160 results on '"Malpas CB"'
Search Results
2. Disease-modifying therapies in managing disability worsening in paediatric-onset multiple sclerosis: a longitudinal analysis of global and national registries
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Sharmin, S, Roos, I, Malpas, CB, Iaffaldano, P, Simone, M, Filippi, M, Havrdova, EK, Ozakbas, S, Morra, VB, Alroughani, R, Zaffaroni, M, Patti, F, Eichau, S, Salemi, G, Di Sapio, A, Inglese, M, Portaccio, E, Trojano, M, Amato, MP, Kalincik, T, Sharmin, S, Roos, I, Malpas, CB, Iaffaldano, P, Simone, M, Filippi, M, Havrdova, EK, Ozakbas, S, Morra, VB, Alroughani, R, Zaffaroni, M, Patti, F, Eichau, S, Salemi, G, Di Sapio, A, Inglese, M, Portaccio, E, Trojano, M, Amato, MP, and Kalincik, T
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: High-efficacy disease-modifying therapies have been proven to slow disability accrual in adults with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis. However, their impact on disability worsening in paediatric-onset multiple sclerosis, particularly during the early phases, is not well understood. We evaluated how high-efficacy therapies influence transitions across five disability states, ranging from minimal disability to gait impairment and secondary progressive multiple sclerosis, in people with paediatric-onset multiple sclerosis. METHODS: Longitudinal data were obtained from the international MSBase registry, containing data from people with multiple sclerosis from 151 centres across 41 countries, and the Italian Multiple Sclerosis and Related Disorders Register, containing data from people with multiple sclerosis from 178 Italian multiple sclerosis centres. People younger than 18 years at the onset of multiple sclerosis symptoms were included, provided they had a confirmed diagnosis of relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis and at least four Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) scores recorded within 12-month intervals. The primary outcome was the time to change in disability state: minimal disability (EDSS scores 0, 1·0, and 1·5), mild disability (EDSS scores 2·0 and 2·5), moderate disability (EDSS scores 3·0 and 3·5), gait impairment (EDSS scores ≥4·0), and clinician diagnosed secondary progressive multiple sclerosis. A multi-state model was constructed to simulate the natural course of multiple sclerosis, modelling the probabilities of both disability worsening and improvement simultaneously. The impact of high-efficacy disease-modifying therapies (alemtuzumab, cladribine, daclizumab, fingolimod, mitoxantrone, natalizumab, ocrelizumab, rituximab, or autologous haematopoietic stem cell transplantation) and low-efficacy disease-modifying therapies (dimethyl fumarate, glatiramer acetate, interferon beta, or teriflunomide), compared with no treatment, on
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- 2024
3. Variability of the response to immunotherapy among subgroups of patients with multiple sclerosis
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Diouf, I, Malpas, CB, Sharmin, S, Roos, I, Horakova, D, Havrdova, EK, Patti, F, Shaygannejad, V, Ozakbas, S, Izquierdo, G, Eichau, S, Onofrj, M, Lugaresi, A, Alroughani, R, Prat, A, Girard, M, Duquette, P, Terzi, M, Boz, C, Grand'Maison, F, Hamdy, S, Sola, P, Ferraro, D, Grammond, P, Turkoglu, R, Buzzard, K, Skibina, O, Yamout, B, Altintas, A, Gerlach, O, van Pesch, V, Blanco, Y, Maimone, D, Lechner-Scott, J, Bergamaschi, R, Karabudak, R, Iuliano, G, McGuigan, C, Cartechini, E, Barnett, M, Hughes, S, Sa, MJ, Solaro, C, Kappos, L, Ramo-Tello, C, Cristiano, E, Hodgkinson, S, Spitaleri, D, Soysal, A, Petersen, T, Slee, M, Butler, E, Granella, F, de Gans, K, McCombe, P, Ampapa, R, Van Wijmeersch, B, van der Walt, A, Butzkueven, H, Prevost, J, Sinnige, LGF, Sanchez-Menoyo, JL, Vucic, S, Laureys, G, Van Hijfte, L, Khurana, D, Macdonell, R, Gouider, R, Castillo-Trivino, T, Gray, O, Aguera-Morales, E, Al-Asmi, A, Shaw, C, Deri, N, Al-Harbi, T, Fragoso, Y, Csepany, T, Sempere, AP, Trevino-Frenk, I, Schepel, J, Moore, F, Kalincik, T, Diouf, I, Malpas, CB, Sharmin, S, Roos, I, Horakova, D, Havrdova, EK, Patti, F, Shaygannejad, V, Ozakbas, S, Izquierdo, G, Eichau, S, Onofrj, M, Lugaresi, A, Alroughani, R, Prat, A, Girard, M, Duquette, P, Terzi, M, Boz, C, Grand'Maison, F, Hamdy, S, Sola, P, Ferraro, D, Grammond, P, Turkoglu, R, Buzzard, K, Skibina, O, Yamout, B, Altintas, A, Gerlach, O, van Pesch, V, Blanco, Y, Maimone, D, Lechner-Scott, J, Bergamaschi, R, Karabudak, R, Iuliano, G, McGuigan, C, Cartechini, E, Barnett, M, Hughes, S, Sa, MJ, Solaro, C, Kappos, L, Ramo-Tello, C, Cristiano, E, Hodgkinson, S, Spitaleri, D, Soysal, A, Petersen, T, Slee, M, Butler, E, Granella, F, de Gans, K, McCombe, P, Ampapa, R, Van Wijmeersch, B, van der Walt, A, Butzkueven, H, Prevost, J, Sinnige, LGF, Sanchez-Menoyo, JL, Vucic, S, Laureys, G, Van Hijfte, L, Khurana, D, Macdonell, R, Gouider, R, Castillo-Trivino, T, Gray, O, Aguera-Morales, E, Al-Asmi, A, Shaw, C, Deri, N, Al-Harbi, T, Fragoso, Y, Csepany, T, Sempere, AP, Trevino-Frenk, I, Schepel, J, Moore, F, and Kalincik, T
- Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: This study assessed the effect of patient characteristics on the response to disease-modifying therapy (DMT) in multiple sclerosis (MS). METHODS: We extracted data from 61,810 patients from 135 centers across 35 countries from the MSBase registry. The selection criteria were: clinically isolated syndrome or definite MS, follow-up ≥ 1 year, and Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) score ≥ 3, with ≥1 score recorded per year. Marginal structural models with interaction terms were used to compare the hazards of 12-month confirmed worsening and improvement of disability, and the incidence of relapses between treated and untreated patients stratified by their characteristics. RESULTS: Among 24,344 patients with relapsing MS, those on DMTs experienced 48% reduction in relapse incidence (hazard ratio [HR] = 0.52, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.45-0.60), 46% lower risk of disability worsening (HR = 0.54, 95% CI = 0.41-0.71), and 32% greater chance of disability improvement (HR = 1.32, 95% CI = 1.09-1.59). The effect of DMTs on EDSS worsening and improvement and the risk of relapses was attenuated with more severe disability. The magnitude of the effect of DMT on suppressing relapses declined with higher prior relapse rate and prior cerebral magnetic resonance imaging activity. We did not find any evidence for the effect of age on the effectiveness of DMT. After inclusion of 1985 participants with progressive MS, the effect of DMT on disability mostly depended on MS phenotype, whereas its effect on relapses was driven mainly by prior relapse activity. CONCLUSIONS: DMT is generally most effective among patients with lower disability and in relapsing MS phenotypes. There is no evidence of attenuation of the effect of DMT with age.
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- 2023
4. Effectiveness of multiple disease-modifying therapies in relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis: causal inference to emulate a multiarm randomised trial
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Diouf, I, Malpas, CB, Sharmin, S, Roos, I, Horakova, D, Kubala Havrdova, E, Patti, F, Shaygannejad, V, Ozakbas, S, Eichau, S, Onofrj, M, Lugaresi, A, Alroughani, R, Prat, A, Duquette, P, Terzi, M, Boz, C, Grand'Maison, F, Sola, P, Ferraro, D, Grammond, P, Yamout, B, Altintas, A, Gerlach, O, Lechner-Scott, J, Bergamaschi, R, Karabudak, R, Iuliano, G, McGuigan, C, Cartechini, E, Hughes, S, Sa, MJ, Solaro, C, Kappos, L, Hodgkinson, S, Slee, M, Granella, F, de Gans, K, McCombe, PA, Ampapa, R, van der Walt, A, Butzkueven, H, Sanchez-Menoyo, JL, Vucic, S, Laureys, G, Sidhom, Y, Gouider, R, Castillo-Trivino, T, Gray, O, Aguera-Morales, E, Al-Asmi, A, Shaw, C, Al-Harbi, TM, Csepany, T, Sempere, AP, Frenk, IT, Stuart, EA, Kalincik, T, Diouf, I, Malpas, CB, Sharmin, S, Roos, I, Horakova, D, Kubala Havrdova, E, Patti, F, Shaygannejad, V, Ozakbas, S, Eichau, S, Onofrj, M, Lugaresi, A, Alroughani, R, Prat, A, Duquette, P, Terzi, M, Boz, C, Grand'Maison, F, Sola, P, Ferraro, D, Grammond, P, Yamout, B, Altintas, A, Gerlach, O, Lechner-Scott, J, Bergamaschi, R, Karabudak, R, Iuliano, G, McGuigan, C, Cartechini, E, Hughes, S, Sa, MJ, Solaro, C, Kappos, L, Hodgkinson, S, Slee, M, Granella, F, de Gans, K, McCombe, PA, Ampapa, R, van der Walt, A, Butzkueven, H, Sanchez-Menoyo, JL, Vucic, S, Laureys, G, Sidhom, Y, Gouider, R, Castillo-Trivino, T, Gray, O, Aguera-Morales, E, Al-Asmi, A, Shaw, C, Al-Harbi, TM, Csepany, T, Sempere, AP, Frenk, IT, Stuart, EA, and Kalincik, T
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Simultaneous comparisons of multiple disease-modifying therapies for relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) over an extended follow-up are lacking. Here we emulate a randomised trial simultaneously comparing the effectiveness of six commonly used therapies over 5 years. METHODS: Data from 74 centres in 35 countries were sourced from MSBase. For each patient, the first eligible intervention was analysed, censoring at change/discontinuation of treatment. The compared interventions included natalizumab, fingolimod, dimethyl fumarate, teriflunomide, interferon beta, glatiramer acetate and no treatment. Marginal structural Cox models (MSMs) were used to estimate the average treatment effects (ATEs) and the average treatment effects among the treated (ATT), rebalancing the compared groups at 6-monthly intervals on age, sex, birth-year, pregnancy status, treatment, relapses, disease duration, disability and disease course. The outcomes analysed were incidence of relapses, 12-month confirmed disability worsening and improvement. RESULTS: 23 236 eligible patients were diagnosed with RRMS or clinically isolated syndrome. Compared with glatiramer acetate (reference), several therapies showed a superior ATE in reducing relapses: natalizumab (HR=0.44, 95% CI=0.40 to 0.50), fingolimod (HR=0.60, 95% CI=0.54 to 0.66) and dimethyl fumarate (HR=0.78, 95% CI=0.66 to 0.92). Further, natalizumab (HR=0.43, 95% CI=0.32 to 0.56) showed a superior ATE in reducing disability worsening and in disability improvement (HR=1.32, 95% CI=1.08 to 1.60). The pairwise ATT comparisons also showed superior effects of natalizumab followed by fingolimod on relapses and disability. CONCLUSIONS: The effectiveness of natalizumab and fingolimod in active RRMS is superior to dimethyl fumarate, teriflunomide, glatiramer acetate and interferon beta. This study demonstrates the utility of MSM in emulating trials to compare clinical effectiveness among multiple interventions simultaneously.
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- 2023
5. Rituximab vs Ocrelizumab in Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis
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Roos, I, Hughes, S, McDonnell, G, Malpas, CB, Sharmin, S, Boz, C, Alroughani, R, Ozakbas, S, Buzzard, K, Skibina, O, van der Walt, A, Butzkueven, H, Lechner-Scott, J, Kuhle, J, Terzi, M, Laureys, G, Van Hijfte, L, John, N, Grammond, P, Grand'Maison, F, Soysal, A, Jensen, AV, Rasmussen, PV, Svendsen, KB, Barzinji, I, Nielsen, HH, Sejbaek, T, Prakash, S, Stilund, MLM, Weglewski, A, Issa, NM, Kant, M, Sellebjerg, F, Gray, O, Magyari, M, Kalincik, T, MSBase, SG, Danish, MSRSG, Roos, I, Hughes, S, McDonnell, G, Malpas, CB, Sharmin, S, Boz, C, Alroughani, R, Ozakbas, S, Buzzard, K, Skibina, O, van der Walt, A, Butzkueven, H, Lechner-Scott, J, Kuhle, J, Terzi, M, Laureys, G, Van Hijfte, L, John, N, Grammond, P, Grand'Maison, F, Soysal, A, Jensen, AV, Rasmussen, PV, Svendsen, KB, Barzinji, I, Nielsen, HH, Sejbaek, T, Prakash, S, Stilund, MLM, Weglewski, A, Issa, NM, Kant, M, Sellebjerg, F, Gray, O, Magyari, M, Kalincik, T, MSBase, SG, and Danish, MSRSG
- Abstract
IMPORTANCE: Ocrelizumab, a humanized monoclonal antibody targeted against CD20+ B cells, reduces the frequency of relapses by 46% and disability worsening by 40% compared with interferon beta 1a in relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (MS). Rituximab, a chimeric monoclonal anti-CD20 agent, is often prescribed as an off-label alternative to ocrelizumab. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate whether the effectiveness of rituximab is noninferior to ocrelizumab in relapsing-remitting MS. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This was an observational cohort study conducted between January 2015 and March 2021. Patients were included in the treatment group for the duration of study therapy and were recruited from the MSBase registry and Danish MS Registry (DMSR). Included patients had a history of relapsing-remitting MS treated with ocrelizumab or rituximab, a minimum 6 months of follow-up, and sufficient data to calculate the propensity score. Patients with comparable baseline characteristics were 1:6 matched with propensity score on age, sex, MS duration, disability (Expanded Disability Status Scale), prior relapse rate, prior therapy, disease activity (relapses, disability accumulation, or both), magnetic resonance imaging lesion burden (missing values imputed), and country. EXPOSURE: Treatment with ocrelizumab or rituximab after 2015. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Noninferiority comparison of annualized rate of relapses (ARRs), with a prespecified noninferiority margin of 1.63 rate ratio. Secondary end points were relapse and 6-month confirmed disability accumulation in pairwise-censored groups. RESULTS: Of the 6027 patients with MS who were treated with ocrelizumab or rituximab, a total of 1613 (mean [SD] age; 42.0 [10.8] years; 1089 female [68%]) fulfilled the inclusion criteria and were included in the analysis (898 MSBase, 715 DMSR). A total of 710 patients treated with ocrelizumab (414 MSBase, 296 DMSR) were matched with 186 patients treated with rituximab (110 MSBase, 76 DMSR). O
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- 2023
6. Disability accrual in primary and secondary progressive multiple sclerosis
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Harding-Forrester, S, Roos, I, Nguyen, A-L, Malpas, CB, Diouf, I, Moradi, N, Sharmin, S, Izquierdo, G, Eichau, S, Patti, F, Horakova, D, Kubala Havrdova, E, Prat, A, Girard, M, Duquette, P, Maison, FG, Onofrj, M, Lugaresi, A, Grammond, P, Ozakbas, S, Amato, MP, Gerlach, O, Sola, P, Ferraro, D, Buzzard, K, Skibina, O, Lechner-Scott, J, Alroughani, R, Boz, C, Van Pesch, V, Cartechini, E, Terzi, M, Maimone, D, Ramo-Tello, C, Yamout, B, Khoury, SJ, La Spitaleri, D, Sa, MJ, Blanco, Y, Granella, F, Slee, M, Butler, E, Sidhom, Y, Gouider, R, Bergamaschi, R, Karabudak, R, Ampapa, R, Sanchez-Menoyo, JL, Prevost, J, Castillo-Trivino, T, McCombe, PA, Macdonell, R, Laureys, G, Van Hijfte, L, Oh, J, Altintas, A, de Gans, K, Turkoglu, R, van der Walt, A, Butzkueven, H, Vucic, S, Barnett, M, Cristiano, E, Hodgkinson, S, Iuliano, G, Kappos, L, Kuhle, J, Shaygannejad, V, Soysal, A, Weinstock-Guttman, B, Van Wijmeersch, B, Kalincik, T, Harding-Forrester, S, Roos, I, Nguyen, A-L, Malpas, CB, Diouf, I, Moradi, N, Sharmin, S, Izquierdo, G, Eichau, S, Patti, F, Horakova, D, Kubala Havrdova, E, Prat, A, Girard, M, Duquette, P, Maison, FG, Onofrj, M, Lugaresi, A, Grammond, P, Ozakbas, S, Amato, MP, Gerlach, O, Sola, P, Ferraro, D, Buzzard, K, Skibina, O, Lechner-Scott, J, Alroughani, R, Boz, C, Van Pesch, V, Cartechini, E, Terzi, M, Maimone, D, Ramo-Tello, C, Yamout, B, Khoury, SJ, La Spitaleri, D, Sa, MJ, Blanco, Y, Granella, F, Slee, M, Butler, E, Sidhom, Y, Gouider, R, Bergamaschi, R, Karabudak, R, Ampapa, R, Sanchez-Menoyo, JL, Prevost, J, Castillo-Trivino, T, McCombe, PA, Macdonell, R, Laureys, G, Van Hijfte, L, Oh, J, Altintas, A, de Gans, K, Turkoglu, R, van der Walt, A, Butzkueven, H, Vucic, S, Barnett, M, Cristiano, E, Hodgkinson, S, Iuliano, G, Kappos, L, Kuhle, J, Shaygannejad, V, Soysal, A, Weinstock-Guttman, B, Van Wijmeersch, B, and Kalincik, T
- Abstract
Background: Some studies comparing primary and secondary progressive multiple sclerosis (PPMS, SPMS) report similar ages at onset of the progressive phase and similar rates of subsequent disability accrual. Others report later onset and/or faster accrual in SPMS. Comparisons have been complicated by regional cohort effects, phenotypic differences in sex ratio and management and variable diagnostic criteria for SPMS. Methods: We compared disability accrual in PPMS and operationally diagnosed SPMS in the international, clinic-based MSBase cohort. Inclusion required PPMS or SPMS with onset at age ≥18 years since 1995. We estimated Andersen-Gill hazard ratios for disability accrual on the Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS), adjusted for sex, age, baseline disability, EDSS score frequency and drug therapies, with centre and patient as random effects. We also estimated ages at onset of the progressive phase (Kaplan-Meier) and at EDSS milestones (Turnbull). Analyses were replicated with physician-diagnosed SPMS. Results: Included patients comprised 1872 with PPMS (47% men; 50% with activity) and 2575 with SPMS (32% men; 40% with activity). Relative to PPMS, SPMS had older age at onset of the progressive phase (median 46.7 years (95% CI 46.2-47.3) vs 43.9 (43.3-44.4); p<0.001), greater baseline disability, slower disability accrual (HR 0.86 (0.78-0.94); p<0.001) and similar age at wheelchair dependence. Conclusions: We demonstrate later onset of the progressive phase and slower disability accrual in SPMS versus PPMS. This may balance greater baseline disability in SPMS, yielding convergent disability trajectories across phenotypes. The different rates of disability accrual should be considered before amalgamating PPMS and SPMS in clinical trials.
