324 results on '"Tozzi F"'
Search Results
2. A genome-wide association study of anorexia nervosa
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Boraska, V, Franklin, CS, Floyd, JAB, Thornton, LM, Huckins, LM, Southam, L, Rayner, NW, Tachmazidou, I, Klump, KL, Treasure, J, Lewis, CM, Schmidt, U, Tozzi, F, Kiezebrink, K, Hebebrand, J, Gorwood, P, Adan, RAH, Kas, MJH, Favaro, A, Santonastaso, P, Fernández-Aranda, F, Gratacos, M, Rybakowski, F, Dmitrzak-Weglarz, M, Kaprio, J, Keski-Rahkonen, A, Raevuori, A, Van Furth, EF, Slof-Op 't Landt, MCT, Hudson, JI, Reichborn-Kjennerud, T, Knudsen, GPS, Monteleone, P, Kaplan, AS, Karwautz, A, Hakonarson, H, Berrettini, WH, Guo, Y, Li, D, Schork, NJ, Komaki, G, Ando, T, Inoko, H, Esko, T, Fischer, K, Männik, K, Metspalu, A, Baker, JH, Cone, RD, Dackor, J, DeSocio, JE, Hilliard, CE, O'Toole, JK, Pantel, J, Szatkiewicz, JP, Taico, C, Zerwas, S, Trace, SE, Davis, OSP, Helder, S, Bühren, K, Burghardt, R, de Zwaan, M, Egberts, K, Ehrlich, S, Herpertz-Dahlmann, B, Herzog, W, Imgart, H, Scherag, A, Scherag, S, Zipfel, S, Boni, C, Ramoz, N, Versini, A, Brandys, MK, Danner, UN, de Kovel, C, Hendriks, J, Koeleman, BPC, Ophoff, RA, Strengman, E, van Elburg, AA, Bruson, A, Clementi, M, Degortes, D, Forzan, M, Tenconi, E, Docampo, E, Escaramís, G, Jiménez-Murcia, S, Lissowska, J, Rajewski, A, Szeszenia-Dabrowska, N, Slopien, A, Hauser, J, Karhunen, L, Meulenbelt, I, Slagboom, PE, Tortorella, A, and Maj, M
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Anorexia ,Mental Health ,Serious Mental Illness ,Human Genome ,Eating Disorders ,Clinical Research ,Genetics ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Anorexia Nervosa ,Asian People ,Calcineurin ,Carrier Proteins ,Case-Control Studies ,Cullin Proteins ,Female ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Factors ,Humans ,Japan ,Male ,Meta-Analysis as Topic ,Nuclear Proteins ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,White People ,anorexia nervosa ,body mass index ,eating disorders ,genome-wide association study ,GWAS ,metabolic ,Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium 3 ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry - Abstract
Anorexia nervosa (AN) is a complex and heritable eating disorder characterized by dangerously low body weight. Neither candidate gene studies nor an initial genome-wide association study (GWAS) have yielded significant and replicated results. We performed a GWAS in 2907 cases with AN from 14 countries (15 sites) and 14 860 ancestrally matched controls as part of the Genetic Consortium for AN (GCAN) and the Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium 3 (WTCCC3). Individual association analyses were conducted in each stratum and meta-analyzed across all 15 discovery data sets. Seventy-six (72 independent) single nucleotide polymorphisms were taken forward for in silico (two data sets) or de novo (13 data sets) replication genotyping in 2677 independent AN cases and 8629 European ancestry controls along with 458 AN cases and 421 controls from Japan. The final global meta-analysis across discovery and replication data sets comprised 5551 AN cases and 21 080 controls. AN subtype analyses (1606 AN restricting; 1445 AN binge-purge) were performed. No findings reached genome-wide significance. Two intronic variants were suggestively associated: rs9839776 (P=3.01 × 10(-7)) in SOX2OT and rs17030795 (P=5.84 × 10(-6)) in PPP3CA. Two additional signals were specific to Europeans: rs1523921 (P=5.76 × 10(-)(6)) between CUL3 and FAM124B and rs1886797 (P=8.05 × 10(-)(6)) near SPATA13. Comparing discovery with replication results, 76% of the effects were in the same direction, an observation highly unlikely to be due to chance (P=4 × 10(-6)), strongly suggesting that true findings exist but our sample, the largest yet reported, was underpowered for their detection. The accrual of large genotyped AN case-control samples should be an immediate priority for the field.
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- 2014
3. Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on surgical care in the Netherlands
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De Graaff, Michelle R, Hogenbirk, Rianne N M, Janssen, Yester F, Elfrink, Arthur K E, Liem, Ronald S L, Nienhuijs, Simon W, De Vries, Jean Paul P M, Elshof, Jan Willem, Verdaasdonk, Emiel, Melenhorst, Jarno, Van Westreenen, H L, Besselink, Marc G H, Ruurda, Jelle P, Van Berge Henegouwen, Mark I, Klaase, Joost M, Den Dulk, Marcel, Van Heijl, Mark, Hegeman, Johannes H, Braun, Jerry, Voeten, Daan M, Würdemann, Franka S, Warps, Anne Loes K, Alberga, Anna J, Suurmeijer, J Annelie, Akpinar, Erman O, Wolfhagen, Nienke, Van Den Boom, Anne Loes, Bolster-van Eenennaam, Marieke J, Van Duijvendijk, Peter, Heineman, David J, Wouters, Michel W J M, Kruijff, Schelto, Helleman, J N, Koningswoud-terhoeve, C L, Belt, E, Van Der Hoeven, J A B, Marres, G M H, Tozzi, F, Von Meyenfeldt, E M, Coebergh, R R J, Van Den Braak, H.P., Rijken, A M, Balm, R, Daams, F, Dickhoff, C, Eshuis, W J, Gisbertz, S S, Zandbergen, H R, Geelkerken, R H, Halfwerk, F R, Biomedical Signals and Systems, TechMed Centre, Multi-Modality Medical Imaging, Biomechanical Engineering, Engineering Organ Support Technologies, Digital Society Institute, RS: GROW - R3 - Innovative Cancer Diagnostics & Therapy, Surgery, MUMC+: MA Heelkunde (9), RS: NUTRIM - R2 - Liver and digestive health, Cardiothoracic Surgery, Dermatology, Cancer Center Amsterdam, Cardio-thoracic surgery, Obstetrics and gynaecology, Amsterdam Reproduction & Development (AR&D), CCA - Cancer Treatment and Quality of Life, CCA - Imaging and biomarkers, AGEM - Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism, Graduate School, Robotics and image-guided minimally-invasive surgery (ROBOTICS), Groningen Institute for Organ Transplantation (GIOT), Value, Affordability and Sustainability (VALUE), and Guided Treatment in Optimal Selected Cancer Patients (GUTS)
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COMPLICATIONS ,HIP ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,DUTCH INSTITUTE ,MULTICENTER ,Surgery ,COHORT - Abstract
During the COVID-19 pandemic, a 13.6 per cent reduction in the number of surgical procedures performed was observed in 2020. Despite great pressure on healthcare, the COVID-19 pandemic did not cause an increase in adverse surgical outcomes, and oncological surgery-related duration of hospital and ICU stay were significantly shorter.Background The COVID-19 pandemic caused disruption of regular healthcare leading to reduced hospital attendances, repurposing of surgical facilities, and cancellation of cancer screening programmes. This study aimed to determine the impact of COVID-19 on surgical care in the Netherlands. Methods A nationwide study was conducted in collaboration with the Dutch Institute for Clinical Auditing. Eight surgical audits were expanded with items regarding alterations in scheduling and treatment plans. Data on procedures performed in 2020 were compared with those from a historical cohort (2018-2019). Endpoints included total numbers of procedures performed and altered treatment plans. Secondary endpoints included complication, readmission, and mortality rates. Results Some 12 154 procedures were performed in participating hospitals in 2020, representing a decrease of 13.6 per cent compared with 2018-2019. The largest reduction (29.2 per cent) was for non-cancer procedures during the first COVID-19 wave. Surgical treatment was postponed for 9.6 per cent of patients. Alterations in surgical treatment plans were observed in 1.7 per cent. Time from diagnosis to surgery decreased (to 28 days in 2020, from 34 days in 2019 and 36 days in 2018; P < 0.001). For cancer-related procedures, duration of hospital stay decreased (5 versus 6 days; P < 0.001). Audit-specific complications, readmission, and mortality rates were unchanged, but ICU admissions decreased (16.5 versus 16.8 per cent; P < 0.001). Conclusion The reduction in the number of surgical operations was greatest for those without cancer. Where surgery was undertaken, it appeared to be delivered safely, with similar complication and mortality rates, fewer admissions to ICU, and a shorter hospital stay.Lay Summary COVID-19 has had a significant impact on healthcare worldwide. Hospital visits were reduced, operating facilities were used for COVID-19 care, and cancer screening programmes were cancelled. This study describes the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on Dutch surgical healthcare in 2020. Patterns of care in terms of changed or delayed treatment are described for patients who had surgery in 2020, compared with those who had surgery in 2018-2019. The study found that mainly non-cancer surgical treatments were cancelled during months with high COVID-19 rates. Outcomes for patients undergoing surgery were similar but with fewer ICU admissions and shorter hospital stay. These data provide no insight into the burden endured by patients who had postponed or cancelled operations.
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- 2022
4. Effect of Postoperative Fluid Management on Major Complications and Pancreatic Fistula Following Pancreaticoduodenectomy
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Gryspeerdt, F., primary, Vanhove, M., additional, Rashidian, N., additional, Tozzi, F., additional, Apers, T., additional, Abreu de Carvalho, L.F., additional, Eker, H., additional, and Berrevoet, F., additional
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- 2023
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5. Laparoscopic Bile Duct Exploration: One-stage Management of Common Bile Duct Lithiasis – Single Center Experience
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Tozzi, F., primary, Rashidian, N., additional, Snijker, L., additional, Gryspeerdt, F., additional, Berrevoet, F., additional, and Abreu de Carvalho, L., additional
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- 2023
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6. The Role of Pressurized Intraperitoneal Aerosol Chemotherapy for Peritoneal Metastases of Hepato-pancreato-Biliary Cancer – Single Center Experience
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Tozzi, F., primary, Willaert, W., additional, Ceelen, W., additional, Gryspeerdt, F., additional, Berrevoet, F., additional, and Rashidian, N., additional
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- 2023
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7. Preparing for the next pandemic by understanding the impact of COVID-19 mitigation measures on patients with eating Disorders: observations from an inpatient setting
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Todisco, P., Meneguzzo, P., Garolla, A., Antoniades, A., Vogazianos, P., and Tozzi, F.
