramod K.
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- 2016
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23. Case series and literature review of skeletal tumors and their incidence in the Gaucher disease population.
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Murugesan, Vagishwari, Lischuk, Andrew, Haims, Andrew, Lackman, Richard, Brooks, John S., Mankin, Henry, and Mistry, Pramod K.
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- 2016
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24. The Role of ARF6 in Biliary Atresia.
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Ningappa, Mylarappa, So, Juhoon, Glessner, Joseph, Ashokkumar, Chethan, Ranganathan, Sarangarajan, Min, Jun, Higgs, Brandon W., Sun, Qing, Haberman, Kimberly, Schmitt, Lori, Vilarinho, Silvia, Mistry, Pramod K., Vockley, Gerard, Dhawan, Anil, Gittes, George K., Hakonarson, Hakon, Jaffe, Ronald, Subramaniam, Shankar, Shin, Donghun, and Sindhi, Rakesh
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ADP-ribosylation factors ,BILIARY atresia ,PHENOTYPES ,DISEASE susceptibility ,BILE duct physiology ,SINGLE nucleotide polymorphisms ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Background & Aims: Altered extrahepatic bile ducts, gut, and cardiovascular anomalies constitute the variable phenotype of biliary atresia (BA). Methods: To identify potential susceptibility loci, Caucasian children, normal (controls) and with BA (cases) at two US centers were compared at >550000 SNP loci. Systems biology analysis was carried out on the data. In order to validate a key gene identified in the analysis, biliary morphogenesis was evaluated in 2-5-day post-fertilization zebrafish embryos after morpholino-antisense oligonucleotide knockdown of the candidate gene ADP ribosylation factor-6 (ARF6, Mo-arf6). Results: Among 39 and 24 cases at centers 1 and 2, respectively, and 1907 controls, which clustered together on principal component analysis, the SNPs rs3126184 and rs10140366 in a 3’ flanking enhancer region for ARF6 demonstrated higher minor allele frequencies (MAF) in each cohort, and 63 combined cases, compared with controls (0.286 vs. 0.131, P = 5.94x10
-7 , OR 2.66; 0.286 vs. 0.13, P = 5.57x10-7 , OR 2.66). Significance was enhanced in 77 total cases, which included 14 additional BA genotyped at rs3126184 only (p = 1.58x10-2 , OR = 2.66). Pathway analysis of the 1000 top-ranked SNPs in CHP cases revealed enrichment of genes for EGF regulators (p<1 x10-7 ), ERK/MAPK and CREB canonical pathways (p<1 x10-34 ), and functional networks for cellular development and proliferation (p<1 x10-45 ), further supporting the role of EGFR-ARF6 signaling in BA. In zebrafish embryos, Mo-arf6 injection resulted in a sparse intrahepatic biliary network, several biliary epithelial cell defects, and poor bile excretion to the gall bladder compared with uninjected embryos. Biliary defects were reproduced with the EGFR-blocker AG1478 alone or with Mo-arf6 at lower doses of each agent and rescued with arf6 mRNA. Conclusions: The BA-associated SNPs identify a chromosome 14q21.3 susceptibility locus encompassing the ARF6 gene. arf6 knockdown in zebrafish implicates early biliary dysgenesis as a basis for BA, and also suggests a role for EGFR signaling in BA pathogenesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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25. Understanding the natural history of Gaucher disease.
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Mistry, Pramod K., Belmatoug, Nadia, vom Dahl, Stephan, and Giugliani, Roberto
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- 2015
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26. Effect of oral eliglustat on splenomegaly in patients with Gaucher disease type 1: the ENGAGE randomized clinical trial.