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- 2023
7. Ocular motility as a measure of cerebral dysfunction in adults with focal epilepsy
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Yong, HMA, Clough, M, Perucca, P, Malpas, CB, Kwan, P, O'Brien, TJ, Fielding, J, Yong, HMA, Clough, M, Perucca, P, Malpas, CB, Kwan, P, O'Brien, TJ, and Fielding, J
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Using objective oculomotor measures, we aimed to: (1) compare oculomotor performance in patients with drug-resistant focal epilepsy to healthy controls, and (2) investigate the differential impact of epileptogenic focus laterality and location on oculomotor performance. METHODS: We recruited 51 adults with drug-resistant focal epilepsy from the Comprehensive Epilepsy Programs of two tertiary hospitals and 31 healthy controls to perform prosaccade and antisaccade tasks. Oculomotor variables of interest were latency, visuospatial accuracy, and antisaccade error rate. Linear mixed models were performed to compare interactions between groups (epilepsy, control) and oculomotor tasks, and between epilepsy subgroups and oculomotor tasks for each oculomotor variable. RESULTS: Compared to healthy controls, patients with drug-resistant focal epilepsy exhibited longer antisaccade latencies (mean difference = 42.8 ms, P = 0.001), poorer spatial accuracy for both prosaccade (mean difference = 0.4°, P = 0.002), and antisaccade tasks (mean difference = 2.1°, P < 0.001), and more antisaccade errors (mean difference = 12.6%, P < 0.001). In the epilepsy subgroup analysis, left-hemispheric epilepsy patients exhibited longer antisaccade latencies compared to controls (mean difference = 52.2 ms, P = 0.003), while right-hemispheric epilepsy was the most spatially inaccurate compared to controls (mean difference = 2.5°, P = 0.003). The temporal lobe epilepsy subgroup displayed longer antisaccade latencies compared to controls (mean difference = 47.6 ms, P = 0.005). SIGNIFICANCE: Patients with drug-resistant focal epilepsy exhibit poor inhibitory control as evidenced by a high percentage of antisaccade errors, slower cognitive processing speed, and impaired visuospatial accuracy on oculomotor tasks. Patients with left-hemispheric epilepsy and temporal lobe epilepsy have markedly impaired processing speed. Overall, oculomotor tasks can be a useful tool to objectively quantify cer
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- 2023
8. Childhood trauma in patients with epileptic vs nonepileptic seizures
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Yang, T, Roberts, C, Winton-Brown, T, Lloyd, M, Kwan, P, O'Brien, TJ, Velakoulis, D, Rayner, G, Malpas, CB, Yang, T, Roberts, C, Winton-Brown, T, Lloyd, M, Kwan, P, O'Brien, TJ, Velakoulis, D, Rayner, G, and Malpas, CB
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Childhood trauma has been implicated as a risk factor for the etiology of psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNES). Relatively little attention has been paid to whether profiles of specific trauma types differ between patients with epilepsy and PNES. Investigating childhood trauma profiles in these patient groups may identify psychological vulnerabilities that predispose to developing PNES, and aid early diagnoses, prevention, and treatment. METHODS: Data were collected from two cohorts (nRetrospective = 203; nProspective = 209) admitted to video-electroencephalography (EEG) monitoring units in Melbourne Australia. The differences in Childhood Trauma Questionnaire domain score between patient groups were investigated using standardized effect sizes and general linear mixed-effects models (GLMMs). Receiver-operating characteristic curves were used to investigate classification accuracy. RESULTS: In the retrospective cohort, patients diagnosed with PNES reported greater childhood emotional abuse, emotional neglect, physical abuse, sexual abuse, and physical neglect relative to patients with epilepsy. These differences were replicated in the prospective cohort, except for physical abuse. GLMMs revealed significant main effects for group in both cohorts, but no evidence for any group by domain interactions. Reported sexual abuse showed the best screening performance of PNES, although no psychometric scores were adequate as isolated measures. SIGNIFICANCE: Patients with PNES report a greater frequency of childhood trauma than patients with epilepsy. This effect appears to hold across all trauma types, with no strong evidence emerging for a particular trauma type that is more prevalent in PNES. From a practical perspective, inquiry regarding a history of sexual abuse shows the most promise as a screening measure.
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- 2023
9. Early non-disabling relapses are important predictors of disability accumulation in people with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis
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Daruwalla, C, Shaygannejad, V, Ozakbas, S, Havrdova, EK, Horakova, D, Alroughani, R, Boz, C, Patti, F, Onofrj, M, Lugaresi, A, Eichau, S, Girard, M, Prat, A, Duquette, P, Yamout, B, Khoury, SJ, Sajedi, SA, Turkoglu, R, Altintas, A, Skibina, O, Buzzard, K, Grammond, P, Karabudak, R, van der Walt, A, Butzkueven, H, Maimone, D, Lechner-Scott, J, Soysal, A, John, N, Prevost, J, Spitaleri, D, Ramo-Tello, C, Gerlach, O, Iuliano, G, Foschi, M, Ampapa, R, van Pesch, V, Barnett, M, Shalaby, N, D'hooghe, M, Kuhle, J, Sa, MJ, Fabis-Pedrini, M, Kermode, A, Mrabet, S, Gouider, R, Hodgkinson, S, Laureys, G, Van Hijfte, L, Macdonell, R, Oreja-Guevara, C, Cristiano, E, McCombe, P, Sanchez-Menoyo, JL, Singhal, B, Blanco, Y, Hughes, S, Garber, J, Solaro, C, McGuigan, C, Taylor, B, de Gans, K, Habek, M, Al-Asmi, A, Mihaela, S, Castillo Trivino, T, Al-Harbi, T, Rojas, JI, Gray, O, Khurana, D, Van Wijmeersch, B, Grigoriadis, N, Inshasi, J, Oh, J, Aguera-Morales, E, Fragoso, Y, Moore, F, Shaw, C, Baghbanian, SM, Shuey, N, Willekens, B, Hardy, TA, Decoo, D, Sempere, AP, Field, D, Wynford-Thomas, R, Cunniffe, NG, Roos, I, Malpas, CB, Coles, AJ, Kalincik, T, Brown, JWL, MSBase, SG, Daruwalla, C, Shaygannejad, V, Ozakbas, S, Havrdova, EK, Horakova, D, Alroughani, R, Boz, C, Patti, F, Onofrj, M, Lugaresi, A, Eichau, S, Girard, M, Prat, A, Duquette, P, Yamout, B, Khoury, SJ, Sajedi, SA, Turkoglu, R, Altintas, A, Skibina, O, Buzzard, K, Grammond, P, Karabudak, R, van der Walt, A, Butzkueven, H, Maimone, D, Lechner-Scott, J, Soysal, A, John, N, Prevost, J, Spitaleri, D, Ramo-Tello, C, Gerlach, O, Iuliano, G, Foschi, M, Ampapa, R, van Pesch, V, Barnett, M, Shalaby, N, D'hooghe, M, Kuhle, J, Sa, MJ, Fabis-Pedrini, M, Kermode, A, Mrabet, S, Gouider, R, Hodgkinson, S, Laureys, G, Van Hijfte, L, Macdonell, R, Oreja-Guevara, C, Cristiano, E, McCombe, P, Sanchez-Menoyo, JL, Singhal, B, Blanco, Y, Hughes, S, Garber, J, Solaro, C, McGuigan, C, Taylor, B, de Gans, K, Habek, M, Al-Asmi, A, Mihaela, S, Castillo Trivino, T, Al-Harbi, T, Rojas, JI, Gray, O, Khurana, D, Van Wijmeersch, B, Grigoriadis, N, Inshasi, J, Oh, J, Aguera-Morales, E, Fragoso, Y, Moore, F, Shaw, C, Baghbanian, SM, Shuey, N, Willekens, B, Hardy, TA, Decoo, D, Sempere, AP, Field, D, Wynford-Thomas, R, Cunniffe, NG, Roos, I, Malpas, CB, Coles, AJ, Kalincik, T, Brown, JWL, and MSBase, SG
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: The prognostic significance of non-disabling relapses in people with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) is unclear. OBJECTIVE: To determine whether early non-disabling relapses predict disability accumulation in RRMS. METHODS: We redefined mild relapses in MSBase as 'non-disabling', and moderate or severe relapses as 'disabling'. We used mixed-effects Cox models to compare 90-day confirmed disability accumulation events in people with exclusively non-disabling relapses within 2 years of RRMS diagnosis to those with no early relapses; and any early disabling relapses. Analyses were stratified by disease-modifying therapy (DMT) efficacy during follow-up. RESULTS: People who experienced non-disabling relapses within 2 years of RRMS diagnosis accumulated more disability than those with no early relapses if they were untreated (n = 285 vs 4717; hazard ratio (HR) = 1.29, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.00-1.68) or given platform DMTs (n = 1074 vs 7262; HR = 1.33, 95% CI = 1.15-1.54), but not if given high-efficacy DMTs (n = 572 vs 3534; HR = 0.90, 95% CI = 0.71-1.13) during follow-up. Differences in disability accumulation between those with early non-disabling relapses and those with early disabling relapses were not confirmed statistically. CONCLUSION: This study suggests that early non-disabling relapses are associated with a higher risk of disability accumulation than no early relapses in RRMS. This risk may be mitigated by high-efficacy DMTs. Therefore, non-disabling relapses should be considered when making treatment decisions.
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- 2023
10. Cerebrospinal fluid neurofilament light and cerebral atrophy in younger-onset dementia and primary psychiatric disorders
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Walia, N, Eratne, D, Loi, SM, Farrand, S, Li, Q-X, Malpas, CB, Varghese, S, Walterfang, M, Evans, AH, Parker, S, Collins, SJ, Masters, CL, Velakoulis, D, Walia, N, Eratne, D, Loi, SM, Farrand, S, Li, Q-X, Malpas, CB, Varghese, S, Walterfang, M, Evans, AH, Parker, S, Collins, SJ, Masters, CL, and Velakoulis, D
- Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Neurodegeneration underpins the pathological processes of younger-onset dementia (YOD) and has been implicated in primary psychiatric disorders (PSYs). Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) neurofilament light (NfL) has been used to investigate neurodegeneration severity through correlation with structural brain changes in various conditions, but has seldom been evaluated in YOD and PSYs. METHODS: This retrospective study included patients with YOD or PSYs with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain and CSF NfL analysis. Findings from brain MRI were analysed using automated volumetry (volBrain) to measure white matter (WM), grey matter (GM) and whole brain (WB) volumes expressed as percentages of total intracranial volume. Correlations between NfL and brain volume measurements were computed whilst adjusting for age. RESULTS: Seventy patients (47 with YOD and 23 with PSY) were identified. YOD types included Alzheimer disease and behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia. PSY included schizophrenia and major depressive disorder. MRI brain sequences were either fast spoiler gradient-echo (FSPGR) or magnetization-prepared rapid acquisition gradient-echo (MPRAGE). In the total cohort, higher NfL was associated with reduced WB in the FSPGR and MPRAGE sequences (r = -0.402 [95% confidence interval (CI), -0.593 to -0.147], P = 0.008 and r = -0.625 [95% CI, -0.828 to -0.395], P < 0.001, respectively). Higher NfL was related to reduced GM in FSPGR (r = 0.385 [95% CI, -0.649 to -0.014], P = 0.017) and reduced WM in MPRAGE (r = -0.650 [95% CI, -0.777 to -0.307], P < 0.001). Similar relationships were seen in YOD, but not in PSY. CONCLUSION: Higher CSF NfL is related to brain atrophy in YOD, further supporting its use as a nonspecific marker of neurodegeneration severity.
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- 2023
11. Multiple Sclerosis Relapses Following Cessation of Fingolimod
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Malpas, CB, Roos, I, Sharmin, S, Buzzard, K, Skibina, O, Butzkueven, H, Kappos, L, Patti, F, Alroughani, R, Horakova, D, Havrdova, EK, Izquierdo, G, Eichau, S, Hodgkinson, S, Grammond, P, Lechner-Scott, J, Kalincik, T, Malpas, CB, Roos, I, Sharmin, S, Buzzard, K, Skibina, O, Butzkueven, H, Kappos, L, Patti, F, Alroughani, R, Horakova, D, Havrdova, EK, Izquierdo, G, Eichau, S, Hodgkinson, S, Grammond, P, Lechner-Scott, J, and Kalincik, T
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is growing interest in the issue of disease reactivation in multiple sclerosis following fingolimod cessation. Relatively little is known about modifiers of the risk of post-cessation relapse, including the delay to commencement of new therapy and prior disease activity. OBJECTIVE: We aimed to determine the rate of relapse following cessation of fingolimod and to identify predictors of relapse following cessation. METHODS: Data were extracted from the MSBase registry in March 2019. Inclusion criteria were (a) clinically definite relapsing multiple sclerosis, (b) treatment with fingolimod for ≥ 12 months, (c) follow-up after cessation for ≥ 12 months, and (d) at least one Expanded Disability Status Scale score recorded in the 12 months before cessation. RESULTS: A total of 685 patients were identified who met criteria. The mean annualised relapse rate was 1.71 (95% CI 1.59, 1.85) in the year prior to fingolimod, 0.50 (95% CI 0.44, 0.55) on fingolimod and 0.43 (95% CI 0.38, 0.49) after fingolimod. Of these, 218 (32%) patients experienced a relapse in the first 12 months. Predictors of a higher relapse rate in the first year were: younger age at fingolimod cessation, higher relapse rate in the year prior to cessation, delaying commencement of new therapy and switching to low-efficacy therapy. CONCLUSIONS: Disease reactivation following fingolimod cessation is more common in younger patients, those with greater disease activity prior to cessation and in those who switch to a low-efficacy therapy.
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- 2022
12. Machine learning approaches for imaging-based prognostication of the outcome of surgery for mesial temporal lobe epilepsy
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Sinclair, B, Cahill, V, Seah, J, Kitchen, A, Vivash, LE, Chen, Z, Malpas, CB, O'Shea, MF, Desmond, PM, Hicks, RJ, Morokoff, AP, King, JA, Fabinyi, GC, Kaye, AH, Kwan, P, Berkovic, SF, Law, M, O'Brien, TJ, Sinclair, B, Cahill, V, Seah, J, Kitchen, A, Vivash, LE, Chen, Z, Malpas, CB, O'Shea, MF, Desmond, PM, Hicks, RJ, Morokoff, AP, King, JA, Fabinyi, GC, Kaye, AH, Kwan, P, Berkovic, SF, Law, M, and O'Brien, TJ
- Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Around 30% of patients undergoing surgical resection for drug-resistant mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE) do not obtain seizure freedom. Success of anterior temporal lobe resection (ATLR) critically depends on the careful selection of surgical candidates, aiming at optimizing seizure freedom while minimizing postoperative morbidity. Structural MRI and FDG-PET neuroimaging are routinely used in presurgical assessment and guide the decision to proceed to surgery. In this study, we evaluate the potential of machine learning techniques applied to standard presurgical MRI and PET imaging features to provide enhanced prognostic value relative to current practice. METHODS: Eighty two patients with drug resistant MTLE were scanned with FDG-PET pre-surgery and T1-weighted MRI pre- and postsurgery. From these images the following features of interest were derived: volume of temporal lobe (TL) hypometabolism, % of extratemporal hypometabolism, presence of contralateral TL hypometabolism, presence of hippocampal sclerosis, laterality of seizure onset volume of tissue resected and % of temporal lobe hypometabolism resected. These measures were used as predictor variables in logistic regression, support vector machines, random forests and artificial neural networks. RESULTS: In the study cohort, 24 of 82 (28.3%) who underwent an ATLR for drug-resistant MTLE did not achieve Engel Class I (i.e., free of disabling seizures) outcome at a minimum of 2 years of postoperative follow-up. We found that machine learning approaches were able to predict up to 73% of the 24 ATLR surgical patients who did not achieve a Class I outcome, at the expense of incorrect prediction for up to 31% of patients who did achieve a Class I outcome. Overall accuracies ranged from 70% to 80%, with an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) of .75-.81. We additionally found that information regarding overall extent of both total and significantly hypometabolic tissue resected
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- 2022
13. A phase 1b open-label study of sodium selenate as a disease-modifying treatment for possible behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia
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Vivash, L, Malpas, CB, Meletis, C, Gollant, M, Eratne, D, Li, Q-X, McDonald, S, O'Brien, WT, Brodtmann, A, Darby, D, Kyndt, C, Walterfang, M, Hovens, CM, Velakoulis, D, O'Brien, TJ, Vivash, L, Malpas, CB, Meletis, C, Gollant, M, Eratne, D, Li, Q-X, McDonald, S, O'Brien, WT, Brodtmann, A, Darby, D, Kyndt, C, Walterfang, M, Hovens, CM, Velakoulis, D, and O'Brien, TJ
- Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Sodium selenate increases tau dephosphorylation through protein phosphatase 2 activation. Here we report an open-label Phase 1b study of sodium selenate as a disease-modifying treatment for behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD). METHODS: Twelve participants with bvFTD received sodium selenate (15 mg, three times a day) for 52 weeks. Safety assessments were carried out throughout the trial. Primary outcomes were frequency of adverse events (AEs), serious adverse events (SAEs), and discontinuations. Secondary outcomes of potential efficacy included cognitive and behavioral assessments, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) whole brain volume, and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and blood total tau (t-tau), phosphorylated tau (p-tau), and neurofilament light (NfL) levels, which were measured at baseline and at week 52. RESULTS: Sodium selenate was safe and well tolerated. All participants completed the study, and the majority (64.7%) of reported AEs were mild. One SAE occurred, which was not treatment related. Small declines in MRI and cognitive and behavioral measures were observed over the treatment period. There was no evidence for change in CSF protein levels (t-tau, p-tau, or NfL). Further analysis showed two distinct groups when measuring disease progression markers over the course of the study-one (n = 4) with substantial brain atrophy (2.5% to 6.5% reduction) and cognitive and behavioral decline over the 12-month treatment period, and the second group (n = 7) with no detectable change in cognitive and behavioral measures and less brain atrophy (0.3% to 1.7% reduction). CONCLUSION: Sodium selenate is safe and well tolerated in patients with bvFTD. Randomized-controlled trials are warranted to investigate potential efficacy.