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pandemic preparation ,body image ,inpatient treatment ,COVID-19 ,eating disorders ,psychopathology - Published
- 2023
8. Comparing Long-Acting Antipsychotic Discontinuation Rates Under Ordinary Clinical Circumstances: A Survival Analysis from an Observational, Pragmatic Study
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Bertolini, F., Ostuzzi, G., Pievani, M., Aguglia, A., Bartoli, F., Bortolaso, P., Callegari, C., Caroleo, M., Carra, G., Corbo, M., D'Agostino, A., De Fazio, P., Magliocco, F., Martinotti, G., Ostinelli, E. G., Piccinelli, M. P., Tedeschi, F., Barbui, C., Boschello, F., Gastaldon, C., Mazzi, M. A., Nose, M., Papola, D., Perini, G., Piccoli, A., Purgato, M., Ruggeri, M., Terlizzi, S., Turrini, G., Raffaele, G., Cavallotti, S., Chirico, M., Ferrato, F., Limosani, I., Mastromo, D., Monzani, E., Porcellana, M., Restaino, F., Annese, P. M., Bolognesi, S., Cerretini, M., De Capua, A., Debolini, S., Del Zanna, M., Fargnoli, F., Giannini, A., Luccarelli, L., Lucii, C., Pierantozzi, E., Tozzi, F., Bardicchia, F., Cardamone, G., Facchi, E., Magnani, N., Soscia, F., Biancosino, B., Zotos, S., Giacomin, M., Pompei, F., Spano, M., Zonta, F., Buzzi, A., Callegred, C., Calzolari, R., Caselli, I., Diurni, M., Giana, E., Ielmini, M., Milano, A., Poloni, N., Sani, E., Zizolfi, D., Alberini, G., Cazzamalli, S., Costantini, C., Di Caro, A., Paronelli, C., Piantanida, S., Piccinelli, M., Alessandro, P., Barbanti, S. V., D'Ippolito, C., Gozzi, M., Moretti, V., Campese, O., Di Capro, L., di Giannantonio, M., Fiori, F., Lorusso, M., Mancini, V., Viceconte, D., Calandra, C., Luca, M., Signorelli, M. S., Suraniti, F., Balzarro, B., Boncompagni, G., Caretto, V., Emiliani, R., Lupoli, P., Menchetti, M., Rossi, E., Storbini, V., Tarricone, I., Terzi, L., Boso, M., Catania, C., De Paoli, G., Risaro, P., Aspesi, F., Bava, M., Bono, A., Brambilla, G., Castagna, G., Lucchi, S., Nava, R., Provenzi, M., Tabacchi, T., Tremolada, M., Verrengia, E., Barchiesi, M., Oriani, M. G., Pacetti, M., Ferro, M., Ghio, L., Beneduce, R., Laffranchini, L., Magni, L. R., Rossi, G., Tura, G. B., Addeo, L., Balletta, G., De Vivo, E., Di Benedetto, R., Parise, V. F., Carpiniello, B., Pinna, F., Pecile, D., Mattei, C., Bonavigo, T., Fabrici, E. P., Panarello, S., Peresson, G., Vitucci, C., Gardellin, F., Strizzolo, S., Cossetta, E., Fizzotti, C., Moretti, D., Di Gregorio, L., Sozzi, F., Colli, G., La Barbera, D., Laurenzi, S., Bertolini, F, Ostuzzi, G, Pievani, M, Aguglia, A, Bartoli, F, Bortolaso, P, Callegari, C, Caroleo, M, Carra, G, Corbo, M, D'Agostino, A, De Fazio, P, Magliocco, F, Martinotti, G, Ostinelli, E, Piccinelli, M, Tedeschi, F, Barbui, C, Boschello, F, Gastaldon, C, Mazzi, M, Nose, M, Papola, D, Perini, G, Piccoli, A, Purgato, M, Ruggeri, M, Terlizzi, S, Turrini, G, Raffaele, G, Cavallotti, S, Chirico, M, Ferrato, F, Limosani, I, Mastromo, D, Monzani, E, Porcellana, M, Restaino, F, Annese, P, Bolognesi, S, Cerretini, M, De Capua, A, Debolini, S, Del Zanna, M, Fargnoli, F, Giannini, A, Luccarelli, L, Lucii, C, Pierantozzi, E, Tozzi, F, Bardicchia, F, Cardamone, G, Facchi, E, Magnani, N, Soscia, F, Biancosino, B, Zotos, S, Giacomin, M, Pompei, F, Spano, M, Zonta, F, Buzzi, A, Calzolari, R, Caselli, I, Diurni, M, Giana, E, Ielmini, M, Milano, A, Poloni, N, Sani, E, Zizolfi, D, Alberini, G, Cazzamalli, S, Costantini, C, Di Caro, A, Paronelli, C, Piantanida, S, Alessandro, P, Barbanti, S, D'Ippolito, C, Gozzi, M, Moretti, V, Campese, O, Di Capro, L, di Giannantonio, M, Fiori, F, Lorusso, M, Mancini, V, Viceconte, D, Calandra, C, Luca, M, Signorelli, M, Suraniti, F, Balzarro, B, Boncompagni, G, Caretto, V, Emiliani, R, Lupoli, P, Menchetti, M, Rossi, E, Storbini, V, Tarricone, I, Terzi, L, Boso, M, Catania, C, De Paoli, G, Risaro, P, Aspesi, F, Bava, M, Bono, A, Brambilla, G, Castagna, G, Lucchi, S, Nava, R, Provenzi, M, Tabacchi, T, Tremolada, M, Verrengia, E, Barchiesi, M, Oriani, M, Pacetti, M, Ferro, M, Ghio, L, Beneduce, R, Laffranchini, L, Magni, L, Rossi, G, Tura, G, Addeo, L, Balletta, G, De Vivo, E, Di Benedetto, R, Parise, V, Carpiniello, B, Pinna, F, Pecile, D, Mattei, C, Bonavigo, T, Fabrici, E, Panarello, S, Peresson, G, Vitucci, C, Gardellin, F, Strizzolo, S, Cossetta, E, Fizzotti, C, Moretti, D, Di Gregorio, L, Sozzi, F, Colli, G, La Barbera, D, Laurenzi, S, Bertolini F., Ostuzzi G., Pievani M., Aguglia A., Bartoli F., Bortolaso P., Callegari C., Caroleo M., Carra G., Corbo M., D'Agostino A., De Fazio P., Magliocco F., Martinotti G., Ostinelli E.G., Piccinelli M.P., Tedeschi F., Barbui C., Boschello F., Gastaldon C., Mazzi M.A., Nose M., Papola D., Perini G., Piccoli A., Purgato M., Ruggeri M., Terlizzi S., Turrini G., Raffaele G., Cavallotti S., Chirico M., Ferrato F., Limosani I., Mastromo D., Monzani E., Porcellana M., Restaino F., Annese P.M., Bolognesi S., Cerretini M., De Capua A., Debolini S., Del Zanna M., Fargnoli F., Giannini A., Luccarelli L., Lucii C., Pierantozzi E., Tozzi F., Bardicchia F., Cardamone G., Facchi E., Magnani N., Soscia F., Biancosino B., Zotos S., Giacomin M., Pompei F., Spano M., Zonta F., Buzzi A., Callegred C., Calzolari R., Caselli I., Diurni M., Giana E., Ielmini M., Milano A., Poloni N., Sani E., Zizolfi D., Alberini G., Cazzamalli S., Costantini C., Di Caro A., Paronelli C., Piantanida S., Piccinelli M., Alessandro P., Barbanti S.V., D'Ippolito C., Gozzi M., Moretti V., Campese O., Di Capro L., di Giannantonio M., Fiori F., Lorusso M., Mancini V., Viceconte D., Calandra C., Luca M., Signorelli M.S., Suraniti F., Balzarro B., Boncompagni G., Caretto V., Emiliani R., Lupoli P., Menchetti M., Rossi E., Storbini V., Tarricone I., Terzi L., Boso M., Catania C., De Paoli G., Risaro P., Aspesi F., Bava M., Bono A., Brambilla G., Castagna G., Lucchi S., Nava R., Provenzi M., Tabacchi T., Tremolada M., Verrengia E., Barchiesi M., Oriani M.G., Pacetti M., Ferro M., Ghio L., Beneduce R., Laffranchini L., Magni L.R., Rossi G., Tura G.B., Addeo L., Balletta G., De Vivo E., Di Benedetto R., Parise V.F., Carpiniello B., Pinna F., Pecile D., Mattei C., Bonavigo T., Fabrici E.P., Panarello S., Peresson G., Vitucci C., Gardellin F., Strizzolo S., Cossetta E., Fizzotti C., Moretti D., Di Gregorio L., Sozzi F., Colli G., La Barbera D., and Laurenzi S.