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Mistry, Pramod K, Lukina, Elena, Ben Turkia, Hadhami, Amato, Dominick, Baris, Hagit, Dasouki, Majed, Ghosn, Marwan, Mehta, Atul, Packman, Seymour, Pastores, Gregory, Petakov, Milan, Assouline, Sarit, Balwani, Manisha, Danda, Sumita, Hadjiev, Evgueniy, Ortega, Andres, Shankar, Suma, Solano, Maria Helena, Ross, Leorah, and Angell, Jennifer
- Abstract
Importance: Gaucher disease type 1 is characterized by hepatosplenomegaly, anemia, thrombocytopenia, and skeletal disease. A safe, effective oral therapy is needed.Objective: To determine whether eliglustat, a novel oral substrate reduction therapy, safely reverses clinical manifestations in untreated adults with Gaucher disease type 1.Design, Setting, and Participants: Phase 3, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial conducted at 18 sites in 12 countries from November 2009 to July 2012 among eligible patients with splenomegaly plus thrombocytopenia and/or anemia. Of 72 patients screened, 40 were enrolled.Interventions: Patients were stratified by spleen volume and randomized 1:1 to receive eliglustat (50 or 100 mg twice daily; n = 20) or placebo (n = 20) for 9 months.Main Outcomes and Measures: The primary efficacy end point was percentage change in spleen volume in multiples of normal from baseline to 9 months; secondary efficacy end points were change in hemoglobin level and percentage changes in liver volume and platelet count.Results: All patients had baseline splenomegaly and thrombocytopenia (mostly moderate or severe), most had mild or moderate hepatomegaly, and 20% had mild anemia. Least-square mean spleen volume decreased by 27.77% (95% CI, -32.57% to -22.97%) in the eliglustat group (from 13.89 to 10.17 multiples of normal) vs an increase of 2.26% (95% CI, -2.54% to 7.06%) in the placebo group (from 12.50 to 12.84 multiples of normal) for an absolute treatment difference of -30.03% (95% CI, -36.82% to -23.24%; P < .001). For the secondary end points, the least-square mean absolute differences between groups all favored eliglustat, with a 1.22-g/dL increase in hemoglobin level (95% CI, 0.57-1.88 g/dL; P < .001), 6.64% decrease in liver volume (95% CI, -11.37% to -1.91%; P = .007), and 41.06% increase in platelet count (95% CI, 23.95%-58.17%; P < .001). No serious adverse events occurred. One patient in the eliglustat group withdrew (non-treatment related); 39 of the 40 patients transitioned to an open-label extension study.Conclusions and Relevance: Among previously untreated adults with Gaucher disease type 1, treatment with eliglustat compared with placebo for 9 months resulted in significant improvements in spleen volume, hemoglobin level, liver volume, and platelet count. The clinical significance of these findings is uncertain, and more definitive conclusions about clinical efficacy and utility will require comparison with the standard treatment of enzyme replacement therapy as well as longer-term follow-up.Trial Registration: clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00891202. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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27. Effect of Oral Eliglustat on Splenomegaly in Patients With Gaucher Disease Type 1.
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Mistry, Pramod K., Lukina, Elena, Turkia, Hadhami Ben, Amato, Dominick, Baris, Hagit, Dasouki, Majed, Ghosn, Marwan, Mehta, Atul, Packman, Seymour, Pastores, Gregory, Petakov, Milan, Assouline, Sarit, Balwani, Manisha, Danda, Sumita, Hadjiev, Evgueniy, Ortega, Andres, Shankar, Suma, Solano, Maria Helena, Ross, Leorah, and Angell, Jennifer
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GAUCHER'S disease ,ANEMIA ,THROMBOCYTOPENIA ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,HEPATOMEGALY - Abstract
IMPORTANCE: Gaucher disease type 1 is characterized by hepatosplenomegaly, anemia, thrombocytopenia, and skeletal disease. A safe, effective oral therapy is needed. OBJECTIVE: To determine whether eliglustat, a novel oral substrate reduction therapy, safely reverses clinical manifestations in untreated adults with Gaucher disease type 1. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Phase 3, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial conducted at 18 sites in 12 countries from November 2009 to July 2012 among eligible patients with splenomegaly plus thrombocytopenia and/or anemia. Of 72 patients screened, 40 were enrolled. INTERVENTIONS: Patients were stratified by spleen volume and randomized 1:1 to receive eliglustat (50 or 100 mg twice daily; n = 20) or placebo (n = 20) for 9 months. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: The primary efficacy end point was percentage change in spleen volume in multiples of normal from baseline to 9 months; secondary efficacy end points were change in hemoglobin level and percentage changes in liver volume and platelet count. RESULTS: All patients had baseline splenomegaly and thrombocytopenia (mostly moderate or severe), most had mild or moderate hepatomegaly, and 20% had mild anemia. Least-square mean spleen volume decreased by 27.77% (95% CI, -32.57% to -22.97%) in the eliglustat group (from 13.89 to 10.17 multiples of normal) vs an increase of 2.26% (95% CI, -2.54% to 7.06%) in the placebo group (from 12.50 to 12.84 multiples of normal) for an absolute treatment difference of -30.03% (95% CI, -36.82% to -23.24%; P < .001). For the secondary end points, the least-square mean absolute differences between groups all favored eliglustat, with a 1.22-g/dL increase in hemoglobin level (95% CI, 0.57-1.88 g/dL; P < .001), 6.64% decrease in liver volume (95% CI, -11.37% to -1.91%; P = .007), and 41.06% increase in platelet count (95% CI, 23.95%-58.17%; P < .001). No serious adverse events occurred. One patient in the eliglustat group withdrew (non-treatment related); 39 of the 40 patients transitioned to an open-label extension study. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Among previously untreated adults with Gaucher disease type 1, treatment with eliglustat compared with placebo for 9 months resulted in significant improvements in spleen volume, hemoglobin level, liver volume, and platelet count. The clinical significance of these findings is uncertain, and more definitive conclusions about clinical efficacy and utility will require comparison with the standard treatment of enzyme replacement therapy as well as longer-term follow-up. TRIAL REGISTRATION: clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00891202. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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28. Glucocerebrosidase 2 gene deletion rescues type 1 Gaucher disease.