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- 2022
14. Topographic divergence of atypical cortical asymmetry and atrophy patterns in temporal lobe epilepsy
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Park, B-Y, Lariviere, S, Rodriguez-Cruces, R, Royer, J, Tavakol, S, Wang, Y, Caciagli, L, Caligiuri, ME, Gambardella, A, Concha, L, Keller, SS, Cendes, F, Alvim, MKM, Yasuda, C, Bonilha, L, Gleichgerrcht, E, Focke, NK, Kreilkamp, BAK, Domin, M, von Podewils, F, Langner, S, Rummel, C, Rebsamen, M, Wiest, R, Martin, P, Kotikalapudi, R, Bender, B, O'Brien, TJ, Law, M, Sinclair, B, Vivash, L, Kwan, P, Desmond, PM, Malpas, CB, Lui, E, Alhusaini, S, Doherty, CP, Cavalleri, GL, Delanty, N, Kalviainen, R, Jackson, GD, Kowalczyk, M, Mascalchi, M, Semmelroch, M, Thomas, RH, Soltanian-Zadeh, H, Davoodi-Bojd, E, Zhang, J, Lenge, M, Guerrini, R, Bartolini, E, Hamandi, K, Foley, S, Weber, B, Depondt, C, Absil, J, Carr, SJA, Abela, E, Richardson, MP, Devinsky, O, Severino, M, Striano, P, Parodi, C, Tortora, D, Hatton, SN, Vos, SB, Duncan, JS, Galovic, M, Whelan, CD, Bargallo, N, Pariente, J, Conde-Blanco, E, Vaudano, AE, Tondelli, M, Meletti, S, Kong, X-Z, Francks, C, Fisher, SE, Caldairou, B, Ryten, M, Labate, A, Sisodiya, SM, Thompson, PM, McDonald, CR, Bernasconi, A, Bernasconi, N, Bernhardt, BC, Park, B-Y, Lariviere, S, Rodriguez-Cruces, R, Royer, J, Tavakol, S, Wang, Y, Caciagli, L, Caligiuri, ME, Gambardella, A, Concha, L, Keller, SS, Cendes, F, Alvim, MKM, Yasuda, C, Bonilha, L, Gleichgerrcht, E, Focke, NK, Kreilkamp, BAK, Domin, M, von Podewils, F, Langner, S, Rummel, C, Rebsamen, M, Wiest, R, Martin, P, Kotikalapudi, R, Bender, B, O'Brien, TJ, Law, M, Sinclair, B, Vivash, L, Kwan, P, Desmond, PM, Malpas, CB, Lui, E, Alhusaini, S, Doherty, CP, Cavalleri, GL, Delanty, N, Kalviainen, R, Jackson, GD, Kowalczyk, M, Mascalchi, M, Semmelroch, M, Thomas, RH, Soltanian-Zadeh, H, Davoodi-Bojd, E, Zhang, J, Lenge, M, Guerrini, R, Bartolini, E, Hamandi, K, Foley, S, Weber, B, Depondt, C, Absil, J, Carr, SJA, Abela, E, Richardson, MP, Devinsky, O, Severino, M, Striano, P, Parodi, C, Tortora, D, Hatton, SN, Vos, SB, Duncan, JS, Galovic, M, Whelan, CD, Bargallo, N, Pariente, J, Conde-Blanco, E, Vaudano, AE, Tondelli, M, Meletti, S, Kong, X-Z, Francks, C, Fisher, SE, Caldairou, B, Ryten, M, Labate, A, Sisodiya, SM, Thompson, PM, McDonald, CR, Bernasconi, A, Bernasconi, N, and Bernhardt, BC
- Abstract
Temporal lobe epilepsy, a common drug-resistant epilepsy in adults, is primarily a limbic network disorder associated with predominant unilateral hippocampal pathology. Structural MRI has provided an in vivo window into whole-brain grey matter structural alterations in temporal lobe epilepsy relative to controls, by either mapping (i) atypical inter-hemispheric asymmetry; or (ii) regional atrophy. However, similarities and differences of both atypical asymmetry and regional atrophy measures have not been systematically investigated. Here, we addressed this gap using the multisite ENIGMA-Epilepsy dataset comprising MRI brain morphological measures in 732 temporal lobe epilepsy patients and 1418 healthy controls. We compared spatial distributions of grey matter asymmetry and atrophy in temporal lobe epilepsy, contextualized their topographies relative to spatial gradients in cortical microstructure and functional connectivity calculated using 207 healthy controls obtained from Human Connectome Project and an independent dataset containing 23 temporal lobe epilepsy patients and 53 healthy controls and examined clinical associations using machine learning. We identified a marked divergence in the spatial distribution of atypical inter-hemispheric asymmetry and regional atrophy mapping. The former revealed a temporo-limbic disease signature while the latter showed diffuse and bilateral patterns. Our findings were robust across individual sites and patients. Cortical atrophy was significantly correlated with disease duration and age at seizure onset, while degrees of asymmetry did not show a significant relationship to these clinical variables. Our findings highlight that the mapping of atypical inter-hemispheric asymmetry and regional atrophy tap into two complementary aspects of temporal lobe epilepsy-related pathology, with the former revealing primary substrates in ipsilateral limbic circuits and the latter capturing bilateral disease effects. These findings refine ou
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- 2022
15. Functional connectivity during feedback learning in smokers
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Duehlmeyer, L, Parsons, N, Malpas, CB, Hester, R, Duehlmeyer, L, Parsons, N, Malpas, CB, and Hester, R
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BACKGROUND: Although it has been traditionally assumed that dysregulation of psychological processes in smokers results from activity within specific brain regions, an emerging view regards such dysregulation as attributable to aberrant communication between distinct brain regions. These processes can be measured during appropriate task paradigms such as the learning from errors task. This study aims to elucidate interactions between brain regions underlying the process of learning from errors, punishment and sensitivity to reward in dependent smokers. METHODS: Functional MRI data from 23 age-matched dependent smokers (8 females, mean age = 25.48, SD = 4.46) and 23 controls (13 females, mean age = 24.83, SD = 5.99) were analysed during a feedback-based associative learning task. Functional connectivity between the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex, nucleus accumbens and reward/sensorimotor areas was investigated during a feedback learning task. RESULTS: Behaviourally, smokers exhibited lower error correction rates and were less sensitive to punishment magnitude. Smokers showed increased functional connectivity between dorsal anterior cingulate cortex/nucleus accumbens seed regions and numerous reward-related target regions including the putamen, anterior cingulate and orbitofrontal cortex. CONCLUSIONS: Reduced learning from errors and widespread aberrant functional connectivity contribute to the emerging functional characterisation of dependent smokers and may bear significant implications when considering the efficacy of smoking interventions.
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- 2022
16. Clinical correlates of movement disorders in adult Niemann-Pick type C patients measured via a Personal KinetiGraph
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El-Masri, S, Malpas, CB, Evans, A, Walterfang, M, El-Masri, S, Malpas, CB, Evans, A, and Walterfang, M
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Niemann-Pick type C (NPC) is an autosomal recessive progressive neurodegenerative disorder caused by mutations in the NPC1 or NPC2 genes. Patients with this disorder have variable phenotypic presentations that often include neuropsychiatric manifestations, cognitive decline, and movement disorders. There is considerable interpatient variation in movement disorders, with limited quantitative measurements describing the movements observed. Objective measurements using wearable sensors provide clinically applicable monitoring of patients with Parkinson's disease, and hence may be utilized in patients with NPC. OBJECTIVE: To explore the relationship between objective measurements of movement obtained via the use of the Personal KinetiGraph (PKG) with the clinical information obtained via questionnaires and clinical rating tools of patients with Niemann-Pick type C. METHODS: Twelve patients with Niemann-Pick type C were recruited who wore the PKG for 6 days during regular activities. A 6-day output was provided by the manufacturer, which provided bradykinesia (BK) and dyskinesia (DK) scores. BK and DK scores were further divided into their interquartile ranges. A fluctuation score (FDS), percentage time immobile (PTI), and percent time with tremors (PTT) were also provided. Clinical assessments included Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale (AIMS), Epworth Sleepiness Score (ESS), Falls, Neuropsychiatric Unit Assessment Tool (NUCOG), Parkinson's disease questionnaire (PDQ), and modified Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS) which were performed over telehealth within 2 weeks of PKG use. Pearson's correlation analyses were utilized to explore the relationship between DK and BK quartiles and clinical measures. RESULTS: We found bradykinesia to be a feature among this cohort of patients, with a median BKS of 22.0 (7.4). Additionally, PTI scores were elevated at 4.9 (8.2) indicating elevated daytime sleepiness. Significant correlations were demonstrated b
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- 2022
17. Longitudinal Maturation of Resting State Networks: Relevance to Sustained Attention and Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder
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Thomson, P, Malpas, CB, Vijayakumar, N, Johnson, KA, Anderson, V, Efron, D, Hazell, P, Silk, TJ, Thomson, P, Malpas, CB, Vijayakumar, N, Johnson, KA, Anderson, V, Efron, D, Hazell, P, and Silk, TJ
- Abstract
The transition from childhood to adolescence involves important neural function, cognition, and behavior changes. However, the links between maturing brain function and sustained attention over this period could be better understood. This study examined typical changes in network functional connectivity over childhood to adolescence, developmental differences in attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), and how functional connectivity might underpin variability in sustained attention development in a longitudinal sample. A total of 398 resting state scans were collected from 173 children and adolescents (88 ADHD, 85 control) at up to three timepoints across ages 9-14 years. The effects of age, sex, and diagnostic group on changes in network functional connectivity were assessed, followed by relationships between functional connectivity and sustained attention development using linear mixed effects modelling. The ADHD group displayed greater decreases in functional connectivity between salience and visual networks compared with controls. Lower childhood functional connectivity between the frontoparietal and several brain networks was associated with more rapid sustained attention development, whereas frontoparietal to dorsal attention network connectivity related to attention trajectories in children with ADHD alone. Brain network segregation may increase into adolescence as predicted by key developmental theories; however, participants with ADHD demonstrated altered developmental trajectories between salience and visual networks. The segregation of the frontoparietal network from other brain networks may be a mechanism supporting sustained attention development. Frontoparietal to dorsal attention connectivity can be a focus for further work in ADHD.
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- 2022
18. Psychiatric symptoms are the strongest predictors of quality of life in patients with drug-resistant epilepsy or psychogenic nonepileptic seizures: Authors' response
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Malpas, CB, Johnstone, B, Velakoulis, D, Kwan, P, O'Brien, TJ, Malpas, CB, Johnstone, B, Velakoulis, D, Kwan, P, and O'Brien, TJ
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- 2022
19. Cerebrospinal fluid neurofilament light chain differentiates primary psychiatric disorders from rapidly progressive, Alzheimer's disease and frontotemporal disorders in clinical settings
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Eratne, D, Loi, SM, Qiao-Xin, L, Stehmann, C, Malpas, CB, Santillo, A, Janelidze, S, Cadwallader, C, Walia, N, Ney, B, Lewis, V, Senesi, M, Fowler, C, McGlade, A, Varghese, S, Ravanfar, P, Kelso, W, Farrand, S, Keem, M, Kang, M, Goh, AMY, Dhiman, K, Gupta, V, Watson, R, Yassi, N, Kaylor-Hughes, C, Kanaan, R, Perucca, P, Dobson, H, Vivash, L, Ali, R, O'Brien, TJ, Hansson, O, Zetterberg, H, Blennow, K, Walterfang, M, Masters, CL, Berkovic, SF, Collins, S, Velakoulis, D, Eratne, D, Loi, SM, Qiao-Xin, L, Stehmann, C, Malpas, CB, Santillo, A, Janelidze, S, Cadwallader, C, Walia, N, Ney, B, Lewis, V, Senesi, M, Fowler, C, McGlade, A, Varghese, S, Ravanfar, P, Kelso, W, Farrand, S, Keem, M, Kang, M, Goh, AMY, Dhiman, K, Gupta, V, Watson, R, Yassi, N, Kaylor-Hughes, C, Kanaan, R, Perucca, P, Dobson, H, Vivash, L, Ali, R, O'Brien, TJ, Hansson, O, Zetterberg, H, Blennow, K, Walterfang, M, Masters, CL, Berkovic, SF, Collins, S, and Velakoulis, D
- Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Many patients with cognitive and neuropsychiatric symptoms face diagnostic delay and misdiagnosis. We investigated whether cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) neurofilament light (NfL) and total-tau (t-tau) could assist in the clinical scenario of differentiating neurodegenerative (ND) from psychiatric disorders (PSY), and rapidly progressive disorders. METHODS: Biomarkers were examined in patients from specialist services (ND and PSY) and a national Creutzfeldt-Jakob registry (Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease [CJD] and rapidly progressive dementias/atypically rapid variants of common ND, RapidND). RESULTS: A total of 498 participants were included: 197 ND, 67 PSY, 161 CJD, 48 RapidND, and 20 controls. NfL was elevated in ND compared to PSY and controls, with highest levels in CJD and RapidND. NfL distinguished ND from PSY with 95%/78% positive/negative predictive value, 92%/87% sensitivity/specificity, 91% accuracy. NfL outperformed t-tau in most real-life clinical diagnostic dilemma scenarios, except distinguishing CJD from RapidND. DISCUSSION: We demonstrated strong generalizable evidence for the diagnostic utility of CSF NfL in differentiating ND from psychiatric disorders, with high accuracy.
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- 2022
20. Psychometric deficits in autoimmune encephalitis: A retrospective study from the Australian Autoimmune Encephalitis Consortium
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Griffith, S, Wesselingh, R, Broadley, J, O'Shea, M, Kyndt, C, Meade, C, Long, B, Seneviratne, U, Reidy, N, Bourke, R, Buzzard, K, D'Souza, W, Macdonell, R, Brodtmann, A, Butzkueven, H, O'Brien, TJ, Alpitsis, R, Malpas, CB, Monif, M, Griffith, S, Wesselingh, R, Broadley, J, O'Shea, M, Kyndt, C, Meade, C, Long, B, Seneviratne, U, Reidy, N, Bourke, R, Buzzard, K, D'Souza, W, Macdonell, R, Brodtmann, A, Butzkueven, H, O'Brien, TJ, Alpitsis, R, Malpas, CB, and Monif, M
- Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Despite the rapid increase in research examining outcomes in autoimmune encephalitis (AE) patients, there are few cohort studies examining cognitive outcomes in this population. The current study aimed to characterise psychometric outcomes in this population, and explore variables that may predict psychometric outcomes. METHODS: This retrospective observational study collected psychometric data from 59 patients across six secondary and tertiary referral centres in metropolitan hospitals in Victoria, Australia between January 2008 and July 2019. Frequency and pattern analysis were employed to define and characterize psychometric outcomes. Univariable logistic regression was performed to examine predictors of intact and pathological psychometric outcomes. RESULTS: Deficits in psychometric markers of executive dysfunction were the most common finding in this cohort, followed by deficits on tasks sensitive to memory. A total of 54.2% of patients were classified as having psychometric impairments across at least two cognitive domains. Twenty-nine patterns were observed, suggesting outcomes in AE are complex. None of the demographic data, clinical features or auxiliary examination variables were predictors of psychometric outcome. CONCLUSIONS: Cognitive outcomes in AE are complex. Further detailed and standardized cognitive testing, in combination with magnetic resonance imaging volumetrics and serum/cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers, is required to provide rigorous assessments of disease outcomes.
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- 2022
21. The dynamics of relapses during treatment switch in relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis
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Frascoli, F, Roos, I, Malpas, CB, Kalincik, T, Frascoli, F, Roos, I, Malpas, CB, and Kalincik, T
- Abstract
Based on reported trends in relapse incidence among patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis, an original model for the response to disease modifying therapies is proposed. With a population approach and separate states for patients accounting for their risk of relapses, a system of nonlinear equations is formulated, similarly to established epidemiological models. Different parameters describe the effect of drugs and treatment switch in reducing the frequency of relapses. The model allows for a good fit to previously published data for experiments where different drugs are used. It also shows that different treatments maintain a high degree of similarity, with analogous dynamical features: a pre-treatment increment in relapse frequency leading to a distinct peak, a rapid drop after treatment switch and a plateau corresponding to a new base relapse activity, which seems dependant on the treatment chosen. A sensitivity analysis shows that the uncertainty in the initial proportions of different populations and the frequency of relapses can modify the overall dynamics of the response to treatment. Drugs are observed to induce effects that depend on patient sample's intrinsic characteristics, producing two clearly distinct and independent dynamics of relapse response. This confirms the clinical observation that certain drugs may be overall more successful in lowering the rate of relapses more significantly than others, notwithstanding the fact that patients behave differently across experiments.