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Male ,Pediatrics ,respectively) ,0302 clinical medicine ,Delayed-Action Preparation ,Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale ,Pharmacology (medical) ,he STAR Network ‘Depot Study’ prospectively followed 394 subjects initiating treatment with long-acting injections (LAIs) of antipsychotics under naturalistic conditions for 12 months. LAI discontinuation was frequent in everyday clinical practice in Italy ,Original Research Article ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,treatment ,Mental Disorders ,Hazard ratio ,whereas more than half of participants initiating risperidone LAI and olanzapine LAI discontinued during the 12 months of follow-up (51.4 and 62.5% ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scale ,Middle Aged ,side efects ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Italy ,Mental Disorder ,Female ,he STAR Network ‘Depot Study’ prospectively followed 394 subjects initiating treatment with long-acting injections (LAIs) of antipsychotics under naturalistic conditions for 12 months. LAI discontinuation was frequent in everyday clinical practice in Italy, occurring in almost 40% of the entire sample ,side efects, participant refusal to continue LAIs and LAIs no longer being required were the most frequently reported reasons for discontinuation. Paliperidone LAI and aripiprazole LAI were the least discontinued medications (33.9 and 35.4%, respectively), whereas more than half of participants initiating risperidone LAI and olanzapine LAI discontinued during the 12 months of follow-up (51.4 and 62.5%, respectively). In multivariate analysis, being prescribed olanzapine LAI and poor medication adherence at baseline were signifcantly associated with higher discontinuation risk ,Human ,Antipsychotic Agents ,medicine.drug ,Psychopathology ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Discontinuation ,Follow-Up Studie ,Medication Adherence ,03 medical and health sciences ,medicine ,Humans ,Paliperidone ,Adverse effect ,Settore MED/25 - Psichiatria ,discontinuation rates ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,respectively). In multivariate analysis ,business.industry ,Long-Acting Antipsychotic ,long-acting injectable antipsychotics ,Survival Analysis ,Confidence interval ,participant refusal to continue LAIs and LAIs no longer being required were the most frequently reported reasons for discontinuation. Paliperidone LAI and aripiprazole LAI were the least discontinued medications (33.9 and 35.4% ,030227 psychiatry ,Prospective Studie ,Antipsychotic Agent ,occurring in almost 40% of the entire sample ,Delayed-Action Preparations ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,being prescribed olanzapine LAI and poor medication adherence at baseline were signifcantly associated with higher discontinuation risk ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Background Recent guidelines suggested a wider use of long-acting injectable antipsychotics (LAI) than previously, but naturalistic data on the consequences of LAI use in terms of discontinuation rates and associated factors are still sparse, making it hard for clinicians to be informed on plausible treatment courses. Objective Our objective was to assess, under real-world clinical circumstances, LAI discontinuation rates over a period of 12 months after a first prescription, reasons for discontinuation, and associated factors. Methods The STAR Network ‘Depot Study’ was a naturalistic, multicentre, observational prospective study that enrolled subjects initiating a LAI without restrictions on diagnosis, clinical severity or setting. Participants from 32 Italian centres were assessed at baseline and at 6 and 12 months of follow-up. Psychopathology, drug attitude and treatment adherence were measured using the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale, the Drug Attitude Inventory and the Kemp scale, respectively. Results The study followed 394 participants for 12 months. The overall discontinuation rate at 12 months was 39.3% (95% confidence interval [CI] 34.4–44.3), with paliperidone LAI being the least discontinued LAI (33.9%; 95% CI 25.3–43.5) and olanzapine LAI the most discontinued (62.5%; 95% CI 35.4–84.8). The most frequent reason for discontinuation was onset of adverse events (32.9%; 95% CI 25.6–40.9) followed by participant refusal of the medication (20.6%; 95% CI 14.6–27.9). Medication adherence at baseline was negatively associated with discontinuation risk (hazard ratio [HR] 0.853; 95% CI 0.742–0.981; p = 0.026), whereas being prescribed olanzapine LAI was associated with increased discontinuation risk compared with being prescribed paliperidone LAI (HR 2.156; 95% CI 1.003–4.634; p = 0.049). Conclusions Clinicians should be aware that LAI discontinuation is a frequent occurrence. LAI choice should be carefully discussed with the patient, taking into account individual characteristics and possible obstacles related to the practicalities of each formulation. Supplementary Information The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s40263-021-00809-w.
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- 2021
9. AB1365 PROPOSAL FOR A STANDARDIZED ULTRASOUND SCANNING PROTOCOL OF THE NAIL PLATE.
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Rotta, D., primary, Adami, G., additional, Bellinato, F., additional, Fassio, A., additional, Idolazzi, L., additional, Gisondi, P., additional, Tozzi, F., additional, Filippucci, E., additional, and Rossini, M., additional
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- 2022
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10. Clinical correlates of paliperidone palmitate and aripiprazole monohydrate prescription for subjects with schizophreniaspectrum disorders: Findings from the STAR Network Depot Study
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Barbui C, Nosè M, Purgato M, Turrini G, Ostuzzi G, Mazzi MA, Papola D, Gastaldon C, Terlizzi S, Bertolini F, Piccoli A, Ruggeri M, De Fazio P, Magliocco F, Caroleo M, Raffaele G, D'Agostino A, Ostinelli EG, Chirico M, Cavallotti S, Lucii C, Bolognesi S, Debolini S, Pierantozzi E, Fargnoli F, Del Zanna M, Giannini A, Luccarelli L, De Capua A, Annese PM, Cerretini M, Tozzi F, Magnani N, Cardamone G, Bardicchia F, Facchi E, Soscia F, Zotos S, Biancosino B, Zonta F, Pompei F, Callegari C, Zizolfi D, Poloni N, Ielmini M, Caselli I, Giana E, Buzzi A, Diurni M, Milano A, Sani E, Calzolari R, Bortolaso P, Piccinelli M, Cazzamalli S, Alberini G, Piantanida S, Costantini C, Paronelli C, Di Caro A, Moretti V, Gozzi M, D'Ippolito C, Barbanti SV, Papalini A, Corbo M, Martinotti G, Campese O, Fiori F, Lorusso M, Di Capro L, Viceconte D, Mancini V, Suraniti F, Signorelli MSI, Rossi E, Lupoli P, Menchetti M, Terzi L, Boso M, Risaro P, De Paoli G, Catania C, Tarricone I, Caretto V, Storbini V, Emiliani R, Balzarro B, Carrà G, Bartoli F, Tabacchi T, Nava R, Bono A, Provenzi M, Brambilla G, Aspesi F, Trotta G, Tremolada M, Castagna G, Bava M, Verrengia E, Lucchi S, Oriani MG, Barchiesi M, Pacetti M, Aguglia A, Magni LR, Rossi G, Beneduce R, Tura GB, Laffranchini L, Mastromo D, Ferrato F, Restaino F, Monzani E, Porcellana M, Limosani I, Ghio L, Ferro M, Parise VF, Balletta G, Addeo L, De Vivo E, Di Benedetto R, Pinna F, Carpiniello B, Spano M, Giacomin M, Pecile D, Mattei C, Fabrici EP, Panarello S, Peresson G, Vitucci C, Bonavigo T, Perini G, Boschello F, Strizzolo S, Gardellin F, Di Giannantonio M, Moretti D, Fizzotti C, Cossetta E, Di Gregorio L, Sozzi F, Boncompagni G, La Barbera D, Colli G, Laurenzi S, Calandra C, Luca M, Crocamo C, STAR Network Depot Investigators, Bartoli F., Ostuzzi G., Crocamo C., Corbo M., D'Agostino A., Martinotti G., Ostinelli E.G., Tabacchi T., Barbui C., Carr G., Nose M., Purgato M., Turrini G., Mazzi M.A., Papola D., Gastaldon C., Terlizzi S., Bertolini F., Piccoli A., Ruggeri M., De Fazio P., Magliocco F., Caroleo M., Raffaele G., Chirico M., Cavallotti S., Lucii C., Bolognesi S., Debolini S., Pierantozzi E., Fargnoli F., Del Zanna M., Giannini A., Luccarelli L., De Capua A., Annese P.M., Cerretini M., Tozzi F., Magnani N., Cardamone G., Bardicchia F., Facchi E., Soscia F., Zotos S., Biancosino B., Zonta F., Pompei F., Callegari C., Zizolfi D., Poloni N., Ielmini M., Caselli I., Giana E., Buzzi A., Diurni M., Milano A., Sani E., Calzolari R., Bortolaso P., Piccinelli M., Cazzamalli S., Alberini G., Piantanida S., Costantini C., Paronelli C., Di Caro A., Moretti V., Gozzi M., D'Ippolito C., Barbanti S.V., Papalini A., Campese O., Fiori F., Lorusso M., Di Capro L., Viceconte D., Mancini V., Suraniti F., Signorelli M.S., Rossi E., Lupoli P., Menchetti M., Terzi L., Boso M., Risaro P., De Paoli G., Catania C., Tarricone I., Caretto V., Storbini V., Emiliani R., Balzarro B., Carra G., Nava R., Bono A., Provenzi M., Brambilla G., Aspesi F., Trotta G., Tremolada M., Castagna G., Bava M., Verrengia E., Lucchi S., Oriani M.G., Barchiesi M., Pacetti M., Aguglia A., Magni L.R., Rossi G., Beneduce R., Tura G.B., Laffranchini L., Mastromo D., Ferrato F., Restaino F., Monzani E., Porcellana M., Limosani I., Ghio L., Ferro M., Parise V.F., Balletta G., Addeo L., De Vivo E., Di Benedetto R., Pinna F., Carpiniello B., Spano M., Giacomin M., Pecile D., Mattei C., Fabrici E.P., Panarello S., Peresson G., Vitucci C., Bonavigo T., Perini G., Boschello F., Strizzolo S., Gardellin F., Di Giannantonio M., Moretti D., Fizzotti C., Cossetta E., Di Gregorio L., Sozzi F., Boncompagni G., La Barbera D., Colli G., Laurenzi S., Calandra C., Luca M., Barbui C, Nosè M, Purgato M, Turrini G, Ostuzzi G, Mazzi MA, Papola D, Gastaldon C, Terlizzi S, Bertolini F, Piccoli A, Ruggeri M, De Fazio P, Magliocco F, Caroleo M, Raffaele G, D'Agostino A, Ostinelli EG, Chirico M, Cavallotti S, Lucii C, Bolognesi S, Debolini S, Pierantozzi E, Fargnoli F, Del Zanna M, Giannini A, Luccarelli L, De Capua A, Annese PM, Cerretini M, Tozzi F, Magnani N, Cardamone