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Mistry, Pramod K., Jun Liu, Li Sun, Wei-Lien Chuang, Tony Yuen, Ruhua Yang, Ping Lu, Zhang, Kate, Jianhua Li, Keutzer, Joan, Stachnik, Agnes, Mennone, Albert, Boyer, James L., Dhanpat Jain, Brady, Roscoe O., New, Maria I., and Zaidi, Mone
- Subjects
GAUCHER'S disease ,LIPIDS ,GLYCOSPHINGOLIPIDS ,ORGANELLES ,CELLS ,PATHOLOGICAL physiology - Abstract
The inherited deficiency of the lysosomal glucocerebrosidase (GBA) due to mutations in the GBA gene results in Gaucher disease (GD). A vast majority of patients present with nonneuronopathic, type 1 GD (GD1). GBA deficiency causes the accumulation of two key sphingolipids, glucosylceramide (GL-1) and glucosylsphingosine (LysoGL-1), classically noted within the lysosomes of mononuclear phagocytes. How metabolites of GL-1 or LysoGL-1 produced by extralysosomal glucocerebrosidase GBA2 contribute to the GD1 pathophysiology is not known. We recently recapitulated hepatosplenomegaly, cytopenia, hypercytokinemia, and the bone-formation defect of human GD1 through conditional deletion of Gba in Mx1-Cre
+ :GD1 mice. Here we show that the deletion of Gba2 significantly rescues the GD1 clinical phenotype, despite enhanced elevations in GL-1 and LysoGL-1. Most notably, the reduced bone volume and bone formation rate are normalized. These results suggest that metabolism of GL-1 or LysoGL-1 into downstream bioactive lipids is a major contributor to the bone-formation defect. Direct testing revealed a strong inhibition of osteoblast viability by nanomolar concentrations of sphingosine, but not of ceramide. These findings are consistent with toxicity of high circulating sphingosine levels in GD1 patients, which decline upon enzyme-replacement therapy; serum ceramide levels remain unchanged. Together, complementary results from mice and humans affected with GD1 not only pinpoint sphingosine as being an osteoblast toxin, but also set forth Gba2 as a viable therapeutic target for the development of inhibitors to ameliorate certain disabling consequences of GD1. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2014
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29. Calcium ameliorates diarrhea in immunocompromised children.
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Cheng, Sam X, Bai, Harrison X, Gonzalez-Peralta, Regino, Mistry, Pramod K, and Gorelick, Fred S
- Published
- 2013
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30. Risk factors for fractures and avascular osteonecrosis in type 1 Gaucher disease: A study from the International Collaborative Gaucher Group (ICGG) Gaucher Registry.
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Khan, Aneal, Hangartner, Thomas, Weinreb, Neal J, Taylor, John S, and Mistry, Pramod K
- Abstract
We hypothesized that overall disease activity or the severity of involvement of individual disease compartments, as measured by clinical and surrogate markers, predict the risk of avascular osteonecrosis (AVN) or fractures in type 1 Gaucher disease (GD1). We applied our risk-set matched case-control method to identify four patient groups within the International Collaborative Gaucher Group (ICGG) Gaucher Registry based on the presence and absence of AVN and fractures. Characteristics of GD1 were examined by comparing the distributions of each risk factor in cases versus matched controls using conditional logistic regression to calculate adjusted odds ratios (OR). Potential risk factors included hematological and visceral parameters, GD1 biomarkers, white blood cells, GBA1 genotype, and spine and femur dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) Z-scores. In the total population of 5894 ICGG Gaucher Registry patients, 544 experienced at least one episode of AVN; 2008 reported no history of AVN. Clinical and surrogate markers of disease activity were similar in patients with and without AVN; patients with AVN were 1.6 times more likely to be anemic compared to matched controls (OR = 1.59; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.06-2.38, p < 0.05). For fractures, 319 patients suffered fractures and 1233 had no prior history of fractures. Clinical and surrogate markers of disease in patients with and without fractures were similar, except for mean lumbar spine DXA Z-scores. Among patients with fractures, 49.3% had DXA Z-scores ≤ −1 compared to 31.0% in the control group. Compared to controls with Z-scores > −1.0, GD1 patients exhibiting Z-scores ≤ −1 had an OR of 5.55 (95% CI, 1.81-17.02, p < 0.01) for fracture. In GD1, after controlling for gender, year of birth, treatment status, and splenectomy status, we identified new risk factors for AVN and fractures. Concurrent anemia was associated with an increased risk for AVN. Low bone mineral density of the lumbar spine was a strong risk factor for fractures of the spine and femur in GD1. © 2012 American Society for Bone and Mineral Research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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31. Gaucher disease gene GBA functions in immune regulation.
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Jun Liu, Halene, Stephanie, Mei Yang, Iqbal, Jameel, Ruhua Yang, Mehal, Wajahat Z., Wei-Lien Chuang, Jain, Dhanpat, Yuen, Tony, Li Sun, Zaidi, Mone, and Mistry, Pramod K.