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- 2022
22. Multiple Sclerosis Severity Score (MSSS) improves the accuracy of individualized prediction in MS
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Kalincik, T, Kister, I, Bacon, TE, Malpas, CB, Sharmin, S, Horakova, D, Kubala-Havrdova, E, Patti, F, Izquierdo, G, Eichau, S, Ozakbas, S, Onofrj, M, Lugaresi, A, Prat, A, Girard, M, Duquette, P, Grammond, P, Sola, P, Ferraro, D, Alroughani, R, Terzi, M, Boz, C, Grand'Maison, F, Bergamaschi, R, Gerlach, O, Sa, MJ, Kappos, L, Cartechini, E, Lechner-Scott, J, van Pesch, V, Shaygannejad, V, Granella, F, Spitaleri, D, Iuliano, G, Maimone, D, Prevost, J, Soysal, A, Turkoglu, R, Ampapa, R, Butzkueven, H, Cutter, G, Kalincik, T, Kister, I, Bacon, TE, Malpas, CB, Sharmin, S, Horakova, D, Kubala-Havrdova, E, Patti, F, Izquierdo, G, Eichau, S, Ozakbas, S, Onofrj, M, Lugaresi, A, Prat, A, Girard, M, Duquette, P, Grammond, P, Sola, P, Ferraro, D, Alroughani, R, Terzi, M, Boz, C, Grand'Maison, F, Bergamaschi, R, Gerlach, O, Sa, MJ, Kappos, L, Cartechini, E, Lechner-Scott, J, van Pesch, V, Shaygannejad, V, Granella, F, Spitaleri, D, Iuliano, G, Maimone, D, Prevost, J, Soysal, A, Turkoglu, R, Ampapa, R, Butzkueven, H, and Cutter, G
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: The MSBase prediction model of treatment response leverages multiple demographic and clinical characteristics to estimate hazards of relapses, confirmed disability accumulation (CDA), and confirmed disability improvement (CDI). The model did not include Multiple Sclerosis Severity Score (MSSS), a disease duration-adjusted ranked score of disability. OBJECTIVE: To incorporate MSSS into the MSBase prediction model and compare model accuracy with and without MSSS. METHODS: The associations between MSSS and relapse, CDA, and CDI were evaluated with marginal proportional hazards models adjusted for three principal components representative of patients' demographic and clinical characteristics. The model fit with and without MSSS was assessed with penalized r2 and Harrell C. RESULTS: A total of 5866 MS patients were started on disease-modifying therapy during prospective follow-up (age 38.4 ± 10.6 years; 72% female; disease duration 8.5 ± 7.7 years). Including MSSS into the model improved the accuracy of individual prediction of relapses by 31%, of CDA by 23%, and of CDI by 24% (Harrell C) and increased the amount of variance explained for relapses by 49%, for CDI by 11%, and for CDA by 10% as compared with the original model. CONCLUSION: Addition of a single, readily available metric, MSSS, to the comprehensive MSBase prediction model considerably improved the individual accuracy of prognostics in MS.
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- 2022
23. Cognition, adaptive skills and epilepsy disability/severity in patients with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome undergoing deep brain stimulation for epilepsy in the ESTEL trial
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Dalic, LJ, Warren, AEL, Malpas, CB, Thevathasan, W, Roten, A, Bulluss, KJ, Archer, JS, Dalic, LJ, Warren, AEL, Malpas, CB, Thevathasan, W, Roten, A, Bulluss, KJ, and Archer, JS
- Abstract
PURPOSE: We previously reported seizure and EEG outcomes of the ESTEL study (Electrical Stimulation of Thalamus for Epilepsy of Lennox-Gastaut phenotype). To assess potential cognitive and behavioral changes during chronic, duty-cycle stimulation of bilateral thalamic centromedian nucleus, we compared standardized cognitive and behavioral measurements, as well as caregiver assessments of disability/severity, before implantation and after 3-months stimulation. METHODS: Twenty patients with LGS (17-37 years;13 females) were studied; one participant was not randomized due to DBS device removal, with outcomes of 19 remaining participants reported here. Cognitive and behavioral measurements were performed at baseline (i.e., before DBS implantation), at the end of the blinded stimulation phase, and at study exit. Instruments measured cognition (NIH toolbox cognitive battery, NIHTB-CB), adaptive skills (ABAS-3), epilepsy severity (GASE) and disability (GAD), quality of life (QOLIE-31), and depression (PHQ-9). Changes in scores after 3-months of stimulation relative to baseline were explored using Wilcoxon matched-pairs signed rank tests. RESULTS: After 3-months of stimulation, caregiver-reported epilepsy severity (GASE) and disability (GAD) improved (p<0.05). No other instrument showed a significant change from baseline. Measurements that required direct participant involvement, rather than caregivers, was completed by only a subset of higher-functioning individuals (NIHTB-CB, n = 13; QOLIE-31, n = 3; and PHQ-9, n = 6). In addition to cognitive impairments, behavioral and physical limitations were common obstacles to instrument completion. Standardized scores were hindered by 'floor effects'; however, raw scores better reflected clinical impressions of participants' functioning and were more sensitive to caregiver-reported changes following treatment. CONCLUSION: DBS treatment is associated with reduced epilepsy severity and disability in young adults with LGS. Performing
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- 2022
24. Plasma neurofilament light chain protein is not increased in treatment-resistant schizophrenia and first-degree relatives
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Eratne, D, Janelidze, S, Malpas, CB, Loi, S, Walterfane, M, Merritt, A, Diouf, I, Blennow, K, Zetterberg, H, Cilia, B, Warman, C, Bousman, C, Everall, I, Zalesky, A, Jayaram, M, Thomas, N, Berkovic, SF, Hansson, O, Velakoulis, D, Pantelis, C, Santillo, A, Eratne, D, Janelidze, S, Malpas, CB, Loi, S, Walterfane, M, Merritt, A, Diouf, I, Blennow, K, Zetterberg, H, Cilia, B, Warman, C, Bousman, C, Everall, I, Zalesky, A, Jayaram, M, Thomas, N, Berkovic, SF, Hansson, O, Velakoulis, D, Pantelis, C, and Santillo, A
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Schizophrenia, a complex psychiatric disorder, is often associated with cognitive, neurological and neuroimaging abnormalities. The processes underlying these abnormalities, and whether a subset of people with schizophrenia have a neuroprogressive or neurodegenerative component to schizophrenia, remain largely unknown. Examining fluid biomarkers of diverse types of neuronal damage could increase our understanding of these processes, as well as potentially provide clinically useful biomarkers, for example with assisting with differentiation from progressive neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer and frontotemporal dementias. METHODS: This study measured plasma neurofilament light chain protein (NfL) using ultrasensitive Simoa technology, to investigate the degree of neuronal injury in a well-characterised cohort of people with treatment-resistant schizophrenia on clozapine (n = 82), compared to first-degree relatives (an at-risk group, n = 37), people with schizophrenia not treated with clozapine (n = 13), and age- and sex-matched controls (n = 59). RESULTS: We found no differences in NfL levels between treatment-resistant schizophrenia (mean NfL, M = 6.3 pg/mL, 95% confidence interval: [5.5, 7.2]), first-degree relatives (siblings, M = 6.7 pg/mL, 95% confidence interval: [5.2, 8.2]; parents, M after adjusting for age = 6.7 pg/mL, 95% confidence interval: [4.7, 8.8]), controls (M = 5.8 pg/mL, 95% confidence interval: [5.3, 6.3]) and not treated with clozapine (M = 4.9 pg/mL, 95% confidence interval: [4.0, 5.8]). Exploratory, hypothesis-generating analyses found weak correlations in treatment-resistant schizophrenia, between NfL and clozapine levels (Spearman's r = 0.258, 95% confidence interval: [0.034, 0.457]), dyslipidaemia (r = 0.280, 95% confidence interval: [0.064, 0.470]) and a negative correlation with weight (r = -0.305, 95% confidence interval: [-0.504, -0.076]). CONCLUSION: Treatment-resistant schizophrenia does not appear to be associated
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- 2022
25. The diagnostic challenge among young onset dementia syndromes and primary psychiatric diseases: Results of a retrospective, 20‐year cross‐sectional study
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Tsoukra, P, Velakoulis, D, Wibawa, P, Malpas, CB, Walterfang, M, Evans, AH, Farrand, S, Kelso, W, Eratne, D, Loi, SM, Tsoukra, P, Velakoulis, D, Wibawa, P, Malpas, CB, Walterfang, M, Evans, AH, Farrand, S, Kelso, W, Eratne, D, and Loi, SM
- Abstract
Background Distinguishing a dementia syndrome from a primary psychiatric disease in younger patients can be challenging and may lead to diagnostic change over time. The aim of this study was to examine diagnostic stability in a cohort of patients with younger‐onset neurocognitive disorders. Method We retrospectively reviewed records of patients that were admitted to our unit between 2000 and 2019, were followed‐up for ≥12 months and received a diagnosis of young onset dementia at any time point. Initial diagnosis included Alzheimer disease (AD)‐type dementia (n= 30), frontotemporal dementia (FTD) syndromes (n=44), vascular dementia (VaD, n=7), mild cognitive impairment (MCI, n= 10), primary psychiatric diseases (n=6) and other conditions such as Lewy Body Dementia (n=30). Result In a total of n=127 patients, 49 (39%) changed their initial diagnoses during follow‐up. Behavioural variant FTD (bvFTD) was the least stable diagnosis, followed by dementia not otherwise specified and MCI. Compared to patients with a stable diagnosis, those who changed exhibited: a higher cognitive score at baseline, a longer follow‐up period, greater delay to final diagnosis, and no family history of dementia. Patients switching from a neurodegenerative to a psychiatric diagnosis more likely had a long psychiatric history, while those changing from a psychiatric to a neurodegenerative diagnosis had a recent manifestation of psychiatric symptoms. Conclusion Misdiagnosis in younger patients with neurocognitive disorders is not uncommon, especially in cases of behavioural variant FTD. Late‐onset psychiatric symptoms may be the harbinger to a neurodegenerative disease. Close follow‐up and monitoring of these patients are necessary.
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- 2021
26. A phase 1b open label study of sodium selenate as a disease‐modifying treatment for behavioural variant fronto‐temporal dementia
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Vivash, LE, Malpas, CB, Hovens, CM, Velakoulis, D, O’Brien, T, Vivash, LE, Malpas, CB, Hovens, CM, Velakoulis, D, and O’Brien, T
- Abstract
Background Hyperphosphorylated tau is a pathological hallmark of ∼45% of behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD). For this reason, hyperphosphorylated tau represents a promising treatment target for this population. Sodium selenate stimulates the PP2A enzyme, which directly dephosphorylates hyperphosphorylated tau. This Phase 1b, open‐labelled, study investigated sodium selenate as a disease‐modifying treatment for patients with bvFTD. Method Twelve patients with bvFTD were treated with sodium selenate (15mg tds) for twelve months. Participants underwent a cognitive and behavioural battery, MRI, lumbar puncture and safety assessments at screening, baseline, and at regular intervals following treatment commencement. Adverse events were monitored via diary cards between clinic visits. Result All 12 patients completed the study. Safety analysis found that sodium selenate was safe and well tolerated, with no study withdrawals. Commonly reported mild‐moderate adverse events were nail changes (n=6), muscles aches (n=4), headache, fatigue, hair loss and fall (n=3). Five patients reduced their dose to 10mg tds due to adverse events. No treatment‐related serious adverse events occurred. Analyses of efficacy data are ongoing. A mixed‐effects analysis showed an overall small but significant decline on cognition and behaviour, including total NUCOG score (b=‐0.18, 95% CI=‐0.28–0.08) Cambridge Behavioural Index (b=0.32, 95% CI=0.18‐0.46) and Carer Burden Scale score (b=0.1, 95% CI = 0.02‐0.18). Percentage change in whole‐brain volume from baseline to week 52 ranged from ‐0.26% to ‐6.51% (n=7 >‐1.8%, n=4 <‐1.8%). Plasma tau levels (n=6) did not change from baseline (3.73±0.26pg/mL) to week 52 (4.66±0.24pg/mL). CSF tau also showed no change from baseline (167.8±11.2pg/mL) to week 52 (156.1±2.49pg/mL). Although not significant, the directional changes are in line with the proposed mechanism of sodium selenate. Exploratory analyses of “responders” (brain v
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- 2021
27. Characterizing neuroanatomic heterogeneity in people with and without ADHD based on subcortical brain volumes
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Li, T, van Rooij, D, Roth Mota, N, Buitelaar, JK, Hoogman, M, Arias Vasquez, A, Franke, B, Ambrosino, S, Banaschewski, T, Bandeira, CE, Bau, CHD, Baumeister, S, Baur-Streubel, R, Bellgrove, MA, Biederman, J, Bralten, J, Bramati, IE, Brandeis, D, Berm, S, Busatto, GF, Calvo, A, Castellanos, FX, Cercignani, M, Chantiluke, KC, Christakou, A, Coghill, D, Conzelmann, A, Cubillo, AI, Cupertino, RB, de Zeeuw, P, Durston, S, Earl, EA, Epstein, JN, Ethofer, T, Fallgatter, AJ, Fair, DA, Faraone, SV, Frodl, T, Gabel, MC, Gogberashvili, T, Grevet, EH, Haavik, J, Harrison, NA, Hartman, CA, Heslenfeld, DJ, Hoekstra, PJ, Høvik, MF, Jahanshad, N, Kardatzki, B, Karkashadze, G, Kelly, C, Kohls, G, Konrad, K, Kuntsi, J, Lazaro, L, Lera-Miguel, S, Lesch, KP, Louza, MR, Lundervold, AJ, Malpas, CB, Mattos, P, McCarthy, H, Nicolau, R, Nigg, JT, O'Gorman Tuura, RL, Oosterlaan, J, Oranje, B, Paloyelis, Y, Pauli, P, Picon, FA, Plessen, KJ, Ramos-Quiroga, JA, Reif, A, Reneman, L, Rosa, PGP, Rubia, K, Schrantee, A, Schweren, LJS, Seitz, J, Shaw, P, Silk, Tim, Skokauskas, N, Carlos Soliva Vila, J, Soloveva, A, Stevens, MC, Sudre, G, Tamm, L, Thompson, PM, Tovar-Moll, F, van Erp, TGM, Vance, A, Vilarroya, O, Vives-Gilabert, Y, von Polier, GG, Walitza, S, Yoncheva, YN, Zanetti, MV, Ziegler, GC, Anikin, A, Asherson, P, Li, T, van Rooij, D, Roth Mota, N, Buitelaar, JK, Hoogman, M, Arias Vasquez, A, Franke, B, Ambrosino, S, Banaschewski, T, Bandeira, CE, Bau, CHD, Baumeister, S, Baur-Streubel, R, Bellgrove, MA, Biederman, J, Bralten, J, Bramati, IE, Brandeis, D, Berm, S, Busatto, GF, Calvo, A, Castellanos, FX, Cercignani, M, Chantiluke, KC, Christakou, A, Coghill, D, Conzelmann, A, Cubillo, AI, Cupertino, RB, de Zeeuw, P, Durston, S, Earl, EA, Epstein, JN, Ethofer, T, Fallgatter, AJ, Fair, DA, Faraone, SV, Frodl, T, Gabel, MC, Gogberashvili, T, Grevet, EH, Haavik, J, Harrison, NA, Hartman, CA, Heslenfeld, DJ, Hoekstra, PJ, Høvik, MF, Jahanshad, N, Kardatzki, B, Karkashadze, G, Kelly, C, Kohls, G, Konrad, K, Kuntsi, J, Lazaro, L, Lera-Miguel, S, Lesch, KP, Louza, MR, Lundervold, AJ, Malpas, CB, Mattos, P, McCarthy, H, Nicolau, R, Nigg, JT, O'Gorman Tuura, RL, Oosterlaan, J, Oranje, B, Paloyelis, Y, Pauli, P, Picon, FA, Plessen, KJ, Ramos-Quiroga, JA, Reif, A, Reneman, L, Rosa, PGP, Rubia, K, Schrantee, A, Schweren, LJS, Seitz, J, Shaw, P, Silk, Tim, Skokauskas, N, Carlos Soliva Vila, J, Soloveva, A, Stevens, MC, Sudre, G, Tamm, L, Thompson, PM, Tovar-Moll, F, van Erp, TGM, Vance, A, Vilarroya, O, Vives-Gilabert, Y, von Polier, GG, Walitza, S, Yoncheva, YN, Zanetti, MV, Ziegler, GC, Anikin, A, and Asherson, P