G, Bardicchia F, Facchi E, Soscia F, Zotos S, Biancosino B, Zonta F, Pompei F, Callegari C, Zizolfi D, Poloni N, Ielmini M, Caselli I, Giana E, Buzzi A, Diurni M, Milano A, Sani E, Calzolari R, Bortolaso P, Piccinelli M, Cazzamalli S, Alberini G, Piantanida S, Costantini C, Paronelli C, Di Caro A, Moretti V, Gozzi M, D'Ippolito C, Barbanti SV, Papalini A, Corbo M, Martinotti G, Campese O, Fiori F, Lorusso M, Di Capro L, Viceconte D, Mancini V, Suraniti F, Signorelli MSI, Rossi E, Lupoli P, Menchetti M, Terzi L, Boso M, Risaro P, De Paoli G, Catania C, Tarricone I, Caretto V, Storbini V, Emiliani R, Balzarro B, Carrà G, Bartoli F, Tabacchi T, Nava R, Bono A, Provenzi M, Brambilla G, Aspesi F, Trotta G, Tremolada M, Castagna G, Bava M, Verrengia E, Lucchi S, Oriani MG, Barchiesi M, Pacetti M, Aguglia A, Magni LR, Rossi G, Beneduce R, Tura GB, Laffranchini L, Mastromo D, Ferrato F, Restaino F, Monzani E, Porcellana M, Limosani I, Ghio L, Ferro M, Parise VF, Balletta G, Addeo L, De Vivo E, Di Benedetto R, Pinna F, Carpiniello B, Spano M, Giacomin M, Pecile D, Mattei C, Fabrici EP, Panarello S, Peresson G, Vitucci C, Bonavigo T, Perini G, Boschello F, Strizzolo S, Gardellin F, Di Giannantonio M, Moretti D, Fizzotti C, Cossetta E, Di Gregorio L, Sozzi F, Boncompagni G, La Barbera D, Colli G, Laurenzi S, Calandra C, Luca M, Crocamo C, STAR Network Depot Investigators, Bartoli, F, Ostuzzi, G, Crocamo, C, Corbo, M, D'Agostino, A, Martinotti, G, Ostinelli, E, Tabacchi, T, Barbui, C, and Carra, G
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Aripiprazole monohydrate ,Long-acting injectable antipsychotics ,Paliperidone palmitate ,Schizophrenia ,Adult ,Antipsychotic Agents ,Aripiprazole ,Female ,Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice ,Humans ,Male ,Medication Adherence ,Paliperidone Palmitate ,Practice Patterns, Physicians' ,Schizophrenic Psychology ,Young Adult ,Long-acting injectable antipsychotic ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Aripiprazole monohydrate, Long-acting injectable antipsychotics, Paliperidone palmitate, Schizophrenia ,Practice Patterns ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale ,medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Antipsychotic ,Settore MED/25 - Psichiatria ,Practice ,Physicians' ,business.industry ,Health Knowledge ,medicine.disease ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Attitudes ,Propensity score matching ,Observational study ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug ,Psychopathology - Abstract
This study, based on the 'Servizi Territoriali Associati per la Ricerca' (STAR) Network Depot Study nationwide baseline data, explored whether individual symptoms severity and clusters might influence the prescription of paliperidone palmitate 1-month (PP1M) vs. aripiprazole monohydrate. The Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) was used to assess psychopathology and relevant symptoms clusters. Drug Attitude Inventory, 10 items, was used to test attitude towards medications. Adherence to treatments was rated according to the Kemp seven-point scale. We assessed for eligibility 451 individuals and, among them, we included 195 subjects (n = 117 who started PPM1 and n = 78 aripiprazole monohydrate). Individuals were comparable in terms of age, gender, treatment years, recent hospitalizations, previous long-acting injectable antipsychotic treatments, additional oral treatments, attitude toward drugs, medication adherence, and alcohol/substance-related comorbidities. Subjects starting PP1M presented higher BPRS overall (P = 0.009), positive (P = 0.015), and negative (P = 0.010) symptom scores compared to subjects starting aripiprazole monohydrate. Results were confirmed by appropriate regression models and propensity score matching analysis. No differences were found comparing the other BPRS subscale scores: affect, resistance, and activation. Clinicians may be more prone to prescribe PPM1, rather than aripiprazole monohydrate, to subjects showing higher overall symptom severity, including positive and negative symptoms. No additional clinical factors influenced prescribing attitudes in our sample.
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- 2020
11. Correction: Investigation of common, low-frequency and rare genome-wide variation in anorexia nervosa
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Huckins, L M, Hatzikotoulas, K, Southam, L, Thornton, L M, Steinberg, J, Aguilera-McKay, F, Treasure, J, Schmidt, U, Gunasinghe, C, Romero, A, Curtis, C, Rhodes, D, Moens, J, Kalsi, G, Dempster, D, Leung, R, Keohane, A, Burghardt, R, Ehrlich, S, Hebebrand, J, Hinney, A, Ludolph, A, Walton, E, Deloukas, P, Hofman, A, Palotie, A, Palta, P, van Rooij, F J A, Stirrups, K, Adan, R, Boni, C, Cone, R, Dedoussis, G, van Furth, E, Gonidakis, F, Gorwood, P, Hudson, J, Kaprio, J, Kas, M, Keski-Rahonen, A, Kiezebrink, K, Knudsen, G-P, Maj, M, Monteleone, A M, Monteleone, P, Raevuori, A H, Reichborn-Kjennerud, T, Tozzi, F, Tsitsika, A, van Elburg, A, Collier, D A, Sullivan, P F, Breen, G, Bulik, C M, and Zeggini, E
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- 2018
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12. Shared genetic risk between eating disorder- and substance-use-related phenotypes: Evidence from genome-wide association studies
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Munn-Chernoff, M.A. Johnson, E.C. Chou, Y.-L. Coleman, J.R.I. Thornton, L.M. Walters, R.K. Yilmaz, Z. Baker, J.H. Hübel, C. Gordon, S. Medland, S.E. Watson, H.J. Gaspar, H.A. Bryois, J. Hinney, A. Leppä, V.M. Mattheisen, M. Ripke, S. Yao, S. Giusti-Rodríguez, P. Hanscombe, K.B. Adan, R.A.H. Alfredsson, L. Ando, T. Andreassen, O.A. Berrettini, W.H. Boehm, I. Boni, C. Boraska Perica, V. Buehren, K. Burghardt, R. Cassina, M. Cichon, S. Clementi, M. Cone, R.D. Courtet, P. Crow, S. Crowley, J.J. Danner, U.N. Davis, O.S.P. de Zwaan, M. Dedoussis, G. Degortes, D. DeSocio, J.E. Dick, D.M. Dikeos, D. Dina, C. Dmitrzak-Weglarz, M. Docampo, E. Duncan, L.E. Egberts, K. Ehrlich, S. Escaramís, G. Esko, T. Estivill, X. Farmer, A. Favaro, A. Fernández-Aranda, F. Fichter, M.M. Fischer, K. Föcker, M. Foretova, L. Forstner, A.J. Forzan, M. Franklin, C.S. Gallinger, S. Giegling, I. Giuranna, J. Gonidakis, F. Gorwood, P. Gratacos Mayora, M. Guillaume, S. Guo, Y. Hakonarson, H. Hatzikotoulas, K. Hauser, J. Hebebrand, J. Helder, S.G. Herms, S. Herpertz-Dahlmann, B. Herzog, W. Huckins, L.M. Hudson, J.I. Imgart, H. Inoko, H. Janout, V. Jiménez-Murcia, S. Julià, A. Kalsi, G. Kaminská, D. Karhunen, L. Karwautz, A. Kas, M.J.H. Kennedy, J.L. Keski-Rahkonen, A. Kiezebrink, K. Kim, Y.-R. Klump, K.L. Knudsen, G.P.S. La Via, M.C. Le Hellard, S. Levitan, R.D. Li, D. Lilenfeld, L. Lin, B.D. Lissowska, J. Luykx, J. Magistretti, P.J. Maj, M. Mannik, K. Marsal, S. Marshall, C.R. Mattingsdal, M. McDevitt, S. McGuffin, P. Metspalu, A. Meulenbelt, I. Micali, N. Mitchell, K. Monteleone, A.M. Monteleone, P. Nacmias, B. Navratilova, M. Ntalla, I. O'Toole, J.K. Ophoff, R.A. Padyukov, L. Palotie, A. Pantel, J. Papezova, H. Pinto, D. Rabionet, R. Raevuori, A. Ramoz, N. Reichborn-Kjennerud, T. Ricca, V. Ripatti, S. Ritschel, F. Roberts, M. Rotondo, A. Rujescu, D. Rybakowski, F. Santonastaso, P. Scherag, A. Scherer, S.W. Schmidt, U. Schork, N.J. Schosser, A. Seitz, J. Slachtova, L. Slagboom, P.E. Slof-Op't Landt, M.C.T. Slopien, A. Sorbi, S. Świątkowska, B. Szatkiewicz, J.P. Tachmazidou, I. Tenconi, E. Tortorella, A. Tozzi, F. Treasure, J. Tsitsika, A. Tyszkiewicz-Nwafor, M. Tziouvas, K. van Elburg, A.A. van Furth, E.F. Wagner, G. Walton, E. Widen, E. Zeggini, E. Zerwas, S. Zipfel, S. Bergen, A.W. Boden, J.M. Brandt, H. Crawford, S. Halmi, K.A. Horwood, L.J. Johnson, C. Kaplan, A.S. Kaye, W.H. Mitchell, J. Olsen, C.M. Pearson, J.F. Pedersen, N.L. Strober, M. Werge, T. Whiteman, D.C. Woodside, D.B. Grove, J. Henders, A.K. Larsen, J.T. Parker, R. Petersen, L.V. Jordan, J. Kennedy, M.A. Birgegård, A. Lichtenstein, P. Norring, C. Landén, M. Mortensen, P.B. Polimanti, R. McClintick, J.N. Adkins, A.E. Aliev, F. Bacanu, S.-A. Batzler, A. Bertelsen, S. Biernacka, J.M. Bigdeli, T.B. Chen, L.-S. Clarke, T.-K. Degenhardt, F. Docherty, A.R. Edwards, A.C. Foo, J.C. Fox, L. Frank, J. Hack, L.M. Hartmann, A.M. Hartz, S.M. Heilmann-Heimbach, S. Hodgkinson, C. Hoffmann, P. Hottenga, J.-J. Konte, B. Lahti, J. Lahti-Pulkkinen, M. Lai, D. Ligthart, L. Loukola, A. Maher, B.S. Mbarek, H. McIntosh, A.M. McQueen, M.B. Meyers, J.L. Milaneschi, Y. Palviainen, T. Peterson, R.E. Ryu, E. Saccone, N.L. Salvatore, J.E. Sanchez-Roige, S. Schwandt, M. Sherva, R. Streit, F. Strohmaier, J. Thomas, N. Wang, J.-C. Webb, B.T. Wedow, R. Wetherill, L. Wills, A.G. Zhou, H. Boardman, J.D. Chen, D. Choi, D.-S. Copeland, W.E. Culverhouse, R.C. Dahmen, N. Degenhardt, L. Domingue, B.W. Frye, M.A. Gäebel, W. Hayward, C. Ising, M. Keyes, M. Kiefer, F. Koller, G. Kramer, J. Kuperman, S. Lucae, S. Lynskey, M.T. Maier, W. Mann, K. Männistö, S. Müller-Myhsok, B. Murray, A.D. Nurnberger, J.I. Preuss, U. Räikkönen, K. Reynolds, M.D. Ridinger, M. Scherbaum, N. Schuckit, M.A. Soyka, M. Treutlein, J. Witt, S.H. Wodarz, N. Zill, P. Adkins, D.E. Boomsma, D.I. Bierut, L.J. Brown, S.A. Bucholz, K.K. Costello, E.J. de Wit, H. Diazgranados, N. Eriksson, J.G. Farrer, L.A. Foroud, T.M. Gillespie, N.A. Goate, A.M. Goldman, D. Grucza, R.A. Hancock, D.B. Harris, K.M. Hesselbrock, V. Hewitt, J.K. Hopfer, C.J. Iacono, W.G. Johnson, E.O. Karpyak, V.M. Kendler, K.S. Kranzler, H.R. Krauter, K. Lind, P.A. McGue, M. MacKillop, J. Madden, P.A.F. Maes, H.H. Magnusson, P.K.E. Nelson, E.C. Nöthen, M.M. Palmer, A.A. Penninx, B.W.J.H. Porjesz, B. Rice, J.P. Rietschel, M. Riley, B.P. Rose, R.J. Shen, P.-H. Silberg, J. Stallings, M.C. Tarter, R.E. Vanyukov, M.M. Vrieze, S. Wall, T.L. Whitfield, J.B. Zhao, H. Neale, B.M. Wade, T.D. Heath, A.C. Montgomery, G.W. Martin, N.G. Sullivan, P.F. Kaprio, J. Breen, G. Gelernter, J. Edenberg, H.J. Bulik, C.M. Agrawal, A.