- Subjects
GAUCHER'S disease ,IMMUNOREGULATION ,GLUCOSIDASES ,GENETIC mutation ,CLINICAL trials ,THYMOCYTES ,CELL proliferation ,CYTOKINES - Abstract
Inherited deficiency of acid β-glucosidase (GCase) due to biallelic mutations ¡n the GBA (glucosidase, β, acid) gene causes the classic manifestations of Gaucher disease (GD) involving the viscera, the skeleton, and the lungs. Clinical observations point to immune defects in GD beyond the accumulation of activated macrophages engorged with lysosomal glucosylceramide. Here, we show a plethora of immune cell aberrations in mice in which the GBA gene is deleted conditionally in hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). The thymus exhibited the earliest and most striking alterations reminiscent of impaired T-cell maturation, aberrant B-cell recruitment, enhanced antigen presentation, and impaired egress of mature thymocytes. These changes correlated strongly with disease severity. In contrast to the profound defects in the thymus, there were only limited cellular defects in peripheral lymphoid organs, mainly restricted to mice with severe disease. The cellular changes in GCase deficiency were accompanied by elevated T-helper (Th)1 and Th2 cytokines that also tracked with disease severity. Finally, the proliferation of GCase-deficient HSCs was inhibited significantly by both GL1 and Lyso-GL1, suggesting that the "supply" of early thymic progenitors from bone marrow may, in fact, be reduced in GBA deficiency. The results not only point to a fundamental role for GBA in immune regulation but also suggest that GBA mutations in GD may cause widespread immune dysregulation through the accumulation of substrates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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32. Risk factors associated with biliary pancreatitis in children.
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Ma MH, Bai HX, Park AJ, Latif SU, Mistry PK, Pashankar D, Northrup VS, Bhandari V, Husain SZ, Ma, Michael H, Bai, Harrison X, Park, Alexander J, Latif, Sahibzada U, Mistry, Pramod K, Pashankar, Dinesh, Northrup, Veronika S, Bhandari, Vineet, and Husain, Sohail Z
- Published
- 2012
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33. Genome-wide association study of N370S homozygous Gaucher disease reveals the candidacy of CLN8 gene as a genetic modifier contributing to extreme phenotypic variation.
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Zhang, Clarence K., Stein, Philip B., Liu, Jun, Wang, Zuoheng, Yang, Ruhua, Cho, Judy H., Gregersen, Peter K., Aerts, Johannes M.F.G., Zhao, Hongyu, Pastores, Gregory M., and Mistry, Pramod K.
- Published
- 2012
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34. Pulmonary vascular disease in Gaucher disease: clinical spectrum, determinants of phenotype and long-term outcomes of therapy.
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Lo, Sarah, Liu, Jun, Chen, F., Pastores, G., Knowles, J., Boxer, M., Aleck, Kirk, and Mistry, Pramod
- Abstract
Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) and hepatopulmonary syndrome (HPS) are rare pulmonary vascular complications of type 1 Gaucher disease (GD1). We examined GBA1 genotype, spleen status, Severity Score Index (SSI), and other patient characteristics as determinants of GD/PAH-HPS phenotype. We also examined the long-term outcomes of imiglucerase enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) +/− adjuvant therapies in 14 consecutive patients. We hypothesized a role of BMPR2 and ALK1 as genetic modifiers underlying GD/PAH-HPS phenotype. Median age at diagnosis of GD1 was 5 yrs (2-22); PAH was diagnosed at median 36 yrs (22-63). There was a preponderance of females (ratio 5:2). ERT was commenced at median 36.5 yrs (16-53) and adjuvant therapy at 36 yrs (24-57). GBA1 genotype was N370S homozygous in two patients, N370S heteroallelic in 12. Median SSI was 15 (7-20). All patients had undergone splenectomy at median age 12 yrs (2-30). In three patients, HPS was the initial presentation, and PAH developed after its resolution; in these three, HPS responded dramatically to ERT. In seven patients, sequencing of the coding regions of BMPR2 and ALK1 was undertaken: 3/7 were heterozygous for BMPR2 polymorphisms; none harbored ALK1 variants. With ERT (± adjuvant therapy), 5/14 improved dramatically, five remained stable, two worsened, and two died prematurely. In this largest series of GD/PAH-HPS patients, there is preponderance of females and N370S heteroallelic GBA1 genotype. Splenectomy appears essential to development of this phenotype. In some patients, HPS precedes PAH. BMPR2 and ALK1 appear not be modifier genes for this rare phenotype of GD. ERT +/− adjuvant therapy improves prognosis of this devastating GD phenotype. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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35. Evaluation of high density lipoprotein as a circulating biomarker of Gaucher disease activity.