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- 2021
28. Evidence for similar structural brain anomalies in youth and adult attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder: a machine learning analysis
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Zhang-James, Y, Helminen, EC, Liu, J, Busatto, GF, Calvo, A, Cercignani, M, Chaim-Avancini, TM, Gabel, MC, Harrison, NA, Lazaro, L, Lera-Miguel, S, Louza, MR, Nicolau, R, Rosa, PGP, Schulte-Rutte, M, Zanetti, MV, Ambrosino, S, Asherson, P, Banaschewski, T, Baranov, A, Baumeister, S, Baur-Streubel, R, Bellgrove, MA, Biederman, J, Bralten, J, Bramati, IE, Brandeis, D, Brem, S, Buitelaar, JK, Castellanos, FX, Chantiluke, KC, Christakou, A, Coghill, D, Conzelmann, A, Cubillo, AI, Dale, AM, de Zeeuw, P, Doyle, AE, Durston, S, Earl, EA, Epstein, JN, Ethofer, T, Fair, DA, Fallgatter, AJ, Frodl, T, Gogberashvili, T, Haavik, J, Hartman, CA, Heslenfeld, DJ, Hoekstra, PJ, Hohmann, S, Høvik, MF, Jahanshad, N, Jernigan, TL, Kardatzki, B, Karkashadze, G, Kelly, C, Kohls, G, Konrad, K, Kuntsi, J, Lesch, KP, Lundervold, AJ, Malpas, CB, Mattos, P, McCarthy, H, Mehta, MA, Namazova-Baranova, L, Nigg, JT, Novotny, SE, O’Gorman Tuura, RL, Weiss, EO, Oosterlaan, J, Oranje, B, Paloyelis, Y, Pauli, P, Plessen, KJ, Ramos-Quiroga, JA, Reif, A, Reneman, L, Rubia, K, Schrantee, A, Schwarz, L, Schweren, LJS, Seitz, J, Shaw, P, Silk, Timothy, Skokauskas, N, Vila, JCS, Stevens, MC, Sudre, G, Tamm, L, Thompson, PM, Tovar-Moll, F, van Erp, TGM, Vance, A, Vilarroya, O, Vives-Gilabert, Y, von Polier, GG, Walitza, S, Yoncheva, YN, Zhang-James, Y, Helminen, EC, Liu, J, Busatto, GF, Calvo, A, Cercignani, M, Chaim-Avancini, TM, Gabel, MC, Harrison, NA, Lazaro, L, Lera-Miguel, S, Louza, MR, Nicolau, R, Rosa, PGP, Schulte-Rutte, M, Zanetti, MV, Ambrosino, S, Asherson, P, Banaschewski, T, Baranov, A, Baumeister, S, Baur-Streubel, R, Bellgrove, MA, Biederman, J, Bralten, J, Bramati, IE, Brandeis, D, Brem, S, Buitelaar, JK, Castellanos, FX, Chantiluke, KC, Christakou, A, Coghill, D, Conzelmann, A, Cubillo, AI, Dale, AM, de Zeeuw, P, Doyle, AE, Durston, S, Earl, EA, Epstein, JN, Ethofer, T, Fair, DA, Fallgatter, AJ, Frodl, T, Gogberashvili, T, Haavik, J, Hartman, CA, Heslenfeld, DJ, Hoekstra, PJ, Hohmann, S, Høvik, MF, Jahanshad, N, Jernigan, TL, Kardatzki, B, Karkashadze, G, Kelly, C, Kohls, G, Konrad, K, Kuntsi, J, Lesch, KP, Lundervold, AJ, Malpas, CB, Mattos, P, McCarthy, H, Mehta, MA, Namazova-Baranova, L, Nigg, JT, Novotny, SE, O’Gorman Tuura, RL, Weiss, EO, Oosterlaan, J, Oranje, B, Paloyelis, Y, Pauli, P, Plessen, KJ, Ramos-Quiroga, JA, Reif, A, Reneman, L, Rubia, K, Schrantee, A, Schwarz, L, Schweren, LJS, Seitz, J, Shaw, P, Silk, Timothy, Skokauskas, N, Vila, JCS, Stevens, MC, Sudre, G, Tamm, L, Thompson, PM, Tovar-Moll, F, van Erp, TGM, Vance, A, Vilarroya, O, Vives-Gilabert, Y, von Polier, GG, Walitza, S, and Yoncheva, YN
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- 2021
29. Analysis of structural brain asymmetries in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder in 39 datasets
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Postema, MC, Hoogman, M, Ambrosino, S, Asherson, P, Banaschewski, T, Bandeira, CE, Baranov, A, Bau, CHD, Baumeister, S, Baur-Streubel, R, Bellgrove, MA, Biederman, J, Bralten, J, Brandeis, D, Brem, S, Buitelaar, JK, Busatto, GF, Castellanos, FX, Cercignani, M, Chaim-Avancini, TM, Chantiluke, KC, Christakou, A, Coghill, D, Conzelmann, A, Cubillo, AI, Cupertino, RB, de Zeeuw, P, Doyle, AE, Durston, S, Earl, EA, Epstein, JN, Ethofer, T, Fair, DA, Fallgatter, AJ, Faraone, SV, Frodl, T, Gabel, MC, Gogberashvili, T, Grevet, EH, Haavik, J, Harrison, NA, Hartman, CA, Heslenfeld, DJ, Hoekstra, PJ, Hohmann, S, Høvik, MF, Jernigan, TL, Kardatzki, B, Karkashadze, G, Kelly, C, Kohls, G, Konrad, K, Kuntsi, J, Lazaro, L, Lera-Miguel, S, Lesch, KP, Louza, MR, Lundervold, AJ, Malpas, CB, Mattos, P, McCarthy, H, Namazova-Baranova, L, Nicolau, R, Nigg, JT, Novotny, SE, Oberwelland Weiss, E, O'Gorman Tuura, RL, Oosterlaan, J, Oranje, B, Paloyelis, Y, Pauli, P, Picon, FA, Plessen, KJ, Ramos-Quiroga, JA, Reif, A, Reneman, L, Rosa, PGP, Rubia, K, Schrantee, A, Schweren, LJS, Seitz, J, Shaw, P, Silk, Tim, Skokauskas, N, Soliva Vila, JC, Stevens, MC, Sudre, G, Tamm, L, Tovar-Moll, F, van Erp, TGM, Vance, A, Vilarroya, O, Vives-Gilabert, Y, von Polier, GG, Walitza, S, Yoncheva, YN, Zanetti, MV, Ziegler, GC, Glahn, DC, Jahanshad, N, Postema, MC, Hoogman, M, Ambrosino, S, Asherson, P, Banaschewski, T, Bandeira, CE, Baranov, A, Bau, CHD, Baumeister, S, Baur-Streubel, R, Bellgrove, MA, Biederman, J, Bralten, J, Brandeis, D, Brem, S, Buitelaar, JK, Busatto, GF, Castellanos, FX, Cercignani, M, Chaim-Avancini, TM, Chantiluke, KC, Christakou, A, Coghill, D, Conzelmann, A, Cubillo, AI, Cupertino, RB, de Zeeuw, P, Doyle, AE, Durston, S, Earl, EA, Epstein, JN, Ethofer, T, Fair, DA, Fallgatter, AJ, Faraone, SV, Frodl, T, Gabel, MC, Gogberashvili, T, Grevet, EH, Haavik, J, Harrison, NA, Hartman, CA, Heslenfeld, DJ, Hoekstra, PJ, Hohmann, S, Høvik, MF, Jernigan, TL, Kardatzki, B, Karkashadze, G, Kelly, C, Kohls, G, Konrad, K, Kuntsi, J, Lazaro, L, Lera-Miguel, S, Lesch, KP, Louza, MR, Lundervold, AJ, Malpas, CB, Mattos, P, McCarthy, H, Namazova-Baranova, L, Nicolau, R, Nigg, JT, Novotny, SE, Oberwelland Weiss, E, O'Gorman Tuura, RL, Oosterlaan, J, Oranje, B, Paloyelis, Y, Pauli, P, Picon, FA, Plessen, KJ, Ramos-Quiroga, JA, Reif, A, Reneman, L, Rosa, PGP, Rubia, K, Schrantee, A, Schweren, LJS, Seitz, J, Shaw, P, Silk, Tim, Skokauskas, N, Soliva Vila, JC, Stevens, MC, Sudre, G, Tamm, L, Tovar-Moll, F, van Erp, TGM, Vance, A, Vilarroya, O, Vives-Gilabert, Y, von Polier, GG, Walitza, S, Yoncheva, YN, Zanetti, MV, Ziegler, GC, Glahn, DC, and Jahanshad, N
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- 2021
30. Prefrontal and frontostriatal structures mediate academic outcomes associated with ADHD symptoms
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Chiu, H, Genc, S, Malpas, CB, Sciberras, E, Nicholson, JM, Efron, D, Silk, TJ, Chiu, H, Genc, S, Malpas, CB, Sciberras, E, Nicholson, JM, Efron, D, and Silk, TJ
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- 2021
31. Sodium selenate as a disease-modifying treatment for mild-moderate Alzheimer's disease: an open-label extension study
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Vivash, L, Malpas, CB, Hovens, CM, Brodtmann, A, Collins, S, Macfarlane, S, Velakoulis, D, O'Brien, TJ, Vivash, L, Malpas, CB, Hovens, CM, Brodtmann, A, Collins, S, Macfarlane, S, Velakoulis, D, and O'Brien, TJ
- Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Sodium selenate is a potential disease-modifying treatment for Alzheimer's disease (AD) which reduces hyperphosphorylated tau through activation of the protein phosphatase 2A enzyme. We have shown sodium selenate to be safe and well tolerated in a 24-week, phase 2a double-blind placebo-controlled randomised controlled trial (RCT), also reporting sodium selenate reduced neurodegeneration on diffusion-weighted MRI. This study assessed the safety and tolerability of chronic sodium selenate treatment (up to 23 months) in patients with AD who had been enrolled in the RCT. Cognitive measures served as secondary outcomes of potential disease-modification. METHODS: An open-label extension study of sodium selenate (10 mg three times a day) in patients with AD who had completed the previous RCT. Twenty-eight patients were enrolled. Patients were regularly monitored for safety, adverse events (AEs) and protocol compliance. Cognitive tests were administered for measures of disease progression. RESULTS: Sixteen patients were discontinued by the sponsor, and 12 discontinued for other reasons. Treatment duration ranged from 6 to 23 months. The majority of AEs were mild (83%), and 33% were treatment-related. Common treatment-related AEs were alopecia (21%) and nail disorder (32%), which both resolved either prior to or following cessation of treatment. Two serious AEs occurred, which were not treatment-related. Alzheimer's Disease Assessment Scale-Cognitive Subscale 11 score increased 1.8 points over 12 months. DISCUSSION: Chronic sodium selenate treatment is safe and well tolerated in patients with AD. Cognitive measures suggest a slowing of disease progression though this could not be confirmed as the study was not controlled. Further research into sodium selenate as a treatment for AD is warranted.
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- 2021
32. Burnout and psychological distress amongst Australian healthcare workers during the COVID-19 pandemic
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Dobson, H, Malpas, CB, Burrell, AJC, Gurvich, C, Chen, L, Kulkarni, J, Winton-Brown, T, Dobson, H, Malpas, CB, Burrell, AJC, Gurvich, C, Chen, L, Kulkarni, J, and Winton-Brown, T
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To examine psychological distress in healthcare workers (HCWs) during the COVID-19 pandemic in April-May 2020. METHODS: A cross-sectional survey examining demographic, employment and mental health characteristics of HCWs in a large metropolitan hospital in Australia. RESULTS: HCWs showed significant symptoms of moderate-severe level depression (21%), anxiety (20%) and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD; 29%), associated with burnout, prior psychiatric history, profession and resilience. CONCLUSION: Despite low levels of COVID contact, moderate to high levels of psychological distress were reported. Continued monitoring and support for HCWs' mental well-being is warranted as the COVID-19 pandemic develops.
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- 2021
33. Association Between Psychiatric Comorbidities and Mortality in Epilepsy
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Tao, G, Auvrez, C, Nightscales, R, Barnard, S, McCartney, L, Malpas, CB, Perucca, P, Chen, Z, Adams, S, McIntosh, A, Ignatiadis, S, O'Brien, P, Cook, MJ, Kwan, P, Berkovic, SF, D'Souza, W, Velakoulis, D, O'Brien, TJ, Tao, G, Auvrez, C, Nightscales, R, Barnard, S, McCartney, L, Malpas, CB, Perucca, P, Chen, Z, Adams, S, McIntosh, A, Ignatiadis, S, O'Brien, P, Cook, MJ, Kwan, P, Berkovic, SF, D'Souza, W, Velakoulis, D, and O'Brien, TJ
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OBJECTIVE: To explore the impact of psychiatric comorbidities on all-cause mortality in adults with epilepsy from a cohort of patients admitted for video-EEG monitoring (VEM) over 2 decades. METHODS: A retrospective medical record audit was conducted on 2,709 adults admitted for VEM and diagnosed with epilepsy at 3 Victorian comprehensive epilepsy programs from 1995 to 2015. A total of 1,805 patients were identified in whom the record of a clinical evaluation by a neuropsychiatrist was available, excluding 27 patients who died of a malignant brain tumor known at the time of VEM admission. Epilepsy and lifetime psychiatric diagnoses were determined from consensus opinion of epileptologists and neuropsychiatrists involved in the care of each patient. Mortality and cause of death were determined by linkage to the Australian National Death Index and National Coronial Information System. RESULTS: Compared with the general population, mortality was higher in people with epilepsy (PWE) with a psychiatric illness (standardized mortality ratio [SMR] 3.6) and without a psychiatric illness (SMR 2.5). PWE with a psychiatric illness had greater mortality compared with PWE without (hazard ratio 1.41, 95% confidence interval 1.02-1.97) after adjusting for age and sex. No single psychiatric disorder by itself conferred increased mortality in PWE. The distribution of causes of death remained similar between PWE with psychiatric comorbidities and those without. CONCLUSION: The presence of comorbid psychiatric disorders in adults with epilepsy is associated with increased mortality, highlighting the importance of identifying and treating psychiatric comorbidities in these patients.
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- 2021
34. Cognition and psychopathology in autoimmune encephalitides: A focus on risk factors and patient outcomes
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Griffith, SP, Malpas, CB, Kyndt, C, Alpitsis, R, O’Brien, TJ, Monif, M, Griffith, SP, Malpas, CB, Kyndt, C, Alpitsis, R, O’Brien, TJ, and Monif, M
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Neurocognitive compromise, neuropsychiatric symptoms and psychopathology are all evident in the acute stages of autoimmune encephalitides. These factors considerably affect functional independence after discharge. Drawing on psychometric assessments and qualitative descriptions, this review explores the nature, extent and diagnosis of cognitive disorder in autoimmune encephalitides. Potential pathophysiological and neuroanatomical architecture related to neurocognitive compromise in the acute and chronic stages of this illness is examined. In regard to outcomes, the review highlights clinicodemographic factors currently known to be associated with poorer cognitive outcome. Finally, the review delves into neuropsychiatric symptomology and psychological concerns that should be considered at diagnosis and during follow up of these patients.