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mental disorders - Abstract
Eating disorders and substance use disorders frequently co-occur. Twin studies reveal shared genetic variance between liabilities to eating disorders and substance use, with the strongest associations between symptoms of bulimia nervosa and problem alcohol use (genetic correlation [rg], twin-based = 0.23-0.53). We estimated the genetic correlation between eating disorder and substance use and disorder phenotypes using data from genome-wide association studies (GWAS). Four eating disorder phenotypes (anorexia nervosa [AN], AN with binge eating, AN without binge eating, and a bulimia nervosa factor score), and eight substance-use-related phenotypes (drinks per week, alcohol use disorder [AUD], smoking initiation, current smoking, cigarettes per day, nicotine dependence, cannabis initiation, and cannabis use disorder) from eight studies were included. Significant genetic correlations were adjusted for variants associated with major depressive disorder and schizophrenia. Total study sample sizes per phenotype ranged from ~2400 to ~537 000 individuals. We used linkage disequilibrium score regression to calculate single nucleotide polymorphism-based genetic correlations between eating disorder- and substance-use-related phenotypes. Significant positive genetic associations emerged between AUD and AN (rg = 0.18; false discovery rate q = 0.0006), cannabis initiation and AN (rg = 0.23; q < 0.0001), and cannabis initiation and AN with binge eating (rg = 0.27; q = 0.0016). Conversely, significant negative genetic correlations were observed between three nondiagnostic smoking phenotypes (smoking initiation, current smoking, and cigarettes per day) and AN without binge eating (rgs = −0.19 to −0.23; qs < 0.04). The genetic correlation between AUD and AN was no longer significant after co-varying for major depressive disorder loci. The patterns of association between eating disorder- and substance-use-related phenotypes highlights the potentially complex and substance-specific relationships among these behaviors. © 2020 Society for the Study of Addiction
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- 2021
13. Depressive disorder moderates the effect of the FTO gene on body mass index
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Rivera, M, Cohen-Woods, S, Kapur, K, Breen, G, Ng, M Y, Butler, A W, Craddock, N, Gill, M, Korszun, A, Maier, W, Mors, O, Owen, M J, Preisig, M, Bergmann, S, Tozzi, F, Rice, J, Rietschel, M, Rucker, J, Schosser, A, Aitchison, K J, Uher, R, Craig, I W, Lewis, C M, Farmer, A E, and McGuffin, P
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- 2012
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14. Association of DISC1 and TSNAX genes and affective disorders in the depression case–control (DeCC) and bipolar affective case–control (BACCS) studies
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Schosser, A, Gaysina, D, Cohen-Woods, S, Chow, P C, Martucci, L, Craddock, N, Farmer, A, Korszun, A, Gunasinghe, C, Gray, J, Jones, L, Tozzi, F, Perry, J, Muglia, P, Owen, M J, Craig, I W, and McGuffin, P
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- 2010
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15. Genome-wide association study of recurrent major depressive disorder in two European case–control cohorts
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Muglia, P, Tozzi, F, Galwey, N W, Francks, C, Upmanyu, R, Kong, X Q, Antoniades, A, Domenici, E, Perry, J, Rothen, S, Vandeleur, C L, Mooser, V, Waeber, G, Vollenweider, P, Preisig, M, Lucae, S, Müller-Myhsok, B, Holsboer, F, Middleton, L T, and Roses, A D
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- 2010
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16. Population-based linkage analysis of schizophrenia and bipolar case–control cohorts identifies a potential susceptibility locus on 19q13
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Francks, C, Tozzi, F, Farmer, A, Vincent, J B, Rujescu, D, St Clair, D, and Muglia, P
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- 2010
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17. Associations Between Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder and Various Eating Disorders: A Swedish Nationwide Population Study Using Multiple Genetically Informative Approaches
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Yao, S., Kuja-Halkola, R., Martin, J., Lu, Y., Lichtenstein, P., Hubel, C., Almqvist, C., Magnusson, P. K., Bulik, C. M., Larsson, H., Norring, C., Birgegard, A., Yilmaz, Z., Watson, H., Baker, J., Thornton, L. M., Adan, R., Ando, T., Bergen, A., Berrettini, W., Boni, C., Boraska Perica, V., Brandt, H., Burghardt, R., Cassina, M., Cesta, C., Clementi, M., Coleman, J., Cone, R., Courtet, P., Crawford, S., Crow, S., Crowley, J., Danner, U., Davis, O., de Zwaan, M., Dedoussis, G., Degortes, D., Desocio, J., Dick, D., Dikeos, D., Dmitrzak-Weglarz, M., Docampo, E., Egberts, K., Ehrlich, S., Escaramis, G., Esko, T., Estivill, X., Favaro, A., Fernandez-Aranda, F., Fichter, M., Finan, C., Fischer, K., Focker, M., Foretova, L., Forzan, M., Franklin, C., Gaspar, H., Gonidakis, F., Gorwood, P., Gratacos, M., Guillaume, S., Guo, Y., Hakonarson, H., Halmi, K., Hatzikotoulas, K., Hauser, J., Hebebrand, J., Helder, S., Hendriks, J., Herpertz-Dahlmann, B., Herzog, W., Hilliard, C., Hinney, A., Huckins, L., Hudson, J., Huemer, J., Imgart, H., Inoko, H., Jimenez-Murcia, S., Johnson, C., Jordan, J., Jureus, A., Kalsi, G., Kaminska, D., Kaplan, A., Kaprio, J., Karhunen, L., Karwautz, A., Kas, M., Kaye, W., Kennedy, J., Kennedy, M., Keski-Rahkonen, A., Kiezebrink, K., Kim, Y. -R., Klump, K., Knudsen, G. P., Koeleman, B., Koubek, D., La Via, M., Landen, M., Levitan, R., Li, D., Lilenfeld, L., Lissowska, J., Magistretti, P., Maj, M., Mannik, K., Martin, N., Mcdevitt, S., Mcguffin, P., Merl, E., Metspalu, A., Meulenbelt, I., Micali, N., Mitchell, J., Mitchell, K., Monteleone, P., Monteleone, A. M., Mortensen, P., Munn-Chernoff, M., Nacmias, B., Nilsson, I., Ntalla, I., O'Toole, J., Pantel, J., Papezova, H., Parker, R., Rabionet, R., Raevuori, A., Rajewski, A., Ramoz, N., Rayner, N. W., Reichborn-Kjennerud, T., Ricca, V., Ripke, S., Ritschel, F., Roberts, M., Rotondo, A., Rybakowski, F., Santonastaso, P., Scherag, A., Schmidt, U., Schork, N., Schosser, A., Seitz, J., Slachtova, L., Slagboom, P. E., Slof-Op't Landt, M., Slopien, A., Smith, T., Sorbi, S., Strengman, E., Strober, M., Sullivan, P., Szatkiewicz, J., Szeszenia-Dabrowska, N., Tachmazidou, I., Tenconi, E., Thornton, L., Tortorella, A., Tozzi, F., Treasure, J., Tsitsika, A., Tziouvas, K., van Elburg, A., van Furth, E., Wade, T., Wagner, G., Walton, E., Woodside, D. B., Zeggini, E., Zerwas, S., Zipfel, S., Alfredsson, L., Andreassen, O., Aschauer, H., Barrett, J., Bencko, V., Carlberg, L., Cichon, S., Cohen-Woods, S., Dina, C., Ding, B., Espeseth, T., Floyd, J., Gallinger, S., Gambaro, G., Giegling, I., Herms, S., Janout, V., Julia, A., Klareskog, L., Le Hellard, S., Leboyer, M., Lundervold, A., Marsal, S., Mattingsdal, M., Navratilova, M., Ophoff, R., Palotie, A., Pinto, D., Ripatti, S., Rujescu, D., Scherer, S., Scott, L., Sladek, R., Soranzo, N., Southam, L., Steen, V., Wichmann, H. -E., Widen, E., Breen, G., Bulik, C., Yao, S., Kuja-Halkola, R., Martin, J., Lu, Y., Lichtenstein, P., Hubel, C., Almqvist, C., Magnusson, P. K., Bulik, C. M., Larsson, H., Norring, C., Birgegard, A., Yilmaz, Z., Watson, H., Baker, J., Thornton, L. M., Adan, R., Ando, T., Bergen, A., Berrettini, W., Boni, C., Boraska Perica, V., Brandt, H., Burghardt, R., Cassina, M., Cesta, C., Clementi, M., Coleman, J., Cone, R., Courtet, P., Crawford, S., Crow, S., Crowley, J., Danner, U., Davis, O., de Zwaan, M., Dedoussis, G., Degortes, D., Desocio, J., Dick, D., Dikeos, D., Dmitrzak-Weglarz, M., Docampo, E., Egberts, K., Ehrlich, S., Escaramis, G., Esko, T., Estivill, X., Favaro, A., Fernandez-Aranda, F., Fichter, M., Finan, C., Fischer, K., Focker, M., Foretova, L., Forzan, M., Franklin, C., Gaspar, H., Gonidakis, F., Gorwood, P., Gratacos, M., Guillaume, S., Guo, Y., Hakonarson, H., Halmi, K., Hatzikotoulas, K., Hauser, J., Hebebrand, J., Helder, S., Hendriks, J., Herpertz-Dahlmann, B., Herzog, W., Hilliard, C., Hinney, A., Huckins, L., Hudson, J., Huemer, J., Imgart, H., Inoko, H., Jimenez-Murcia, S., Johnson, C., Jordan, J., Jureus, A., Kalsi, G., Kaminska, D., Kaplan, A., Kaprio, J., Karhunen, L., Karwautz, A., Kas, M., Kaye, W., Kennedy, J., Kennedy, M., Keski-Rahkonen, A., Kiezebrink, K., Kim, Y. -R., Klump, K., Knudsen, G. P., Koeleman, B., Koubek, D., La Via, M., Landen, M., Levitan, R., Li, D., Lilenfeld, L., Lissowska, J., Magistretti, P., Maj, M., Mannik, K., Martin, N., Mcdevitt, S., Mcguffin, P., Merl, E., Metspalu, A., Meulenbelt, I., Micali, N., Mitchell, J., Mitchell, K., Monteleone, P., Monteleone, A. M., Mortensen, P., Munn-Chernoff, M., Nacmias, B., Nilsson, I., Ntalla, I., O'Toole, J., Pantel, J., Papezova, H., Parker, R., Rabionet, R., Raevuori, A., Rajewski, A., Ramoz, N., Rayner, N. W., Reichborn-Kjennerud, T., Ricca, V., Ripke, S., Ritschel, F., Roberts, M., Rotondo, A., Rybakowski, F., Santonastaso, P., Scherag, A., Schmidt, U., Schork, N., Schosser, A., Seitz, J., Slachtova, L., Slagboom, P. E., Slof-Op't Landt, M., Slopien, A., Smith, T., Sorbi, S., Strengman, E., Strober, M., Sullivan, P., Szatkiewicz, J., Szeszenia-Dabrowska, N., Tachmazidou, I., Tenconi, E., Thornton, L., Tortorella, A., Tozzi, F., Treasure, J., Tsitsika, A., Tziouvas, K., van Elburg, A., van Furth, E., Wade, T., Wagner, G., Walton, E., Woodside, D. B., Zeggini, E., Zerwas, S., Zipfel, S., Alfredsson, L., Andreassen, O., Aschauer, H., Barrett, J., Bencko, V., Carlberg, L., Cichon, S., Cohen-Woods, S., Dina, C., Ding, B., Espeseth, T., Floyd, J., Gallinger, S., Gambaro, G., Giegling, I., Herms, S., Janout, V., Julia, A., Klareskog, L., Le Hellard, S., Leboyer, M., Lundervold, A., Marsal, S., Mattingsdal, M., Navratilova, M., Ophoff, R., Palotie, A., Pinto, D., Ripatti, S., Rujescu, D., Scherer, S., Scott, L., Sladek, R., Soranzo, N., Southam, L., Steen, V., Wichmann, H. -E., Widen, E., Breen, G., Bulik, C., Department of Medical Epidemiology and Biostatistics (MEB), Karolinska Institutet [Stockholm], School of Medicine [Cardiff], Cardiff University-Institute of Medical Genetics [Cardiff], University of North Carolina [Chapel Hill] (UNC), University of North Carolina System (UNC), Department Psychiatry [Chapel Hill], University of North Carolina System (UNC)-University of North Carolina