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Stein, Philip, Yang, Ruhua, Liu, Jun, Pastores, Gregory, and Mistry, Pramod
- Abstract
Circulating biomarkers are important surrogates for monitoring disease activity in type I Gaucher disease (GD1). We and others have reported low high-density lipoprotein (HDL) in GD1. We assessed HDL cholesterol as a biomarker of GD1, with respect to its correlation with indicators of disease severity and its response to imiglucerase enzyme replacement therapy (ERT). In 278 consecutively evaluated GD1 patients, we correlated HDL cholesterol, chitotriosidase, and angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) with indicators of disease severity. Additionally, we measured the response of these biomarkers to ERT. HDL cholesterol was negatively correlated with spleen volume, liver volume, and GD severity score index; the magnitude of this association of disease severity with HDL cholesterol was similar to that for ACE and for chitotriosidase. Within individual patients monitored over many years, there was a strikingly strong correlation of HDL with liver and spleen volumes; there was a similarly strong correlation of chitotriosidase and ACE with disease severity in individual patients monitored serially over many years (chitotriosidase r = 0.96 to 0.98, ACE r = 0.88 to 0.94, and HDL r = −0.84 to −0.94, p < 0.001). ERT for 3 years resulted in a striking increase of HDL while serum levels of chitotriosidase and ACE decreased. Our results reveal markedly low HDL cholesterol in untreated GD1, a correlation with indicators of disease severity in GD1, and a rise towards normal after ERT. These findings suggest HDL cholesterol merits inclusion within the 'biomarker basket' for monitoring of patients with GD1. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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36. Reducing selection bias in case-control studies from rare disease registries.
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Cole, J Alexander, Taylor, John S, Hangartner, Thomas N, Weinreb, Neal J, Mistry, Pramod K, and Khan, Aneal
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RESEARCH bias ,RARE diseases ,GAUCHER'S disease treatment ,CEREBROSIDE metabolism disorders ,COHORT analysis - Abstract
Background: In clinical research of rare diseases, where small patient numbers and disease heterogeneity limit study design options, registries are a valuable resource for demographic and outcome information. However, in contrast to prospective, randomized clinical trials, the observational design of registries is prone to introduce selection bias and negatively impact the validity of data analyses. The objective of the study was to demonstrate the utility of case-control matching and the risk-set method in order to control bias in data from a rare disease registry. Data from the International Collaborative Gaucher Group (ICGG) Gaucher Registry were used as an example.Methods: A case-control matching analysis using the risk-set method was conducted to identify two groups of patients with type 1 Gaucher disease in the ICGG Gaucher Registry: patients with avascular osteonecrosis (AVN) and those without AVN. The frequency distributions of gender, decade of birth, treatment status, and splenectomy status were presented for cases and controls before and after matching. Odds ratios (and 95% confidence intervals) were calculated for each variable before and after matching.Results: The application of case-control matching methodology results in cohorts of cases (i.e., patients with AVN) and controls (i.e., patients without AVN) who have comparable distributions for four common parameters used in subject selection: gender, year of birth (age), treatment status, and splenectomy status. Matching resulted in odds ratios of approximately 1.00, indicating no bias.Conclusions: We demonstrated bias in case-control selection in subjects from a prototype rare disease registry and used case-control matching to minimize this bias. Therefore, this approach appears useful to study cohorts of heterogeneous patients in rare disease registries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2011
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37. A reappraisal of Gaucher disease-diagnosis and disease management algorithms.
- Author
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Mistry, Pramod K., Cappellini, Maria Domenica, Lukina, Elena, Özsan, Hayri, Mach Pascual, Sara, Rosenbaum, Hanna, Helena Solano, Maria, Spigelman, Zachary, Villarrubia, Jesús, Watman, Nora Patricia, and Massenkeil, Gero
- Published
- 2011
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38. Misdiagnosis of Niemann‐Pick disease type C as Gaucher disease.
- Author
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Lo, Sarah M., McNamara, Joseph, Seashore, Margherita R., and Mistry, Pramod K.
- Abstract
Abstract: Niemann‐Pick disease type C (NPC) is a model for inborn errors of metabolism whose gene product mediates molecular trafficking rather than catabolizing macromolecules, as in classic lipidoses. We report the case of an infant who presented with hepatosplenomegaly without neurological abnormalities. Decreased activity of acid β‐glucosidase and elevated serum chitotriosidase and tartrate‐resistant acid phosphatase on repeated measurements led to initial diagnosis of Gaucher disease (GD). Failure to respond to enzyme replacement therapy after one year, however, put the diagnosis in question. Cholesterol esterification assays in cultured skin fibroblasts and NPC gene analysis led to the correct diagnosis of NPC. The patient had markedly reduced cholesterol esterification and was a compound heterozygote for a known and a novel mutation in the NPC gene (395delC and 2068insTCCC), which are both predicted to lead to protein truncation. Although the full phenotype of NPC involves hepatosplenomegaly and neurodegenerative disease, the initial presentation in a pediatric patient may be restricted to visceral disease. Of interest, this patient had decreased activity of leukocyte acid β‐glucosidase activity and elevated serum chitotriosidase to levels often seen in GD. Although acid β‐glucosidase activity in leukocytes was low, it was in the normal range in skin fibroblasts. Therefore, diagnostic delay may occur in NPC due to false positive testing for GD. Diagnosis of NPC requires a high index of suspicion and should be considered in a patient with hepatosplenomegaly even in the absence of neurodevelopmental signs. Prompt diagnosis will become increasingly important as effective therapies are developed for NPC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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39. Focal splenic lesions in type I Gaucher disease are associated with poor platelet and splenic response to macrophage-targeted enzyme replacement therapy.