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- 2021
35. Clinical predictors of discordance between screening tests and psychiatric assessment for depressive and anxiety disorders among patients being evaluated for seizure disorders
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Holper, S, Foster, E, Lloyd, M, Rayner, G, Rychkova, M, Ali, R, Winton-Brown, TT, Velakoulis, D, O'Brien, TJ, Kwan, P, Malpas, CB, Holper, S, Foster, E, Lloyd, M, Rayner, G, Rychkova, M, Ali, R, Winton-Brown, TT, Velakoulis, D, O'Brien, TJ, Kwan, P, and Malpas, CB
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: This study was undertaken to identify factors that predict discordance between the screening instruments Neurological Disorders Depression Inventory for Epilepsy (NDDI-E) and Generalized Anxiety Disorder scale (GAD-7), and diagnoses made by qualified psychiatrists among patients with seizure disorders. Importantly, this is not a validation study; rather, it investigates clinicodemographic predictors of discordance between screening tests and psychiatric assessment. METHODS: Adult patients admitted for inpatient video-electroencephalographic monitoring completed eight psychometric instruments, including the NDDI-E and GAD-7, and psychiatric assessment. Patients were grouped according to agreement between the screening instrument and psychiatrists' diagnoses. Screening was "discordant" if the outcome differed from the psychiatrist's diagnosis, including both false positive and false negative results. Bayesian statistical analyses were used to identify factors associated with discordance. RESULTS: A total of 411 patients met inclusion criteria; mean age was 39.6 years, and 55.5% (n = 228) were female. Depression screening was discordant in 33% of cases (n = 136/411), driven by false positives (n = 76/136, 56%) rather than false negatives (n = 60/136, 44%). Likewise, anxiety screening was discordant in one third of cases (n = 121/411, 29%) due to false positives (n = 60/121, 50%) and false negatives (n = 61/121, 50%). Seven clinical factors were predictive of discordant screening for both depression and anxiety: greater dissociative symptoms, greater patient-reported adverse events, subjective cognitive impairment, negative affect, detachment, disinhibition, and psychoticism. When the analyses were restricted to only patients with psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNES) or epilepsy, the rate of discordant depression screening was higher in the PNES group (n = 29, 47%) compared to the epilepsy group (n = 70, 30%, Bayes factor for the alternative hypothesis =
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- 2021
36. Virtual Histology of Cortical Thickness and Shared Neurobiology in 6 Psychiatric Disorders
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Patel, Y, Parker, N, Shin, J, Howard, D, French, L, Thomopoulos, SI, Pozzi, E, Abe, Y, Abe, C, Anticevic, A, Alda, M, Aleman, A, Alloza, C, Alonso-Lana, S, Ameis, SH, Anagnostou, E, McIntosh, AA, Arango, C, Arnold, PD, Asherson, P, Assogna, F, Auzias, G, Ayesa-Arriola, R, Bakker, G, Banaj, N, Banaschewski, T, Bandeira, CE, Baranov, A, Bargallo, N, Bau, CHD, Baumeister, S, Baune, BT, Bellgrove, MA, Benedetti, F, Bertolino, A, Boedhoe, PSW, Boks, M, Bollettini, I, del Mar Bonnin, C, Borgers, T, Borgwardt, S, Brandeis, D, Brennan, BP, Bruggemann, JM, Bulow, R, Busatto, GF, Calderoni, S, Calhoun, VD, Calvo, R, Canales-Rodriguez, EJ, Cannon, DM, Carr, VJ, Cascella, N, Cercignani, M, Chaim-Avancini, TM, Christakou, A, Coghill, D, Conzelmann, A, Crespo-Facorro, B, Cubillo, AI, Cullen, KR, Cupertino, RB, Daly, E, Dannlowski, U, Davey, CG, Denys, D, Deruelle, C, Di Giorgio, A, Dickie, EW, Dima, D, Dohm, K, Ehrlich, S, Ely, BA, Erwin-Grabner, T, Ethofer, T, Fair, DA, Fallgatter, AJ, Faraone, SV, Fatjo-Vilas, M, Fedor, JM, Fitzgerald, KD, Ford, JM, Frodl, T, Fu, CHY, Fullerton, JM, Gabel, MC, Glahn, DC, Roberts, G, Gogberashvili, T, Goikolea, JM, Gotlib, IH, Goya-Maldonado, R, Grabe, HJ, Green, MJ, Grevet, EH, Groenewold, NA, Grotegerd, D, Gruber, O, Gruner, P, Guerrero-Pedraza, A, Gur, RE, Gur, RC, Haar, S, Haarman, BCM, Haavik, J, Hahn, T, Hajek, T, Harrison, BJ, Harrison, NA, Hartman, CA, Whalley, HC, Heslenfeld, DJ, Hibar, DP, Hilland, E, Hirano, Y, Ho, TC, Hoekstra, PJ, Hoekstra, L, Hohmann, S, Hong, LE, Hoschl, C, Hovik, MF, Howells, FM, Nenadic, I, Jalbrzikowski, M, James, AC, Janssen, J, Jaspers-Fayer, F, Xu, J, Jonassen, R, Karkashadze, G, King, JA, Kircher, T, Kirschner, M, Koch, K, Kochunov, P, Kohls, G, Konrad, K, Kramer, B, Krug, A, Kuntsi, J, Kwon, JS, Landen, M, Landro, NI, Lazaro, L, Lebedeva, IS, Leehr, EJ, Lera-Miguel, S, Lesch, K-P, Lochner, C, Louza, MR, Luna, B, Lundervold, AJ, MacMaster, FP, Maglanoc, LA, Malpas, CB, Portella, MJ, Marsh, R, Martyn, FM, Mataix-Cols, D, Mathalon, DH, McCarthy, H, McDonald, C, McPhilemy, G, Meinert, S, Menchon, JM, Minuzzi, L, Mitchell, PB, Moreno, C, Morgado, P, Muratori, F, Murphy, CM, Murphy, D, Mwangi, B, Nabulsi, L, Nakagawa, A, Nakamae, T, Namazova, L, Narayanaswamy, J, Jahanshad, N, Nguyen, DD, Nicolau, R, O'Gorman Tuura, RL, O'Hearn, K, Oosterlaan, J, Opel, N, Ophoff, RA, Oranje, B, Garcia de la Foz, VO, Overs, BJ, Paloyelis, Y, Pantelis, C, Parellada, M, Pauli, P, Pico-Perez, M, Picon, FA, Piras, F, Plessen, KJ, Pomarol-Clotet, E, Preda, A, Puig, O, Quide, Y, Radua, J, Ramos-Quiroga, JA, Rasser, PE, Rauer, L, Reddy, J, Redlich, R, Reif, A, Reneman, L, Repple, J, Retico, A, Richarte, V, Richter, A, Rosa, PGP, Rubia, KK, Hashimoto, R, Sacchet, MD, Salvador, R, Santonja, J, Sarink, K, Sarro, S, Satterthwaite, TD, Sawa, A, Schall, U, Schofield, PR, Schrantee, A, Seitz, J, Serpa, MH, Setien-Suero, E, Shaw, P, Shook, D, Silk, TJ, Sim, K, Simon, S, Simpson, HB, Singh, A, Skoch, A, Skokauskas, N, Soares, JC, Soreni, N, Soriano-Mas, C, Spalletta, G, Spaniel, F, Lawrie, SM, Stern, ER, Stewart, SE, Takayanagi, Y, Temmingh, HS, Tolin, DF, Tomecek, D, Tordesillas-Gutierrez, D, Tosetti, M, Uhlmann, A, van Amelsvoort, T, van der Wee, NJA, van der Werff, SJA, van Haren, NEM, van Wingen, GA, Vance, A, Vazquez-Bourgon, J, Vecchio, D, Venkatasubramanian, G, Vieta, E, Vilarroya, O, Vives-Gilabert, Y, Voineskos, AN, Volzke, H, von Polier, GG, Walton, E, Weickert, TW, Weickert, CS, Weideman, AS, Wittfeld, K, Wolf, DH, Wu, M-J, Yang, TT, Yang, K, Yoncheva, Y, Yun, J-Y, Cheng, Y, Zanetti, MV, Ziegler, GC, Franke, B, Hoogman, M, Buitelaar, JK, van Rooij, D, Andreassen, OA, Ching, CRK, Veltman, DJ, Schmaal, L, Stein, DJ, van den Heuvel, OA, Turner, JA, van Erp, TGM, Pausova, Z, Thompson, PM, Paus, T, Patel, Y, Parker, N, Shin, J, Howard, D, French, L, Thomopoulos, SI, Pozzi, E, Abe, Y, Abe, C, Anticevic, A, Alda, M, Aleman, A, Alloza, C, Alonso-Lana, S, Ameis, SH, Anagnostou, E, McIntosh, AA, Arango, C, Arnold, PD, Asherson, P, Assogna, F, Auzias, G, Ayesa-Arriola, R, Bakker, G, Banaj, N, Banaschewski, T, Bandeira, CE, Baranov, A, Bargallo, N, Bau, CHD, Baumeister, S, Baune, BT, Bellgrove, MA, Benedetti, F, Bertolino, A, Boedhoe, PSW, Boks, M, Bollettini, I, del Mar Bonnin, C, Borgers, T, Borgwardt, S, Brandeis, D, Brennan, BP, Bruggemann, JM, Bulow, R, Busatto, GF, Calderoni, S, Calhoun, VD, Calvo, R, Canales-Rodriguez, EJ, Cannon, DM, Carr, VJ, Cascella, N, Cercignani, M, Chaim-Avancini, TM, Christakou, A, Coghill, D, Conzelmann, A, Crespo-Facorro, B, Cubillo, AI, Cullen, KR, Cupertino, RB, Daly, E, Dannlowski, U, Davey, CG, Denys, D, Deruelle, C, Di Giorgio, A, Dickie, EW, Dima, D, Dohm, K, Ehrlich, S, Ely, BA, Erwin-Grabner, T, Ethofer, T, Fair, DA, Fallgatter, AJ, Faraone, SV, Fatjo-Vilas, M, Fedor, JM, Fitzgerald, KD, Ford, JM, Frodl, T, Fu, CHY, Fullerton, JM, Gabel, MC, Glahn, DC, Roberts, G, Gogberashvili, T, Goikolea, JM, Gotlib, IH, Goya-Maldonado, R, Grabe, HJ, Green, MJ, Grevet, EH, Groenewold, NA, Grotegerd, D, Gruber, O, Gruner, P, Guerrero-Pedraza, A, Gur, RE, Gur, RC, Haar, S, Haarman, BCM, Haavik, J, Hahn, T, Hajek, T, Harrison, BJ, Harrison, NA, Hartman, CA, Whalley, HC, Heslenfeld, DJ, Hibar, DP, Hilland, E, Hirano, Y, Ho, TC, Hoekstra, PJ, Hoekstra, L, Hohmann, S, Hong, LE, Hoschl, C, Hovik, MF, Howells, FM, Nenadic, I, Jalbrzikowski, M, James, AC, Janssen, J, Jaspers-Fayer, F, Xu, J, Jonassen, R, Karkashadze, G, King, JA, Kircher, T, Kirschner, M, Koch, K, Kochunov, P, Kohls, G, Konrad, K, Kramer, B, Krug, A, Kuntsi, J, Kwon, JS, Landen, M, Landro, NI, Lazaro, L, Lebedeva, IS, Leehr, EJ, Lera-Miguel, S, Lesch, K-P, Lochner, C, Louza, MR, Luna, B, Lundervold, AJ, MacMaster, FP, Maglanoc, LA, Malpas, CB, Portella, MJ, Marsh, R, Martyn, FM, Mataix-Cols, D, Mathalon, DH, McCarthy, H, McDonald, C, McPhilemy, G, Meinert, S, Menchon, JM, Minuzzi, L, Mitchell, PB, Moreno, C, Morgado, P, Muratori, F, Murphy, CM, Murphy, D, Mwangi, B, Nabulsi, L, Nakagawa, A, Nakamae, T, Namazova, L, Narayanaswamy, J, Jahanshad, N, Nguyen, DD, Nicolau, R, O'Gorman Tuura, RL, O'Hearn, K, Oosterlaan, J, Opel, N, Ophoff, RA, Oranje, B, Garcia de la Foz, VO, Overs, BJ, Paloyelis, Y, Pantelis, C, Parellada, M, Pauli, P, Pico-Perez, M, Picon, FA, Piras, F, Plessen, KJ, Pomarol-Clotet, E, Preda, A, Puig, O, Quide, Y, Radua, J, Ramos-Quiroga, JA, Rasser, PE, Rauer, L, Reddy, J, Redlich, R, Reif, A, Reneman, L, Repple, J, Retico, A, Richarte, V, Richter, A, Rosa, PGP, Rubia, KK, Hashimoto, R, Sacchet, MD, Salvador, R, Santonja, J, Sarink, K, Sarro, S, Satterthwaite, TD, Sawa, A, Schall, U, Schofield, PR, Schrantee, A, Seitz, J, Serpa, MH, Setien-Suero, E, Shaw, P, Shook, D, Silk, TJ, Sim, K, Simon, S, Simpson, HB, Singh, A, Skoch, A, Skokauskas, N, Soares, JC, Soreni, N, Soriano-Mas, C, Spalletta, G, Spaniel, F, Lawrie, SM, Stern, ER, Stewart, SE, Takayanagi, Y, Temmingh, HS, Tolin, DF, Tomecek, D, Tordesillas-Gutierrez, D, Tosetti, M, Uhlmann, A, van Amelsvoort, T, van der Wee, NJA, van der Werff, SJA, van Haren, NEM, van Wingen, GA, Vance, A, Vazquez-Bourgon, J, Vecchio, D, Venkatasubramanian, G, Vieta, E, Vilarroya, O, Vives-Gilabert, Y, Voineskos, AN, Volzke, H, von Polier, GG, Walton, E, Weickert, TW, Weickert, CS, Weideman, AS, Wittfeld, K, Wolf, DH, Wu, M-J, Yang, TT, Yang, K, Yoncheva, Y, Yun, J-Y, Cheng, Y, Zanetti, MV, Ziegler, GC, Franke, B, Hoogman, M, Buitelaar, JK, van Rooij, D, Andreassen, OA, Ching, CRK, Veltman, DJ, Schmaal, L, Stein, DJ, van den Heuvel, OA, Turner, JA, van Erp, TGM, Pausova, Z, Thompson, PM, and Paus, T
- Abstract
IMPORTANCE: Large-scale neuroimaging studies have revealed group differences in cortical thickness across many psychiatric disorders. The underlying neurobiology behind these differences is not well understood. OBJECTIVE: To determine neurobiologic correlates of group differences in cortical thickness between cases and controls in 6 disorders: attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), autism spectrum disorder (ASD), bipolar disorder (BD), major depressive disorder (MDD), obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), and schizophrenia. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Profiles of group differences in cortical thickness between cases and controls were generated using T1-weighted magnetic resonance images. Similarity between interregional profiles of cell-specific gene expression and those in the group differences in cortical thickness were investigated in each disorder. Next, principal component analysis was used to reveal a shared profile of group difference in thickness across the disorders. Analysis for gene coexpression, clustering, and enrichment for genes associated with these disorders were conducted. Data analysis was conducted between June and December 2019. The analysis included 145 cohorts across 6 psychiatric disorders drawn from the ENIGMA consortium. The numbers of cases and controls in each of the 6 disorders were as follows: ADHD: 1814 and 1602; ASD: 1748 and 1770; BD: 1547 and 3405; MDD: 2658 and 3572; OCD: 2266 and 2007; and schizophrenia: 2688 and 3244. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Interregional profiles of group difference in cortical thickness between cases and controls. RESULTS: A total of 12 721 cases and 15 600 controls, ranging from ages 2 to 89 years, were included in this study. Interregional profiles of group differences in cortical thickness for each of the 6 psychiatric disorders were associated with profiles of gene expression specific to pyramidal (CA1) cells, astrocytes (except for BD), and microglia (except for OCD); collectively, gene
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- 2021
37. Prenatal valproate exposure and adverse neurodevelopmental outcomes: Does sex matter?
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Honybun, E, Thwaites, R, Malpas, CB, Rayner, G, Anderson, A, Graham, J, Hitchcock, A, O'Brien, TJ, Vajda, FJE, Perucca, P, Honybun, E, Thwaites, R, Malpas, CB, Rayner, G, Anderson, A, Graham, J, Hitchcock, A, O'Brien, TJ, Vajda, FJE, and Perucca, P
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Prenatal exposure to the antiepileptic drug (AED) valproic acid (VPA) is associated with an increased risk of impaired postnatal neurodevelopment, including autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). We aimed to evaluate the influence of sex and drug dosage on the association between prenatal VPA exposure and postnatal behavioral outcomes. METHODS: The Australian Pregnancy Register of AEDs was interrogated to identify children aged 4-11 years prenatally exposed to AEDs. Parents reported on their child's behavior using the Autism Spectrum Quotient-Children's Version and the National Institute for Children's Health Quality Vanderbilt Assessment Scale for ADHD. General linear mixed-effects models were used to investigate the relationship between clinicodemographic variables and psychometric scores. RESULTS: A total of 121 children were studied: 54 prenatally exposed to VPA (28 males, 26 females; mean dose ± SD: 644 ± 310 mg/day) and 67 exposed to other AEDs. There was a main effect of sex showing higher ASD scores in males compared to females (p = .006). An interaction between sex and VPA exposure revealed that males had higher ASD symptoms among children exposed to AEDs other than VPA (p = .01); however, this typical sex dynamic was not evident in VPA-exposed children. There was no evidence of any dose-response relationship between VPA exposure and ASD symptoms. Males had higher ADHD scores compared to females, but there was no evidence for a link between ADHD symptoms and VPA exposure. SIGNIFICANCE: Prenatal VPA exposure seems to negate the usual male sex-related predominance in the incidence of ASD. These initial findings deepen the concept of VPA as a "behavioral teratogen" by indicating that its effect might be influenced by sex, with females appearing particularly sensitive to the effects of VPA. No association between VPA doses and adverse postnatal behavioral outcomes was detected, possibly related to the low
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- 2021
38. Sodium selenate as a disease-modifying treatment for progressive supranuclear palsy: protocol for a phase 2, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial
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Vivash, L, Bertram, KL, Malpas, CB, Marotta, C, Harding, IH, Kolbe, S, Fielding, J, Clough, M, Lewis, SJG, Tisch, S, Evans, AH, O'Sullivan, JD, Kimber, T, Darby, D, Churilov, L, Law, M, Hovens, CM, Velakoulis, D, O'Brien, TJ, Vivash, L, Bertram, KL, Malpas, CB, Marotta, C, Harding, IH, Kolbe, S, Fielding, J, Clough, M, Lewis, SJG, Tisch, S, Evans, AH, O'Sullivan, JD, Kimber, T, Darby, D, Churilov, L, Law, M, Hovens, CM, Velakoulis, D, and O'Brien, TJ
- Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) is a neurodegenerative disorder for which there are currently no disease-modifying therapies. The neuropathology of PSP is associated with the accumulation of hyperphosphorylated tau in the brain. We have previously shown that protein phosphatase 2 activity in the brain is upregulated by sodium selenate, which enhances dephosphorylation. Therefore, the objective of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of sodium selenate as a disease-modifying therapy for PSP. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: This will be a multi-site, phase 2b, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of sodium selenate. 70 patients will be recruited at six Australian academic hospitals and research institutes. Following the confirmation of eligibility at screening, participants will be randomised (1:1) to receive 52 weeks of active treatment (sodium selenate; 15 mg three times a day) or matching placebo. Regular safety and efficacy visits will be completed throughout the study period. The primary study outcome is change in an MRI volume composite (frontal lobe+midbrain-3rd ventricle) over the treatment period. Analysis will be with a general linear model (GLM) with the MRI composite at 52 weeks as the dependent variable, treatment group as an independent variable and baseline MRI composite as a covariate. Secondary outcomes are change in PSP rating scale, clinical global impression of change (clinician) and change in midbrain mean diffusivity. These outcomes will also be analysed with a GLM as above, with the corresponding baseline measure entered as a covariate. Secondary safety and tolerability outcomes are frequency of serious adverse events, frequency of down-titration occurrences and frequency of study discontinuation. Additional, as yet unplanned, exploratory outcomes will include analyses of other imaging, cognitive and biospecimen measures. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The study was approved by the Alfred Health Ethics Committee (594/20). Each