System (UNC), Oregon Research Institute (ORI), Department of Psychiatry [Philadelphia], University of Pennsylvania [Philadelphia], Stockholm County Council, Analyse Phenotypique, Developpementale et Genetique des Comportements Addictifs, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7 (UPD7), University of Split, Azienda Ospedaliera di Padova, Centre Hospitalier Régional Universitaire [Montpellier] (CHRU Montpellier), Department of Nutrition-Dietetics, Harokopio University of Athens, University of Athens Medical School [Athens], MetaGenoPolis, Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA), Medstar Research Institute, Center for Genomic Regulation (CRG-UPF), CIBER de Epidemiología y Salud Pública (CIBERESP), Department of Psychiatry (IDIBELL), CIBERobn Fisiopatología de la Obesidad y Nutrición-University Hospital of Bellvitge, Infectious diseases division, Department of internal medicine, Washington University in Saint Louis (WUSTL), Masaryk Memorial Cancer Institute and Medical Faculty of Masaryk University, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens (NKUA), Institut de psychiatrie et neurosciences (U894 / UMS 1266), Université Paris Descartes - Paris 5 (UPD5)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Neuropsychiatrie : recherche épidémiologique et clinique (PSNREC), Université Montpellier 1 (UM1)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Université de Montpellier (UM), The Center for Applied Genomics, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP ), Weill Medical College of Cornell University [New York], Department of Genomics, Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, LVR-Klinikum Essen, Universität Duisburg-Essen [Essen], Rheinisch-Westfälische Technische Hochschule Aachen (RWTH), Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai [New York] (MSSM), School of Biomedical Sciences, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, 4072, Australia., Tokai University, Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies [Horbat] (IMAS), University of Tasmania [Hobart, Australia] (UTAS), National Institute for Health and Welfare [Helsinki], Medizinische Universität Wien = Medical University of Vienna, University of California [San Diego] (UC San Diego), University of California, Psychiatric Neurogenetics Section, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, School of Computing [Dublin], Dublin City University [Dublin] (DCU), University of Helsinki, University Medical Center [Utrecht], Department of medicine [Stockholm], Karolinska Institutet [Stockholm]-Karolinska University Hospital [Stockholm], Oak Ridge National Laboratory [Oak Ridge] (ORNL), UT-Battelle, LLC, The M Sklodowska-Curie Cancer Center and Institute of Oncology, Brain and Mind Institute, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Università degli studi della Campania 'Luigi Vanvitelli', Center for Integrative Genomics - Institute of Bioinformatics, Génopode (CIG), Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics [Lausanne] (SIB), Université de Lausanne (UNIL)-Université de Lausanne (UNIL), Queensland Institute of Medical Research, MRC Social, Genetic and Developmental Psychiatry Centre (SGDP), King‘s College London-The Institute of Psychiatry, Estonian Genome and Medicine, University of Tartu, Section Molecular Epidemiology, Leiden University Medical Center (LUMC), Institute of Psychiatry, King's College, Università degli Studi di Salerno (UNISA), Università degli Studi di Firenze = University of Florence [Firenze] (UNIFI), Vanderbilt University School of Medicine [Nashville], Charles University [Prague] (CU), Department of Chemistry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 1EW, U.K, Norwegian Institute of Public Health [Oslo] (NIPH), Stanley Center for Psychiatric Research, Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard (BROAD INSTITUTE), Harvard Medical School [Boston] (HMS)-Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)-Massachusetts General Hospital [Boston]-Harvard Medical School [Boston] (HMS)-Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)-Massachusetts General Hospital [Boston], Institute of Medical Informatics, Biometry and Epidemiology, The Scripps Translational Science Institute and The Scripps Research Institute, MRC Centre for Neuropsychiatric Genetics and Genomics, Medical Research Council-Cardiff University, Leiden University Medical Center (LUMC), David Geffen School of Medicine [Los Angeles], University of California [Los Angeles] (UCLA), University of California-University of California, The Jackson Laboratory [Bar Harbor] (JAX), The Nofer Institute of Occupational Medicine, Università degli Studi di Perugia (UNIPG), Neurosciences Centre of Excellence in Drug Discovery, GlaxoSmithKline Research and Development, Utrecht University [Utrecht], SURFACES, Institut de recherches sur la catalyse et l'environnement de Lyon (IRCELYON), Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Institut de Chimie du CNRS (INC)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Institut de Chimie du CNRS (INC)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Centre épigénétique et destin cellulaire (EDC (UMR_7216)), Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7 (UPD7)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Department Biostatistics University of North Carolina, Human Genetics, The Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute [Cambridge], Institute of Environmental Medicine, Karolinska Institutet [Stockholm]-Sachs' Children's Hospital, KG Jebsen Centre for Psychosis Research, University of Oslo (UiO)-Institute of Clinical Medicine-Oslo University Hospital [Oslo], Institute of Hygiene and Epidemiology, Charles University and General University Hospital-First Faculty of Medicine, Life & Brain Center - Department of Genomics, Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn, unité de recherche de l'institut du thorax UMR1087 UMR6291 (ITX), Université de Nantes - UFR de Médecine et des Techniques Médicales (UFR MEDECINE), Université de Nantes (UN)-Université de Nantes (UN)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), University of Oslo (UiO), Familial Gastrointestinal Cancer Registry, Mount Sinai Hospital [Toronto, Canada] (MSH), Centre for Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Faculty of Medicine and Health Leeds, University of Leeds, Department of Optics [Univ Palacký], Faculty of Science [Univ Palacký], Palacky University Olomouc-Palacky University Olomouc, Vall d'Hebron University Hospital [Barcelona], Rheumatology Unit, University of Bergen (UiB), Service de psychiatrie, Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)-Hôpital Henri Mondor-Hôpital Albert Chenevier, Masaryk Memorial Cancer Institute (RECAMO), Department of Psychiatry, University Medical Center [Utrecht]-Brain Center Rudolf Magnus, Harvard Medical School [Boston] (HMS)-Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)-Massachusetts General Hospital [Boston], Program in Genetics and Genomic Biology, Hospital for Sick Children-University of Toronto McLaughlin Centre, Department of Biostatistics and Center for Statistical Genetics, University of Michigan [Ann Arbor], University of Michigan System-University of Michigan System-School of public health, The University of Hong Kong (HKU)-The University of Hong Kong (HKU), Department of Human Genetics [Montréal], McGill University = Université McGill [Montréal, Canada], Institute of Medical Informatics, Biometry, and Epidemiology, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München (LMU)-Chair of Epidemiology, Université Montpellier 1 (UM1)-Université de Montpellier (UM)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), The Institute of Psychiatry-King‘s College London, Cardiff University-Medical Research Council, and Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7 (UPD7)
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Multifactorial Inheritance ,Adolescent ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Article ,Feeding and Eating Disorders ,Young Adult ,[SCCO]Cognitive science ,Polygenic risk score ,Risk Factors ,mental disorders ,Humans ,ADHD ,Genetic epidemiology ,Registries ,Child ,Sweden ,[SDV.GEN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Genetics ,Eating disorder ,Anorexia nervosa ,Bulimia nervosa ,Eating disorders ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,[SDV.MHEP.PSM]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology/Psychiatrics and mental health ,Female ,[SDV.SPEE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologie - Abstract
International audience; BACKGROUND:Although attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and eating disorders (EDs) frequently co-occur, little is known about the shared etiology. In this study, we comprehensively investigated the genetic association between ADHD and various EDs, including anorexia nervosa (AN) and other EDs such as bulimia nervosa.METHODS:We applied different genetically informative designs to register-based information of a Swedish nationwide population (N = 3,550,118). We first examined the familial coaggregation of clinically diagnosed ADHD and EDs across multiple types of relatives. We then applied quantitative genetic modeling in full-sisters and maternal half-sisters to estimate the genetic correlations between ADHD and EDs. We further tested the associations between ADHD polygenic risk scores and ED symptoms, and between AN polygenic risk scores and ADHD symptoms, in a genotyped population-based sample (N = 13,472).RESULTS:Increased risk of all types of EDs was found in individuals with ADHD (any ED: odds ratio [OR] = 3.97, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 3.81, 4.14; AN: OR = 2.68, 95% CI = 2.15, 2.86; other EDs: OR = 4.66, 95% CI = 4.47, 4.87; bulimia nervosa: OR = 5.01, 95% CI = 4.63, 5.41) and their relatives compared with individuals without ADHD and their relatives. The magnitude of the associations decreased as the degree of relatedness decreased, suggesting shared familial liability between ADHD and EDs. Quantitative genetic models revealed stronger genetic correlation of ADHD with other EDs (.37, 95% CI = .31, .42) than with AN (.14, 95% CI = .05, .22). ADHD polygenic risk scores correlated positively with ED symptom measures overall and with the subscales Drive for Thinness and Body Dissatisfaction despite small effect sizes.CONCLUSIONS:We observed stronger genetic association with ADHD for non-AN EDs than for AN, highlighting specific genetic correlation beyond a general genetic factor across psychiatric disorders.