- Author
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Stein, Philip, Malhotra, Advitya, Haims, Andrew, Pastores, Gregory, and Mistry, Pramod
- Abstract
Focal splenic lesions (FSL) occur in Gaucher disease type I (GD1), but their clinical significance is not known. Previous studies estimated the prevalence of FSL at 4% (pediatric) to 33% (adult) of GD1 patients and reported an association with splenomegaly. We tested the hypothesis that the presence of FSL is associated with suboptimal response to macrophage-directed enzyme replacement therapy (ERT). Additionally we investigated whether FSL were associated with other phenotypic features of GD1. The splenic parenchyma was assessed by MRI performed for routine evaluation of GD1 in 239 consecutive GD1 patients with intact spleens. The prevalence of FSL was 18.4% (44/239). Following a mean of 3.5 years of ERT, platelet response was inferior among patients with FSL (80,700 ± 9,600 to 90,100 ± 7,200/mm , P = 0.2) compared to patients without FSL in whom there was a robust platelet response: 108,600 ± 5,670 to 150,200 ± 6,710/mm, P < 0.001. Compared to patients without FSL, patients harboring FSL had worse thrombocytopenia (platelet count: 83,700 ± 8,800 vs. 112,100 ± 4,200/mm, P = 0.004), greater frequency of pre-ERT splenomegaly, and greater post-ERT splenomegaly (8.5 ± 0.77 vs. 4.8 ± 0.25× normal, P < 0.001). Additionally, the prevalence of osteonecrosis was higher among patients with FSL compared to patients without FSL (38 vs. 20.7%, P = 0.026). FSL appear to be a determinant of response to ERT, suggesting studies comparing relative efficacy of newly emerging therapies for GD1 should adjust for this factor. Moreover, occurrences of FSL coincide with more severe manifestations of GD1 such as avascular osteonecrosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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40. Glucocerebrosidase gene-deficient mouse recapitulates Gaucher disease displaying cellular and molecular dysregulation beyond the macrophage.
- Author
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Mistry, Pramod K., Jun Liu, Mei Yang, Timothy Nottoli, McGrath, James, Jain, Dhanpat, Kate Zhang, Keutzer, Joan, Wei-Lein Chuang, Mehal, Wajahat Z., Hongyu Zhao, Aiping Lin, Mane, Shrikant, Xuan Liu, Peng, Yuan Z., Li, Jian H., Agrawal, Manasi, Ling-Ling Zhu, Harry C. Blair, and Lisa J. Robinson
- Subjects
GAUCHER'S disease ,PHAGOCYTES ,AUTOIMMUNE diseases ,PARKINSON'S disease ,OSTEOPOROSIS - Abstract
In nonneuronopathic type 1 Gaucher disease (GD1), mutations in the glucocerebrosidase gene (GBA1) gene result in glucocerebrosidase deficiency and the accumulation of its substrate, glucocerebroside (61-1), in the lysosomes of mononuclear phagocytes. This prevailing macrophage-centric view, however, does not explain emerging aspects of the disease, including malignancy, autoimmune disease, Parkinson disease, and osteoporosis. We condition- ally deleted the GBA1 gene in hematopoietic and mesenchymal cell lineages using an Mx1 promoter. Although this mouse fully recapitulated human GD1, cytokine measurements, microarray analysis, and cellular immunophenotyping together revealed widespread dysfunction not only of macrophages. but also of thymic T cells, dendritic cells, and osteoblasts. The severe osteoporosis was caused by a defect in osteoblastic bone formation arising from an inhibitory effect of the accumulated lipids LysoGL-1 and GL-1 on protein kinase C. This study provides direct evidence for the involvement in GD1 of multiple cell lineages, suggesting that cells other than macrophages may be worthwhile therapeutic targets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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41. Hyperferritinemia and iron overload in type 1 Gaucher disease.
- Author
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Stein, Philip, Yu, Hannah, Jain, Dhanpat, and Mistry, Pramod K.
- Published
- 2010
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42. Liver transplantation for inherited metabolic disorders of the liver.
- Author
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Moini, Maryam, Mistry, Pramod, and Schilsky, Michael L
- Published
- 2010
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43. High incidence of cholesterol gallstone disease in type 1 Gaucher disease: characterizing the biliary phenotype of type 1 Gaucher disease.