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- 2021
39. The effect of improved dietary control on cognitive and psychiatric functioning in adults with phenylketonuria: the ReDAPT study
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Burgess, NM, Kelso, W, Malpas, CB, Winton-Brown, T, Fazio, T, Panetta, J, De Jong, G, Neath, J, Atherton, S, Velakoulis, D, Walterfang, M, Burgess, NM, Kelso, W, Malpas, CB, Winton-Brown, T, Fazio, T, Panetta, J, De Jong, G, Neath, J, Atherton, S, Velakoulis, D, and Walterfang, M
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Phenylketonuria (PKU) is an autosomal recessive inherited disorder characterised by a deficiency in phenylalanine hydroxylase. Untreated, PKU is associated with a wide range of cognitive and psychiatric sequelae. Contemporary management guidelines recommend lifetime dietary control of phenylalanine (Phe) levels, however many individuals who discontinue dietary control subsequently suffer symptoms of anxiety, depression and disturbances to cognition. We undertook a prospective cohort study of patients with early-treated phenylketonuria who had ceased dietary control to test the hypothesis that resumption of dietary control of PKU is associated with improvements in measures of psychiatric morbidity and cognitive functioning. METHODS: We re-initiated dietary control for early-treated patients with PKU and monitored cognitive and psychiatric outcomes over a twelve-month period. Assessments included objective cognitive function (measured by cognitive proficiency index (CPI)), anxiety and depression scales. General linear mixed model (GLMM) analyses were performed to assess change in psychometric variables from baseline over twelve months after resumption of dietary control. RESULTS: A total of nine patients were recruited. Mean age was 33 years (SD = 8.75), five were female. Mean time off dietary control was 19.1 years (SD = 11.3), and mean baseline phenylalanine (Phe) levels were 1108 µmol/L (SD = 293). GLMM analysis demonstrated a positive relationship between CPI and time on diet (b = 0.56 [95% CI = 0.17, 0.95]). Age, time off diet, Phe levels and depression scores were not associated with cognitive function. There was a negative relationship between time on diet and anxiety (b = - 0.88 95% CI = [- 1.26, - 0.50]) and depression ratings (b = - 0.61, 95% CI = [- 0.95, - 0.26]). CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrated improvements in cognitive function, anxiety, and depression ratings associated with resumption of dietary control of PKU. Raw Phe levels were not
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- 2021
40. Delay from treatment start to full effect of immunotherapies for multiple sclerosis
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Roos, I, Leray, E, Frascoli, F, Casey, R, Brown, WJL, Horakova, D, Havrdova, EK, Trojano, M, Patti, F, Izquierdo, G, Eichau, S, Onofrj, M, Lugaresi, A, Prat, A, Girard, M, Grammond, P, Sola, P, Ferraro, D, Ozakbas, S, Bergamaschi, R, Sá, MJ, Cartechini, E, Boz, C, Granella, F, Hupperts, R, Terzi, M, Lechner-Scott, J, Spitaleri, D, van Pesch, V, Soysal, A, Olascoaga, J, Prevost, J, Aguera-Morales, E, Slee, M, Csepany, T, Turkoglu, R, Sidhom, Y, Gouider, R, van Wijmeersch, B, McCombe, P, Macdonell, R, Coles, A, Malpas, CB, Butzkueven, H, Vukusic, S, Kalincik, T, Duquette, P, Grand'Maison, F, Iuliano, G, Ramo-Tello, C, Solaro, C, Cabrera-Gomez, JA, Rio, ME, Bolaños, RF, Shaygannejad, V, Oreja-Guevara, C, Sanchez-Menoyo, JL, Petersen, T, Altintas, A, Barnett, M, Flechter, S, Fragoso, Y, Amato, MP, Moore, F, Ampapa, R, Verheul, F, Hodgkinson, S, Cristiano, E, Yamout, B, Laureys, G, Dominguez, JA, Zwanikken, C, Deri, N, Dobos, E, Vrech, C, Butler, E, Rozsa, C, Petkovska-Boskova, T, Karabudak, R, Rajda, C, Alkhaboori, J, Saladino, ML, Shaw, Cameron, Shuey, N, Vucic, S, Sempere, AP, Campbell, J, Piroska, I, Taylor, B, van der Walt, A, Kappos, L, Roullet, E, Gray, O, Simo, M, Sirbu, CA, Brochet, B, Cotton, F, de Sèze, J, Dion, A, Douek, P, Roos, I, Leray, E, Frascoli, F, Casey, R, Brown, WJL, Horakova, D, Havrdova, EK, Trojano, M, Patti, F, Izquierdo, G, Eichau, S, Onofrj, M, Lugaresi, A, Prat, A, Girard, M, Grammond, P, Sola, P, Ferraro, D, Ozakbas, S, Bergamaschi, R, Sá, MJ, Cartechini, E, Boz, C, Granella, F, Hupperts, R, Terzi, M, Lechner-Scott, J, Spitaleri, D, van Pesch, V, Soysal, A, Olascoaga, J, Prevost, J, Aguera-Morales, E, Slee, M, Csepany, T, Turkoglu, R, Sidhom, Y, Gouider, R, van Wijmeersch, B, McCombe, P, Macdonell, R, Coles, A, Malpas, CB, Butzkueven, H, Vukusic, S, Kalincik, T, Duquette, P, Grand'Maison, F, Iuliano, G, Ramo-Tello, C, Solaro, C, Cabrera-Gomez, JA, Rio, ME, Bolaños, RF, Shaygannejad, V, Oreja-Guevara, C, Sanchez-Menoyo, JL, Petersen, T, Altintas, A, Barnett, M, Flechter, S, Fragoso, Y, Amato, MP, Moore, F, Ampapa, R, Verheul, F, Hodgkinson, S, Cristiano, E, Yamout, B, Laureys, G, Dominguez, JA, Zwanikken, C, Deri, N, Dobos, E, Vrech, C, Butler, E, Rozsa, C, Petkovska-Boskova, T, Karabudak, R, Rajda, C, Alkhaboori, J, Saladino, ML, Shaw, Cameron, Shuey, N, Vucic, S, Sempere, AP, Campbell, J, Piroska, I, Taylor, B, van der Walt, A, Kappos, L, Roullet, E, Gray, O, Simo, M, Sirbu, CA, Brochet, B, Cotton, F, de Sèze, J, Dion, A, and Douek, P
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- 2020
41. A study protocol for a phase II randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of sodium selenate as a disease-modifying treatment for behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia
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Vivash, L, Malpas, CB, Churilov, L, Walterfang, M, Brodtmann, A, Piguet, O, Ahmed, RM, Bush, A, Hovens, CM, Kalincik, T, Darby, D, Velakoulis, D, O'Brien, TJ, Vivash, L, Malpas, CB, Churilov, L, Walterfang, M, Brodtmann, A, Piguet, O, Ahmed, RM, Bush, A, Hovens, CM, Kalincik, T, Darby, D, Velakoulis, D, and O'Brien, TJ
- Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) is a neurodegenerative disorder often neuropathologically associated with the accumulation of abnormally hyperphosphorylated tau, for which there is currently no disease-modifying treatment. Previous work by our group has shown sodium selenate upregulates the activity of protein phosphatase 2 in the brain, increasing the rate of tau dephosphorylation. The objective of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of sodium selenate as a disease-modifying treatment for bvFTD. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: This will be a multisite, phase IIb, double-blind placebo-controlled trial of sodium selenate. One hundred and twenty participants will be enrolled across 4 Australian academic hospitals. Following screening eligible participants will be randomised (1:1) to sodium selenate (15 mg three times a day) or placebo for 52 weeks. Participants will have regular safety and efficacy visits throughout the study period. The primary study outcome will be percentage brain volume change (PBVC) as measured on MRI over 52 weeks of treatment. This will be analysed with a general linear model (analysis of covariance (ANCOVA)) with the PBVC as an output, the treatment as an input and the baseline brain volume as covariate for adjustment purposes. Secondary outcomes include safety and tolerability measures, and efficacy measures; change in cerebrospinal fluid total-tau, Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination-III and Cambridge Behavioural Inventory-Revised scores over the 52 weeks of treatment. These will also be analysed with ANCOVA where the corresponding baseline measure will be incorporated in the model. Additional exploratory outcomes will include other imaging, cognitive and biospecimen analyses. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The study was approved by the Human Research and Ethics Committee of the lead site as part of the Australian Multisite Ethics approval system. The results of the study will be presented at national and int
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- 2020
42. Longitudinal patterns of white matter fibre density and morphology in children are associated with age and pubertal stage
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Genc, S, Malpas, CB, Gulenc, A, Sciberras, E, Efron, D, Silk, TJ, Seal, ML, Genc, S, Malpas, CB, Gulenc, A, Sciberras, E, Efron, D, Silk, TJ, and Seal, ML
- Abstract
The pubertal period involves dynamic white matter development. This period also corresponds with rapid gains in higher cognitive functions including attention, as well as increased risk of developing mental health difficulties. This longitudinal study comprised children aged 9-13 years (n = 130). Diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (dMRI) data were acquired (b = 2800s/mm2, 60 directions) at two time-points. We derived measures of fibre density and morphology using the fixel-based analysis framework and performed a tract-based mixed-effects modelling analysis to understand patterns of white matter development with respect to age, sex, pubertal stage, and the change in pubertal stage. We observed significant increases in apparent fibre density across a large number of white matter pathways, including major association and commissural pathways. We observed a linear relationship between pubertal stage and fibre density and morphology in the right superior longitudinal fasciculus, and fibre morphology in the right inferior longitudinal fasciculus. Finally, we report a significant interaction between the change in pubertal stage and age in the development of fibre density, for left-lateralised association tracts. Overall, white matter development across ages 9-13 years involves the expansion of major white matter fibre pathways, with key association pathways linked with pubertal stage.
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- 2020
43. Subcortical Brain Volume, Regional Cortical Thickness, and Cortical Surface Area Across Disorders: Findings From the ENIGMA ADHD, ASD, and OCD Working Groups
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Boedhoe, PSW, van Rooij, D, Hoogman, M, Twisk, JWR, Schmaal, L, Abe, Y, Alonso, P, Ameis, SH, Anikin, A, Anticevic, A, Arango, C, Arnold, PD, Asherson, P, Assogna, F, Auzias, G, Banaschewski, T, Baranov, A, Batistuzzo, MC, Baumeister, S, Baur-Streubel, R, Behrmann, M, Bellgrove, MA, Benedetti, F, Beucke, JC, Biederman, J, Bollettini, I, Bose, A, Bralten, J, Bramati, IE, Brandeis, D, Brem, S, Brennan, BP, Busatto, GF, Calderoni, S, Calvo, A, Calvo, R, Castellanos, FX, Cercignani, M, Chaim-Avancini, TM, Chantiluke, KC, Cheng, Y, Cho, KIK, Christakou, A, Coghill, D, Conzelmann, A, Cubillo, A, Dale, AM, Dallaspezia, S, Daly, E, Denys, D, Deruelle, C, Di Martino, A, Dinstein, I, Doyle, AE, Durston, S, Earl, EA, Ecker, C, Ehrlich, S, Ely, BA, Epstein, JN, Ethofer, T, Fair, DA, Fallgatter, AJ, Faraone, S, Fedor, J, Feng, X, Feusner, JD, Fitzgerald, J, Fitzgerald, KD, Fouche, J-P, Freitag, CM, Fridgeirsson, EA, Frodl, T, Gabel, MC, Gallagher, L, Gogberashvili, T, Gori, I, Gruner, P, Gursel, DA, Haar, S, Haavik, J, Hall, GB, Harrison, NA, Hartman, CA, Heslenfeld, DJ, Hirano, Y, Hoekstra, PJ, Hoexter, MQ, Hohmann, S, Hovik, MF, Hu, H, Huyser, C, Jahanshad, N, Jalbrzikowski, M, James, A, Janssen, J, Jaspers-Fayer, F, Jernigan, TL, Kapilushniy, D, Kardatzki, B, Karkashadze, G, Kathmann, N, Kaufmann, C, Kelly, C, Khadka, S, King, JA, Koch, K, Kohls, G, Konrad, K, Kuno, M, Kuntsi, J, Kvale, G, Kwon, JS, Lazaro, L, Lera-Miguel, S, Lesch, K-P, Hoekstra, L, Liu, Y, Lochner, C, Louza, MR, Luna, B, Lundervold, AJ, Malpas, CB, Marques, P, Marsh, R, Martinez-Zalacain, I, Mataix-Cols, D, Mattos, P, McCarthy, H, McGrath, J, Mehta, MA, Menchon, JM, Mennes, M, Martinho, MM, Moreira, PS, Morer, A, Morgado, P, Muratori, F, Murphy, CM, Murphy, DGM, Nakagawa, A, Nakamae, T, Nakao, T, Namazova-Baranova, L, Narayanaswamy, JC, Nicolau, R, Nigg, JT, Novotny, SE, Nurmi, EL, Weiss, EO, Tuura, RLO, O'Hearn, K, O'Neill, J, Oosterlaan, J, Oranje, B, Paloyelis, Y, Parellada, M, Pauli, P, Perriello, C, Piacentini, J, Piras, F, Plessen, KJ, Puig, O, Ramos-Quiroga, JA, Reddy, YCJ, Reif, A, Reneman, L, Retico, A, Rosa, PGP, Rubia, K, Rus, OG, Sakai, Y, Schrantee, A, Schwarz, L, Schweren, LJS, Seitz, J, Shaw, P, Shook, D, Silk, TJ, Simpson, HB, Skokauskas, N, Vila, JCS, Solovieva, A, Soreni, N, Soriano-Mas, C, Spalletta, G, Stern, ER, Stevens, MC, Stewart, SE, Sudre, G, Szeszko, PR, Tamm, L, Taylor, MJ, Tolin, DF, Tosetti, M, Tovar-Moll, F, Tsuchiyagaito, A, van Erp, TGM, van Wingen, GA, Vance, A, Venkatasubramanian, G, Vilarroya, O, Vives-Gilabert, Y, von Polier, GG, Walitza, S, Wallace, GL, Wang, Z, Wolfers, T, Yoncheva, YN, Yun, J-Y, Zanetti, M, Zhou, F, Ziegler, GC, Zierhut, KC, Zwiers, MP, Thompson, PM, Stein, DJ, Buitelaar, J, Franke, B, van den Heuvel, OA, Boedhoe, PSW, van Rooij, D, Hoogman, M, Twisk, JWR, Schmaal, L, Abe, Y, Alonso, P, Ameis, SH, Anikin, A, Anticevic, A, Arango, C, Arnold, PD, Asherson, P, Assogna, F, Auzias, G, Banaschewski, T, Baranov, A, Batistuzzo, MC, Baumeister, S, Baur-Streubel, R, Behrmann, M, Bellgrove, MA, Benedetti, F, Beucke, JC, Biederman, J, Bollettini, I, Bose, A, Bralten, J, Bramati, IE, Brandeis, D, Brem, S, Brennan, BP, Busatto, GF, Calderoni, S, Calvo, A, Calvo, R, Castellanos, FX, Cercignani, M, Chaim-Avancini, TM, Chantiluke, KC, Cheng, Y, Cho, KIK, Christakou, A, Coghill, D, Conzelmann, A, Cubillo, A, Dale, AM, Dallaspezia, S, Daly, E, Denys, D, Deruelle, C, Di Martino, A, Dinstein, I, Doyle, AE, Durston, S, Earl, EA, Ecker, C, Ehrlich, S, Ely, BA, Epstein, JN, Ethofer, T, Fair, DA, Fallgatter, AJ, Faraone, S, Fedor, J, Feng, X, Feusner, JD, Fitzgerald, J, Fitzgerald, KD, Fouche, J-P, Freitag, CM, Fridgeirsson, EA, Frodl, T, Gabel, MC, Gallagher, L, Gogberashvili, T, Gori, I, Gruner, P, Gursel, DA, Haar, S, Haavik, J, Hall, GB, Harrison, NA, Hartman, CA, Heslenfeld, DJ, Hirano, Y, Hoekstra, PJ, Hoexter, MQ, Hohmann, S, Hovik, MF, Hu, H, Huyser, C, Jahanshad, N, Jalbrzikowski, M, James, A, Janssen, J, Jaspers-Fayer, F, Jernigan, TL, Kapilushniy, D, Kardatzki, B, Karkashadze, G, Kathmann, N, Kaufmann, C, Kelly, C, Khadka, S, King, JA, Koch, K, Kohls, G, Konrad, K, Kuno, M, Kuntsi, J, Kvale, G, Kwon, JS, Lazaro, L, Lera-Miguel, S, Lesch, K-P, Hoekstra, L, Liu, Y, Lochner, C, Louza, MR, Luna, B, Lundervold, AJ, Malpas, CB, Marques, P, Marsh, R, Martinez-Zalacain, I, Mataix-Cols, D, Mattos, P, McCarthy, H, McGrath, J, Mehta, MA, Menchon, JM, Mennes, M, Martinho, MM, Moreira, PS, Morer, A, Morgado, P, Muratori, F, Murphy, CM, Murphy, DGM, Nakagawa, A, Nakamae, T, Nakao, T, Namazova-Baranova, L, Narayanaswamy, JC, Nicolau, R, Nigg, JT, Novotny, SE, Nurmi, EL, Weiss, EO, Tuura, RLO, O'Hearn, K, O'Neill, J, Oosterlaan, J, Oranje, B, Paloyelis, Y, Parellada, M, Pauli, P, Perriello, C, Piacentini, J, Piras, F, Plessen, KJ, Puig, O, Ramos-Quiroga, JA, Reddy, YCJ, Reif, A, Reneman, L, Retico, A, Rosa, PGP, Rubia, K, Rus, OG, Sakai, Y, Schrantee, A, Schwarz, L, Schweren, LJS, Seitz, J, Shaw, P, Shook, D, Silk, TJ, Simpson, HB, Skokauskas, N, Vila, JCS, Solovieva, A, Soreni, N, Soriano-Mas, C, Spalletta, G, Stern, ER, Stevens, MC, Stewart, SE, Sudre, G, Szeszko, PR, Tamm, L, Taylor, MJ, Tolin, DF, Tosetti, M, Tovar-Moll, F, Tsuchiyagaito, A, van Erp, TGM, van Wingen, GA, Vance, A, Venkatasubramanian, G, Vilarroya, O, Vives-Gilabert, Y, von Polier, GG, Walitza, S, Wallace, GL, Wang, Z, Wolfers, T, Yoncheva, YN, Yun, J-Y, Zanetti, M, Zhou, F, Ziegler, GC, Zierhut, KC, Zwiers, MP, Thompson, PM, Stein, DJ, Buitelaar, J, Franke, B, and van den Heuvel, OA
- Abstract
Objective: Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), autism spectrum disorder (ASD), and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) are common neurodevelopmental disorders that frequently co-occur. The authors sought to directly compare these disorders using structural brain imaging data from ENIGMA consortium data. Methods: Structural T1-weighted whole-brain MRI data from healthy control subjects (N=5,827) and from patients with ADHD (N=2,271), ASD (N=1,777), and OCD (N=2,323) from 151 cohorts worldwide were analyzed using standardized processing protocols. The authors examined subcortical volume, cortical thickness, and cortical surface area differences within a mega-analytical framework, pooling measures extracted from each cohort. Analyses were performed separately for children, adolescents, and adults, using linear mixed-effects models adjusting for age, sex, and site (and intracranial volume for subcortical and surface area measures). Results: No shared differences were found among all three disorders, and shared differences between any two disorders did not survive correction for multiple comparisons. Children with ADHD compared with those with OCD had smaller hippocampal volumes, possibly influenced by IQ. Children and adolescents with ADHD also had smaller intracranial volume than control subjects and those with OCD or ASD. Adults with ASD showed thicker frontal cortices compared with adult control subjects and other clinical groups. No OCD-specific differences were observed across different age groups and surface area differences among all disorders in childhood and adulthood. Conclusions: The study findings suggest robust but subtle differences across different age groups among ADHD, ASD, and OCD. ADHD-specific intracranial volume and hippocampal differences in children and adolescents, and ASD-specific cortical thickness differences in the frontal cortex in adults, support previous work emphasizing structural brain differences in these disorders.