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- 2019
18. α-5/α-3 nicotinic receptor subunit alleles increase risk for heavy smoking
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Berrettini, W, Yuan, X, Tozzi, F, Song, K, Francks, C, Chilcoat, H, Waterworth, D, Muglia, P, and Mooser, V
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- 2008
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19. Genetic identification of cell types underlying brain complex traits yields insights into the etiology of Parkinson’s disease
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Bryois, J. Skene, N.G. Hansen, T.F. Kogelman, L.J.A. Watson, H.J. Liu, Z. Adan, R. Alfredsson, L. Ando, T. Andreassen, O. Baker, J. Bergen, A. Berrettini, W. Birgegård, A. Boden, J. Boehm, I. Boni, C. Boraska Perica, V. Brandt, H. Breen, G. Bryois, J. Buehren, K. Bulik, C. Burghardt, R. Cassina, M. Cichon, S. Clementi, M. Coleman, J. Cone, R. Courtet, P. Crawford, S. Crow, S. Crowley, J. Danner, U. Davis, O. de Zwaan, M. Dedoussis, G. Degortes, D. DeSocio, J. Dick, D. Dikeos, D. Dina, C. Dmitrzak-Weglarz, M. Docampo Martinez, E. Duncan, L. Egberts, K. Ehrlich, S. Escaramís, G. Esko, T. Estivill, X. Farmer, A. Favaro, A. Fernández-Aranda, F. Fichter, M. Fischer, K. Föcker, M. Foretova, L. Forstner, A. Forzan, M. Franklin, C. Gallinger, S. Gaspar, H. Giegling, I. Giuranna, J. Giusti-Rodríquez, P. Gonidakis, F. Gordon, S. Gorwood, P. Gratacos Mayora, M. Grove, J. Guillaume, S. Guo, Y. Hakonarson, H. Halmi, K. Hanscombe, K. Hatzikotoulas, K. Hauser, J. Hebebrand, J. Helder, S. Henders, A. Herms, S. Herpertz-Dahlmann, B. Herzog, W. Hinney, A. Horwood, L.J. Hübel, C. Huckins, L. Hudson, J. Imgart, H. Inoko, H. Janout, V. Jiménez-Murcia, S. Johnson, C. Jordan, J. Julià, A. Juréus, A. Kalsi, G. Kaminská, D. Kaplan, A. Kaprio, J. Karhunen, L. Karwautz, A. Kas, M. Kaye, W. Kennedy, J. Kennedy, M. Keski-Rahkonen, A. Kiezebrink, K. Kim, Y.-R. Kirk, K. Klareskog, L. Klump, K. Knudsen, G.P. La Via, M. Landén, M. Larsen, J. Le Hellard, S. Leppä, V. Levitan, R. Li, D. Lichtenstein, P. Lilenfeld, L. Lin, B.D. Lissowska, J. Luykx, J. Magistretti, P. Maj, M. Mannik, K. Marsal, S. Marshall, C. Martin, N. Mattheisen, M. Mattingsdal, M. McDevitt, S. McGuffin, P. Medland, S. Metspalu, A. Meulenbelt, I. Micali, N. Mitchell, J. Mitchell, K. Monteleone, P. Monteleone, A.M. Montgomery, G. Mortensen, P.B. Munn-Chernoff, M. Nacmias, B. Navratilova, M. Norring, C. Ntalla, I. Olsen, C. Ophoff, R. O’Toole, J. Padyukov, L. Palotie, A. Pantel, J. Papezova, H. Parker, R. Pearson, J. Pedersen, N. Petersen, L. Pinto, D. Purves, K. Rabionet, R. Raevuori, A. Ramoz, N. Reichborn-Kjennerud, T. Ricca, V. Ripatti, S. Ripke, S. Ritschel, F. Roberts, M. Rotondo, A. Rujescu, D. Rybakowski, F. Santonastaso, P. Scherag, A. Scherer, S. Schmidt, U. Schork, N. Schosser, A. Seitz, J. Slachtova, L. Slagboom, P.E. Slof-Op ‘t Landt, M. Slopien, A. Sorbi, S. Strober, M. Stuber, G. Sullivan, P. Świątkowska, B. Szatkiewicz, J. Tachmazidou, I. Tenconi, E. Thornton, L. Tortorella, A. Tozzi, F. Treasure, J. Tsitsika, A. Tyszkiewicz-Nwafor, M. Tziouvas, K. van Elburg, A. van Furth, E. Wade, T. Wagner, G. Walton, E. Watson, H. Werge, T. Whiteman, D. Widen, E. Woodside, D.B. Yao, S. Yilmaz, Z. Zeggini, E. Zerwas, S. Zipfel, S. Anttila, V. Artto, V. Belin, A.C. de Boer, I. Boomsma, D.I. Børte, S. Chasman, D.I. Cherkas, L. Christensen, A.F. Cormand, B. Cuenca-Leon, E. Davey-Smith, G. Dichgans, M. van Duijn, C. Esko, T. Esserlind, A.L. Ferrari, M. Frants, R.R. Freilinger, T. Furlotte, N. Gormley, P. Griffiths, L. Hamalainen, E. Hiekkala, M. Ikram, M.A. Ingason, A. Järvelin, M.-R. Kajanne, R. Kallela, M. Kaprio, J. Kaunisto, M. Kogelman, L.J.A. Kubisch, C. Kurki, M. Kurth, T. Launer, L. Lehtimaki, T. Lessel, D. Ligthart, L. Litterman, N. Maagdenberg, A. Macaya, A. Malik, R. Mangino, M. McMahon, G. Muller-Myhsok, B. Neale, B.M. Northover, C. Nyholt, D.R. Olesen, J. Palotie, A. Palta, P. Pedersen, L. Pedersen, N. Posthuma, D. Pozo-Rosich, P. Pressman, A. Raitakari, O. Schürks, M. Sintas, C. Stefansson, K. Stefansson, H. Steinberg, S. Strachan, D. Terwindt, G. Vila-Pueyo, M. Wessman, M. Winsvold, B.S. Zhao, H. Zwart, J.A. Agee, M. Alipanahi, B. Auton, A. Bell, R. Bryc, K. Elson, S. Fontanillas, P. Furlotte, N. Heilbron, K. Hinds, D. Huber, K. Kleinman, A. Litterman, N. McCreight, J. McIntyre, M. Mountain, J. Noblin, E. Northover, C. Pitts, S. Sathirapongsasuti, J. Sazonova, O. Shelton, J. Shringarpure, S. Tian, C. Tung, J. Vacic, V. Wilson, C. Brueggeman, L. Bulik, C.M. Arenas, E. Hjerling-Leffler, J. Sullivan, P.F. International Headache Genetics Consortium Eating Disorders Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium
- Abstract
Genome-wide association studies have discovered hundreds of loci associated with complex brain disorders, but it remains unclear in which cell types these loci are active. Here we integrate genome-wide association study results with single-cell transcriptomic data from the entire mouse nervous system to systematically identify cell types underlying brain complex traits. We show that psychiatric disorders are predominantly associated with projecting excitatory and inhibitory neurons. Neurological diseases were associated with different cell types, which is consistent with other lines of evidence. Notably, Parkinson’s disease was genetically associated not only with cholinergic and monoaminergic neurons (which include dopaminergic neurons) but also with enteric neurons and oligodendrocytes. Using post-mortem brain transcriptomic data, we confirmed alterations in these cells, even at the earliest stages of disease progression. Our study provides an important framework for understanding the cellular basis of complex brain maladies, and reveals an unexpected role of oligodendrocytes in Parkinson’s disease. © 2020, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature America, Inc.