- Author
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Taddei, Tamar, Dziura, James, Chen, Shu, Yang, Ruhua, Hyogo, Hideyuki, Sullards, Cameron, Cohen, David, Pastores, Gregory, and Mistry, Pramod
- Abstract
In Gaucher disease (GD), lysosomal glucocerebrosidase deficiency results in glucosylceramide accumulation in macrophage lysosomes. Hepatocytes do not accumulate glucosylceramide due in part to biliary secretion. Although gallstones (GS) occur in type 1 Gaucher disease (GD1), the chemical nature of stones, their association with metabolic parameters, and whether bile composition is altered are not understood. We assessed the prevalence of GS, their chemical composition, biliary lipids, and associated metabolic factors. The study cohort comprised 417 patients comprehensively evaluated for GD1 severity. Ascertainment of GS, fasting lipoprotein profile, and bile lipid analyses were performed. The prevalence of GS in GD1 was 32%. Compared with men, the prevalence of GS was higher in women, increasing from 4.2% and 11.8% at age 20–29 years to 71% and 60% at age >70 years, respectively. Patients with GS were more likely to be asplenic ( p < 0.0001), older ( p < 0.0001), have higher low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol ( p = 0.002), and more severe GD1 disease compared with those without GS. On multiple logistic regression analysis, factors associated with GS were age ( p < 0.001), female sex ( p = 0.03), and splenectomy ( p = 0.005). Compared with the general population, prevalence of GS was ∼5-fold higher. Bile lipid analyses revealed cholesterol stones in five patients and pigment stones in one. Bile lipid composition was abnormal and contained glucosylceramide. Our results point to a metabolic syndrome in GD1 consisting of a propensity to cholesterol GS, low high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, and body mass index (BMI) associated with abnormal biliary lipid secretion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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44. Expanding spectrum of the association between Type 1 Gaucher disease and cancers: A series of patients with up to 3 sequential cancers of multiple types-Correlation with genotype and phenotype.
- Author
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Lo, Sarah M., Stein, Philip, Mullaly, Sean, Bar, Michael, Jain, Dhanpat, Pastores, Gregory M., and Mistry, Pramod K.
- Published
- 2010
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45. The risk of Parkinson’s disease in type 1 Gaucher disease.
- Author
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Bultron, Gilberto, Kacena, Katherine, Pearson, Daniel, Boxer, Michael, Yang, Ruhua, Sathe, Swati, Pastores, Gregory, and Mistry, Pramod
- Abstract
In Gaucher disease, defective lysosomal glucocerebrosidase due to mutations in the GBA1 gene results in lysosomal accumulation of glucocerebroside in mononuclear phagocytes and a multisystemic phenotype. Observations of occurrence of Parkinson’s disease in some patients with non-neuronopathic type 1 Gaucher disease (GD1) and their first degree relatives has led to the identification of GBA1 heterozygous mutations as a genetic risk factor for idiopathic Parkinson’s disease (PD). However, the magnitude of risk of PD in patients with known GD1 has not been determined, and it is not known whether GD1/PD represents a specific sub-phenotype of GD1 with distinctive genotype/phenotype characteristics. We estimated the risk of PD in a cohort of 444 consecutively evaluated patients with GD1 compared to that in the general population. Eleven patients developed parkinsonian syndrome during a 12-year follow-up period. The adjusted life-time risk ratio of PD in GD1 compared to that in the general population was 21.4 [95% confidence interval (95% CI) 10.7–38.3], with a higher risk in men compared to women. In our cohort, GD1/Parkinson’s disease phenotype (GD1/PD) was characterized by higher GD1 severity score, due to higher incidence of avascular osteonecrosis. The clinical spectrum of PD varied from mild to potentially life-threatening disease. All but one patient with GD1/PD phenotype had at least one N370S GBA1 allele. In conclusion, compared to the general population, patients with GD1 have an almost 20-fold increased life-time risk of developing PD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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46. Abnormal nonstoring capillary endothelium: a novel feature of Gaucher disease. Ultrastructural study of dermal capillaries.
- Author
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Hůlková, Helena, Poupětová, Helena, Harzer, Klaus, Mistry, Pramod, Aerts, Johannes, and Elleder, Milan
- Abstract
Ultrastructural study of skin biopsies in two cases of Gaucher disease (GD) patients (types II and III) revealed hitherto unknown alteration of the blood capillary endothelial cells (ECs) featured by hypertrophy and numerous subplasmalemmal microvesicles underneath both the apical and basal membranes. There was also prominent apical membrane folding with formation of filiform and large cytoplasmic projections, with occasional transcapillary cytoplasmic bridges. Similar, though less frequently expressed, changes were manifested at the basal membrane by numerous cytoplasmic projections into the subendothelial space. Regressive changes with EC breakdown were rare. Lysosomal storage was always absent. Besides EC hypertrophy, there was also increased EC density in the capillary lumen, leading to pronounced changes in capillary architecture with loose or incomplete EC anchoring. There were also signs of EC sprouting. Some pericytes displayed an increase in size and number of cytoplasmic processes, which often extended into distant pericapillary regions. The spectrum of changes suggests that a significant positive growth effect on EC occurs in GD. The putative mechanisms triggered by GBA1 deficiency leading to EC involvement are discussed. The authors are well aware of the fact the results, based on a nontraditional type of bioptic samples, are preliminary, but they are worth following, as further ultrastructural and functional studies of blood endothelium in GD may open a novel field in molecular cell pathophysiology of the disorder: endothelial dysfunction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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47. Timing of initiation of enzyme replacement therapy after diagnosis of type 1 Gaucher disease: effect on incidence of avascular necrosis.