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- 2020
44. Optic Radiation Tractography in Pediatric Brain Surgery Applications: A Reliability and Agreement Assessment of the Tractography Method
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Yang, JY-M, Beare, R, Wu, MH, Barton, SM, Malpas, CB, Yeh, C-H, Harvey, AS, Anderson, V, Maixner, W, Seal, M, Yang, JY-M, Beare, R, Wu, MH, Barton, SM, Malpas, CB, Yeh, C-H, Harvey, AS, Anderson, V, Maixner, W, and Seal, M
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Optic radiation (OR) tractography may help predict and reduce post-neurosurgical visual field deficits. OR tractography methods currently lack pediatric and surgical focus. PURPOSE: We propose a clinically feasible OR tractography strategy in a pediatric neurosurgery setting and examine its intra-rater and inter-rater reliability/agreements. METHODS: Preoperative and intraoperative MRI data were obtained from six epilepsy and two brain tumor patients on 3 Tesla MRI scanners. Four raters with different clinical experience followed the proposed strategy to perform probabilistic OR tractography with manually drawing anatomical landmarks to reconstruct the OR pathway, based on fiber orientation distributions estimated from high angular resolution diffusion imaging data. Intra- and inter-rater reliabilities/agreements of tractography results were assessed using intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) and dice similarity coefficient (DSC) across various tractography and OR morphological metrics, including the lateral geniculate body positions, tract volumes, and Meyer's loop position from temporal anatomical landmarks. RESULTS: Good to excellent intra- and inter-rater reproducibility was demonstrated for the majority of OR reconstructions (ICC = 0.70-0.99; DSC = 0.84-0.89). ICC was higher for non-lesional (0.82-0.99) than lesional OR (0.70-0.99). The non-lesional OR's mean volume was 22.66 cm3; the mean Meyer's loop position was 29.4 mm from the temporal pole, 5.89 mm behind of and 10.26 mm in front of the temporal ventricular horn. The greatest variations (± 1.00-3.00 mm) were observed near pathology, at the tract edges or at cortical endpoints. The OR tractography were used to assist surgical planning and guide lesion resection in all cases, no patient had new visual field deficits postoperatively. CONCLUSION: The proposed tractography strategy generates reliable and reproducible OR tractography images that can be reliably implemented in the routine, non-em
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- 2019
45. Metabolic patterns and seizure outcomes following anterior temporal lobectomy
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Cahill, V, Sinclair, B, Malpas, CB, McIntosh, AM, Chen, Z, Vivash, LE, O'Shea, MF, Wilson, SJ, Desmond, PM, Berlangieri, SU, Hicks, RJ, Rowe, CC, Morokoff, AP, King, JA, Fabinyi, GC, Kaye, AH, Kwan, P, Berkovic, SF, O'Brien, TJ, Cahill, V, Sinclair, B, Malpas, CB, McIntosh, AM, Chen, Z, Vivash, LE, O'Shea, MF, Wilson, SJ, Desmond, PM, Berlangieri, SU, Hicks, RJ, Rowe, CC, Morokoff, AP, King, JA, Fabinyi, GC, Kaye, AH, Kwan, P, Berkovic, SF, and O'Brien, TJ
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: We investigated the relationship between the interictal metabolic patterns, the extent of resection of 18 F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (18 FDG-PET) hypometabolism, and seizure outcomes in patients with unilateral drug-resistant mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE) following anterior temporal lobe (TL) resection. METHODS: Eighty-two patients with hippocampal sclerosis or normal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings, concordant 18 FDG-PET hypometabolism, and at least 2 years of postoperative follow-up were included in this 2-center study. The hypometabolic regions in each patient were identified with reference to 20 healthy controls (p < 0.005). The resected TL volume and the volume of resected TL PET hypometabolism (TLH) were calculated from the pre- and postoperative MRI scans coregistered with interictal 18 FDG-PET. RESULTS: Striking differences in metabolic patterns were observed depending on the lateralization of the epileptogenic TL. The extent of the ipsilateral TLH was significantly greater in left MTLE patients (p < 0.001), whereas right MTLE patients had significantly higher rates of contralateral (CTL) TLH (p = 0.016). In right MTLE patients, CTL hypometabolism was the strongest predictor of an unfavorable seizure outcome, associated with a 5-fold increase in the likelihood of seizure recurrence (odds ratio [OR] = 4.90, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.07-22.39, p = 0.04). In left MTLE patients, greater extent of resection of ipsilateral TLH was associated with lower rates of seizure recurrence (p = 0.004) in univariate analysis; however, its predictive value did not reach statistical significance (OR = 0.96, 95% CI = 0.90-1.02, p = 0.19). INTERPRETATION: The difference in metabolic patterns depending on the lateralization of MTLE may represent distinct epileptic networks in patients with right versus left MTLE, and can guide preoperative counseling and surgical planning. Ann Neurol 2019; 1-10 ANN NEUROL 2019;85:241-250.
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- 2019
46. A network analysis approach to ADHD symptoms: More than the sum of its parts
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Medland, SE, Silk, TJ, Malpas, CB, Beare, R, Efron, D, Anderson, V, Hazell, P, Jongeling, B, Nicholson, JM, Sciberras, E, Medland, SE, Silk, TJ, Malpas, CB, Beare, R, Efron, D, Anderson, V, Hazell, P, Jongeling, B, Nicholson, JM, and Sciberras, E
- Abstract
In interpreting attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) symptoms, categorical and dimensional approaches are commonly used. Both employ binary symptom counts which give equal weighting, with little attention to the combinations and relative contributions of individual symptoms. Alternatively, symptoms can be viewed as an interacting network, revealing the complex relationship between symptoms. Using a novel network modelling approach, this study explores the relationships between the 18 symptoms in the Diagnostic Statistical Manual (DSM-5) criteria and whether network measures are useful in predicting outcomes. Participants were from a community cohort, the Children's Attention Project. DSM ADHD symptoms were recorded in a face-to-face structured parent interview for 146 medication naïve children with ADHD and 209 controls (aged 6-8 years). Analyses indicated that not all symptoms are equal. Frequencies of endorsement and configurations of symptoms varied, with certain symptoms playing a more important role within the ADHD symptom network. In total, 116,220 combinations of symptoms within a diagnosis of ADHD were identified, with 92% demonstrating a unique symptom configuration. Symptom association networks highlighted the relative importance of hyperactive/impulsive symptoms in the symptom network. In particular, the 'motoric'-type symptoms as well as interrupts as a marker of impulsivity in the hyperactive domain, as well as loses things and does not follow instructions in the inattentive domain, had high measures of centrality. Centrality-measure weighted symptom counts showed significant association with clinical but not cognitive outcomes, however the relationships were not significantly stronger than symptom count alone. The finding may help to explain heterogeneity in the ADHD phenotype.
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- 2019
47. Developmental brain trajectories in children with ADHD and controls: a longitudinal neuroimaging study
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Silk, TJ, Genc, S, Anderson, V, Efron, D, Hazell, P, Nicholson, JM, Kean, M, Malpas, CB, Sciberras, E, Silk, TJ, Genc, S, Anderson, V, Efron, D, Hazell, P, Nicholson, JM, Kean, M, Malpas, CB, and Sciberras, E
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: The symptom profile and neuropsychological functioning of individuals with Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), change as they enter adolescence. It is unclear whether variation in brain structure and function parallels these changes, and also whether deviations from typical brain development trajectories are associated with differential outcomes. This paper describes the Neuroimaging of the Children's Attention Project (NICAP), a comprehensive longitudinal multimodal neuroimaging study. Primary aims are to determine how brain structure and function change with age in ADHD, and whether different trajectories of brain development are associated with variations in outcomes including diagnostic persistence, and academic, cognitive, social and mental health outcomes. METHODS/DESIGN: NICAP is a multimodal neuroimaging study in a community-based cohort of children with and without ADHD. Approximately 100 children with ADHD and 100 typically developing controls will be scanned at a mean age of 10 years (range; 9-11years) and will be re-scanned at two 18-month intervals (ages 11.5 and 13 years respectively). Assessments include a structured diagnostic interview, parent and teacher questionnaires, direct child cognitive/executive functioning assessment and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). MRI acquisition techniques, collected at a single site, have been selected to provide optimized information concerning structural and functional brain development. DISCUSSION: This study will allow us to address the primary aims by describing the neurobiological development of ADHD and elucidating brain features associated with differential clinical/behavioral outcomes. NICAP data will also be explored to assess the impact of sex, ADHD presentation, ADHD severity, comorbidities and medication use on brain development trajectories. Establishing which brain regions are associated with differential clinical outcomes, may allow us to improve predictions about the course
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- 2016
48. Plasma and CSF neurofilament light chain distinguish neurodegenerative from primary psychiatric conditions in a clinical setting.
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Eratne D, Kang MJY, Lewis C, Dang C, Malpas CB, Keem M, Grewal J, Marinov V, Coe A, Kaylor-Hughes C, Borchard T, Keng-Hong C, Waxmann A, Saglam B, Kalincik T, Kanaan R, Kelso W, Evans A, Farrand S, Loi S, Walterfang M, Stehmann C, Li QX, Collins S, Masters CL, Santillo AF, Zetterberg H, Blennow K, Berkovic SF, and Velakoulis D
- Abstract
Introduction: People with neurodegenerative disorders (ND) frequently face diagnostic delay and misdiagnosis. We investigated blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) neurofilament light chain (NfL) to distinguish ND from primary psychiatric disorders (PPD), a common challenge in clinical settings., Methods: Plasma and CSF NfL levels were measured and compared between groups, adjusting for age, sex, and weight., Results: A total of 337 participants were included: 136 ND, 77 PPD, and 124 Controls. Plasma NfL was 2.5-fold elevated in ND compared to PPD and had strong diagnostic performance (area under the curve, [AUC]: 0.86, 81%/85% specificity/sensitivity) that was comparable to CSF NfL (2-fold elevated, AUC: 0.89, 95%/71% specificity/sensitivity). Diagnostic performance was especially strong in younger people (40- < 60 years). Additional findings were cutoffs optimized for sensitivity and specificity, and issues important for future clinical translation., Conclusions: This study adds important evidence for a simple blood-based biomarker to assist as a screening test for neurodegeneration and distinction from PPD, in clinical settings., Highlights: NfL levels were significantly higher in ND versus PPD. Plasma NfL showed strong diagnostic performance, comparable to CSF NfL, to distinguish ND from PPD. Diagnostic performance was higher in younger people, where diagnostic challenges are greater. Further research is needed on analytical and reference range factors, for clinical translation. These findings support a simple screening blood test for neurodegeneration., (© 2024 The Author(s). Alzheimer's & Dementia published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Alzheimer's Association.)
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- 2024
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49. Paternal exposure to antiseizure medications and offspring outcomes: a systematic review.
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Honybun E, Rayner G, Malpas CB, O'Brien TJ, Vajda FJ, Perucca P, and Perucca E
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Background: Concerns have recently been raised about risks to the fetus resulting from paternal exposure to antiseizure medications (ASMs). To address these concerns, we conducted a systematic review of the literature to assess neurodevelopmental and anatomical outcomes in offspring born to fathers taking ASMs at the time of conception., Methods: Electronic searches of MEDLINE, PsycINFO, and Embase were conducted to identify human studies published in English that reported on outcomes, comprising neurodevelopmental disorders, major congenital malformations, small-for-gestational age or low birth weight, in offspring of fathers taking ASMs at conception. Quality analysis of included studies was undertaken using the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale. A narrative synthesis was used to report study findings., Results: Of 923 studies identified by the search and screened by title and abstract, 26 underwent full-text review and 10 met eligibility criteria. There was limited evidence available, but there appeared to be no clear evidence for an adverse impact of paternal ASM use on offspring outcomes. Few isolated adverse findings were not replicated by other investigations. Several methodological limitations prevented meta-analysis, including failure by most studies to report outcomes separately for each individual ASM, heterogeneity in measurement and outcome reporting, and small numbers of monotherapy exposures., Conclusions: Although there were limited data available, this systematic review provides reassuring evidence that paternal exposure to ASMs at conception is unlikely to pose any major risk of adverse outcomes for the offspring. Further research is needed to examine the relationship between preconception ASM use in males and offspring outcomes at birth and postnatally., Competing Interests: Competing interests: CBM has received conference travel support and/or speaker fees from Merck, Novartis, and Biogen. He has received research support from the National Health and Medical Research Council, Multiple Sclerosis Research Australia, the University of Melbourne, the Royal Melbourne Hospital Neuroscience Foundation, and Dementia Australia. TOB has received research support from the Epilepsy Society of Australia, National Health and Medical Research Council, Royal Melbourne Hospital Neuroscience Foundation, Sanofi-Aventis, UCB Pharma, Janssen-Cilag, Novartis, and Sci-Gen. EP received speaker’s or consultancy fees from Eisai, GRIN Therapeutics, Shackelford Pharma, Sintetica, SKL Life Science, Sun Pharma, Takeda, UCB Pharma and Xenon Pharma and royalties from Wiley, Elsevier, and Wolters Kluwers. He is also on the board of EURAP-International Registry of Antiepileptic Drugs and Pregnancy, a non-profit organization which received financial support from Accord, Angelini, Bial, EcuPharma, Eisai, Glenmark, GW Pharma, GlaxoSmithKline, Sanofi, SF Group, Teva, UCB, and Zentiva. PP has received speaker honoraria or consultancy fees to his institution from Chiesi, Eisai, LivaNova, Novartis, Sun Pharma, Supernus, and UCB Pharma, outside of the submitted work. He is an Associate Editor for Epilepsia Open. He is also on the board of EURAP-International Registry of Antiepileptic Drugs and Pregnancy, a non-profit organization which received financial support from Accord, Angelini, Bial, EcuPharma, Eisai, Glenmark, GW Pharma, GlaxoSmithKline, Sanofi, SF Group, Teva, UCB, and Zentiva. GR has received speaker honoraria from Liva Nova. FV has received research support for the Australian Pregnancy Register from the Epilepsy Society of Australia, National Health and Medical Research Council, Royal Melbourne Hospital Neuroscience Foundation, Epilepsy Action Australia, Sanofi-Aventis, UCB Pharma, Janssen-Cilag, Novartis, and Sci-Gen. He is also on the board of EURAP-International Registry of Antiepileptic Drugs and Pregnancy, a non-profit organization which received financial support from Accord, Angelini, Bial, EcuPharma, Eisai, Glenmark, GW Pharma, GlaxoSmithKline, Sanofi, SF Group, Teva, UCB, and Zentiva. EH does not have any conflicts of interest to disclose., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2024
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50. Neuropsychological outcomes of patients with haematological malignancies undergoing chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy: protocol for a prospective study.
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Kuznetsova V, Oza H, Rosenfeld H, Sales C, van der Linde S, Roos I, Roberts S, D'Aprano F, Loi SM, Dowling M, Dickinson M, Kalincik T, Harrison SJ, Anderson MA, and Malpas CB
- Abstract
Introduction: Immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome (ICANS) is a common side-effect of chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CAR-T) therapy, with symptoms ranging from mild to occasionally life-threatening. The neurological, cognitive, psychiatric and psychosocial sequelae of ICANS are diverse and not well defined, posing a challenge for diagnosis and management. The recovery trajectory of the syndrome is uncertain. Patients are rarely examined in this population pretherapy, adding a layer of complexity to specifying symptoms pertinent solely to CAR-T treatment. We present a protocol of a prospective longitudinal research study of adult patients in a single Australian haematology service undergoing CAR-T therapy. The study will describe neurocognitive features specific to ICANS, characterise the underlying syndrome, capture recovery, identify predictors of differential postinfusion outcomes and determine a set of cognitive instruments necessary to monitor patients acutely., Methods and Analysis: This is a prospective longitudinal study that comprises neuropsychological and neurological examinations occurring prior to CAR-T, during the acute post-treatment period, 28 days, 6 months and 12 months post infusion. Data will be sourced from objective psychometric measures, clinical examinations, self-report questionnaires of psychopathology and accounts of subjective cognitive complaint., Ethics and Dissemination: This study aims to guide diagnosis, management and monitoring of neurocognitive features of CAR-T cell therapy. Results of this study will be disseminated through publication in peer-reviewed journals and presentations at scientific conferences. All procedures involving human subjects/patients were approved by the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre Human Research Ethics Committee (21/145)., Competing Interests: MAA reports honoraria from AstraZeneca, Janssen, Abbvie, Beigene, Takeda, CSL, Novartis, Kite, Gilead and Roche. Employee of the Walter and Eliza Hall institute which receives Milestone payments in relation to venetoclax. CS reports no disclosures. SvdL reports honoraria from Kite. IR served on scientific advisory boards, received conference travel support and/or speaker honoraria from Roche, Novartis, Merck and Biogen. IR is supported by MS Australia and the Trish Multiple Sclerosis Research Foundation. SR reports no disclosures. FD reports no disclosures. SL reports honoraria from Otsuka and Lundbeck. She has received research support from the National Health and Medical Research Council and Royal Melbourne Hospital. MDowling reports honoraria and conference support from Kite and Gilead and honoraria from Novartis. MDowling also receives royalties from Abbvie in relation to venetoclax via the Walter and Eliza Hall institute. MDickinson reports advisory boards, research funding from Novartis, Kite, BMS and Gilead. TK served on scientific advisory boards for MS International Federation and World Health Organisation, BMS, Roche, Janssen, Sanofi Genzyme, Novartis, Merck and Biogen, steering committee for Brain Atrophy Initiative by Sanofi Genzyme, received conference travel support and/or speaker honoraria from WebMD Global, Eisai, Novartis, Biogen, Roche, Sanofi-Genzyme, Teva, BioCSL and Merck and received research or educational event support from Biogen, Novartis, Genzyme, Roche, Celgene and Merck. SJH reports the following disclosures: AbbVie: consultancy, advisory board; Amgen: consultancy, honoraria, advisory board, research funding; Celgene: consultancy, honoraria, advisory board, research funding; CSL Bering: honoraria; GSK: consultancy, research funding, advisory board; Janssen Cilag: consultancy, honoraria, advisory board, research funding; Novartis: consultancy, honoraria, advisory board, research funding; Roche/Genetec: consultancy, honoraria, advisory board; Takeda: consultancy, honoraria, advisory board; Haemalogix: scientific advisory board, research funding; Sanofi: consultancy/advisory role; Terumo: consultancy/advisory role/expert testimony. CM has received conference travel support from Merck, Novartis and Biogen. He has received research support from the National Health and Medical Research Council, Multiple Sclerosis Australia, The University of Melbourne, The Royal Melbourne Hospital Neuroscience Foundation and Dementia Australia., (Copyright © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2024
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