- Author
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Mistry, Pramod K., Deegan, Patrick, Vellodi, Ashok, Cole, J. Alexander, Yeh, Michael, and Weinreb, Neal J.
- Subjects
GAUCHER'S disease diagnosis ,IDIOPATHIC femoral necrosis ,DISEASE complications ,DISEASE incidence ,SPLENECTOMY ,THERAPEUTIC use of enzymes ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Data from the International Collaborative Gaucher Group Gaucher Registry were analysed to assess the relationship between enzyme replacement therapy with imiglucerase (ERT) and incidence of avascular necrosis (AVN) in type 1 Gaucher disease (GD1), and to determine whether the time interval between diagnosis and initiation of ERT influences the incidence rate of AVN. All patients with GD1 enrolled in the Gaucher Registry who received ERT and did not report AVN prior to starting therapy ( n = 2700) were included. The incidence rate of AVN following initiation of ERT was determined. An incidence rate of AVN of 13·8 per 1000 person-years was observed in patients receiving ERT. Patients who initiated ERT within 2 years of diagnosis had an incidence rate of 8·1 per 1000 person-years; patients who started ERT ≥2 years after diagnosis had an incidence rate of 16·6 per 1000 person-years. The adjusted incidence rate ratio was 0·59 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0·36–0·96, P = 0·0343]. Splenectomy was an independent risk factor for AVN (adjusted incidence rate ratio 2·23, 95% CI 1·61–3·08, P < 0·0001). In conclusion, the risk of AVN was reduced among patients who initiated ERT within 2 years of diagnosis, compared to initiating treatment ≥2 years after diagnosis. A higher risk of AVN was observed among patients who had previously undergone splenectomy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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48. Protease activation during in vivo pancreatitis is dependent on calcineurin activation.
- Author
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Shah, Ahsan U., Sarwar, Amna, Orabi, Abrahim I., Gautam, Samir, Grant, Wayne M., Park, Alexander J., Shah, Adnan U., Jun Liu, Mistry, Pramod K., Jam, Dhanpat, and Husain, Sohail Z.
- Subjects
PANCREATIC acinar cells ,PROTEOLYTIC enzymes ,DIGESTIVE enzymes ,PHOSPHOPROTEIN phosphatases ,PANCREATITIS ,CALMODULIN ,CHOLECYSTOKININ - Abstract
The premature activation of digestive proenzymes, specifically proteases, within the pancreatic acinar cell is an early and critical event during acute pancreatitis. Our previous studies demonstrate that this activation requires a distinct pathological rise in cytosolic Ca
2+ . Furthermore, we have shown that a target of aberrant Ca2+ in acinar cells is the Ca2+ /calmodulin-dependent phosphatase calcineurin (PP2B). In this study, we hypothesized that PP2B mediates in vivo protease activation and pancreatitis severity. To test this, pancreatitis was induced in mice over 8 h by administering hourly intraperitoneal injections of the cholecystokinin analog caerulein (50 μg/kg). Treatment with the PP2B inhibitor FK506 at 1 and 8 h after pancreatitis induction reduced trypsin activities by greater than 50% (P < 0.005). Serum amylase and IL-6 was reduced by 86 and 84% relative to baseline (P < 0.0005) at 8 h, respectively. Histological severity of pancreatitis, graded on the basis of pancreatic edema, acinar cell vacuolization, inflammation, and apoptosis, was reduced early in the course of pancreatitis. Myeloperoxidase activity from both pancreas and lung was reduced by 93 and 83% relative to baseline, respectively (P < 0.05). These data suggest that PP2B is an important target of the aberrant acinar cell Ca2+ rise associated with pathological protease activation and pancreatitis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2009
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49. The underrecognized progressive nature of N370S Gaucher disease and assessment of cancer risk in 403 patients.
- Author
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Taddei, Tamar H., Kacena, Katherine A., Yang, Mei, Yang, Ruhua, Malhotra, Advitya, Boxer, Michael, Aleck, Kirk A., Rennert, Gadi, Pastores, Gregory M., and Mistry, Pramod K.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Life expectancy in Gaucher disease type 1.
- Author
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Weinreb, Neal J., Deegan, Patrick, Kacena, Katherine A., Mistry, Pramod, Pastores, Gregory M., Velentgas, Priscilla, and vom Dahl, Stephan
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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