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- 2020
20. Estimating the heritability of reporting stressful life events captured by common genetic variants
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Power, R. A., Wingenbach, T., Cohen-Woods, S., Uher, R., Ng, M. Y., Butler, A. W., Ising, M., Craddock, N., Owen, M. J., Korszun, A., Jones, L., Jones, I., Gill, M., Rice, J. P., Maier, W., Zobel, A., Mors, O., Placentino, A., Rietschel, M., Lucae, S., Holsboer, F., Binder, E. B., Keers, R., Tozzi, F., Muglia, P., Breen, G., Craig, I. W., Müller-Myhsok, B., Kennedy, J. L., Strauss, J., Vincent, J. B., Lewis, C. M., Farmer, A. E., and McGuffin, P.
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- 2013
21. Eating behavior of ballet dancers
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Dotti, A., Fioravanti, M., Balotta, M., Tozzi, F., Cannella, C., and Lazzari, R.
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- 2002
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22. Motor imagery in a locked-in patient: evidence from transcranial magnetic stimulation
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Cincotta, M., Tozzi, F., Zaccara, G., Borgheresi, A., Lori, S., Cosottini, M., and Cantello, R.
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- 1999
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23. A follow-up case–control association study of tractable (druggable) genes in recurrent major depression
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Schosser, A., Gaysina, D., Cohen-Woods, S., Domenici, E., Perry, J., Tozzi, F., Korszun, A., Gunasinghe, C., Gray, J., Jones, L., Binder, E. B., Holsboer, F., Craddock, N., Owen, M. J., Craig, I. W., Farmer, A. E., Muglia, P., and McGuffin, P.
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- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Genetic identification of cell types underlying brain complex traits yields insights into the etiology of Parkinson's disease
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Bryois J., Skene N. G., Hansen T. F., Kogelman L. J. A., Watson H. J., Liu Z., Adan R., Alfredsson L., Ando T., Andreassen O., Baker J., Bergen A., Berrettini W., Birgegard A., Boden J., Boehm I., Boni C., Boraska Perica V., Brandt H., Breen G., Buehren K., Bulik C., Burghardt R., Cassina M., Cichon S., Clementi M., Coleman J., Cone R., Courtet P., Crawford S., Crow S., Crowley J., Danner U., Davis O., de Zwaan M., Dedoussis G., Degortes D., DeSocio J., Dick D., Dikeos D., Dina C., Dmitrzak-Weglarz M., Docampo Martinez E., Duncan L., Egberts K., Ehrlich S., Escaramis G., Esko T., Estivill X., Farmer A., Favaro A., Fernandez-Aranda F., Fichter M., Fischer K., Focker M., Foretova L., Forstner A., Forzan M., Franklin C., Gallinger S., Gaspar H., Giegling I., Giuranna J., Giusti-Rodriquez P., Gonidakis F., Gordon S., Gorwood P., Gratacos Mayora M., Grove J., Guillaume S., Guo Y., Hakonarson H., Halmi K., Hanscombe K., Hatzikotoulas K., Hauser J., Hebebrand J., Helder S., Henders A., Herms S., Herpertz-Dahlmann B., Herzog W., Hinney A., Horwood L. J., Hubel C., Huckins L., Hudson J., Imgart H., Inoko H., Janout V., Jimenez-Murcia S., Johnson C., Jordan J., Julia A., Jureus A., Kalsi G., Kaminska D., Kaplan A., Kaprio J., Karhunen L., Karwautz A., Kas M., Kaye W., Kennedy J., Kennedy M., Keski-Rahkonen A., Kiezebrink K., Kim Y. -R., Kirk K., Klareskog L., Klump K., Knudsen G. P., La Via M., Landen M., Larsen J., Le Hellard S., Leppa V., Levitan R., Li D., Lichtenstein P., Lilenfeld L., Lin B. D., Lissowska J., Luykx J., Magistretti P., Maj M., Mannik K., Marsal S., Marshall C., Martin N., Mattheisen M., Mattingsdal M., McDevitt S., McGuffin P., Medland S., Metspalu A., Meulenbelt I., Micali N., Mitchell J., Mitchell K., Monteleone P., Monteleone A. M., Montgomery G., Mortensen P. B., Munn-Chernoff M., Nacmias B., Navratilova M., Norring C., Ntalla I., Olsen C., Ophoff R., O'Toole J., Padyukov L., Palotie A., Pantel J., Papezova H., Parker R., Pearson J., Pedersen N., Petersen L., Pinto D., Purves K., Rabionet R., Raevuori A., Ramoz N., Reichborn-Kjennerud T., Ricca V., Ripatti S., Ripke S., Ritschel F., Roberts M., Rotondo A., Rujescu D., Rybakowski F., Santonastaso P., Scherag A., Scherer S., Schmidt U., Schork N., Schosser A., Seitz J., Slachtova L., Slagboom P. E., Slof-Op 't Landt M., Slopien A., Sorbi S., Strober M., Stuber G., Sullivan P., Swiatkowska B., Szatkiewicz J., Tachmazidou I., Tenconi E., Thornton L., Tortorella A., Tozzi F., Treasure J., Tsitsika A., Tyszkiewicz-Nwafor M., Tziouvas K., van Elburg A., van Furth E., Wade T., Wagner G., Walton E., Watson H., Werge T., Whiteman D., Widen E., Woodside D. B., Yao S., Yilmaz Z., Zeggini E., Zerwas S., Zipfel S., Anttila V., Artto V., Belin A. C., de Boer I., Boomsma D. I., Borte S., Chasman D. I., Cherkas L., Christensen A. F., Cormand B., Cuenca-Leon E., Davey-Smith G., Dichgans M., van Duijn C., Esserlind A. L., Ferrari M., Frants R. R., Freilinger T., Furlotte N., Gormley P., Griffiths L., Hamalainen E., Hiekkala M., Ikram M. A., Ingason A., Jarvelin M. -R., Kajanne R., Kallela M., Kaunisto M., Kubisch C., Kurki M., Kurth T., Launer L., Lehtimaki T., Lessel D., Ligthart L., Litterman N., Maagdenberg A., Macaya A., Malik R., Mangino M., McMahon G., Muller-Myhsok B., Neale B. M., Northover C., Nyholt D. R., Olesen J., Palta P., Pedersen L., Posthuma D., Pozo-Rosich P., Pressman A., Raitakari O., Schurks M., Sintas C., Stefansson K., Stefansson H., Steinberg S., Strachan D., Terwindt G., Vila-Pueyo M., Wessman M., Winsvold B. S., Zhao H., Zwart J. 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J., Hubel, C., Huckins, L., Hudson, J., Imgart, H., Inoko, H., Janout, V., Jimenez-Murcia, S., Johnson, C., Jordan, J., Julia, A., Jureus, A., Kalsi, G., Kaminska, D., Kaplan, A., Kaprio, J., Karhunen, L., Karwautz, A., Kas, M., Kaye, W., Kennedy, J., Kennedy, M., Keski-Rahkonen, A., Kiezebrink, K., Kim, Y. -R., Kirk, K., Klareskog, L., Klump, K., Knudsen, G. P., La Via, M., Landen, M., Larsen, J., Le Hellard, S., Leppa, V., Levitan, R., Li, D., Lichtenstein, P., Lilenfeld, L., Lin, B. D., Lissowska, J., Luykx, J., Magistretti, P., Maj, M., Mannik, K., Marsal, S., Marshall, C., Martin, N., Mattheisen, M., Mattingsdal, M., Mcdevitt, S., Mcguffin, P., Medland, S., Metspalu, A., Meulenbelt, I., Micali, N., Mitchell, J., Mitchell, K., Monteleone, P., Monteleone, A. M., Montgomery, G., Mortensen, P. B., Munn-Chernoff, M., Nacmias, B., Navratilova, M., Norring, C., Ntalla, I., Olsen, C., Ophoff, R., O'Toole, J., Padyukov, L., Palotie, A., Pantel, J., Papezova, H., Parker, R., Pearson, J., Pedersen, N., Petersen, L., Pinto, D., Purves, K., Rabionet, R., Raevuori, A., Ramoz, N., Reichborn-Kjennerud, T., Ricca, V., Ripatti, S., Ripke, S., Ritschel, F., Roberts, M., Rotondo, A., Rujescu, D., Rybakowski, F., Santonastaso, P., Scherag, A., Scherer, S., Schmidt, U., Schork, N., Schosser, A., Seitz, J., Slachtova, L., Slagboom, P. E., Slof-Op 't Landt, M., Slopien, A., Sorbi, S., Strober, M., Stuber, G., Sullivan, P., Swiatkowska, B., Szatkiewicz, J., Tachmazidou, I., Tenconi, E., Thornton, L., Tortorella, A., Tozzi, F., Treasure, J., Tsitsika, A., Tyszkiewicz-Nwafor, M., Tziouvas, K., van Elburg, A., van Furth, E., Wade, T., Wagner, G., Walton, E., Watson, H., Werge, T., Whiteman, D., Widen, E., Woodside, D. 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A., Agee, M., Alipanahi, B., Auton, A., Bell, R., Bryc, K., Elson, S., Fontanillas, P., Heilbron, K., Hinds, D., Huber, K., Kleinman, A., Mccreight, J., Mcintyre, M., Mountain, J., Noblin, E., Pitts, S., Sathirapongsasuti, J., Sazonova, O., Shelton, J., Shringarpure, S., Tian, C., Tung, J., Vacic, V., Wilson, C., Brueggeman, L., Bulik, C. M., Arenas, E., Hjerling-Leffler, J., and Sullivan, P. F.
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Nervous system ,Netherlands Twin Register (NTR) ,Aging ,Parkinson's disease ,Medizin ,Genome-wide association study ,Disease ,Neurodegenerative ,Medical and Health Sciences ,ddc:616.89 ,Mice ,0302 clinical medicine ,Malaltia de Parkinson ,Monoaminergic ,Eating Disorders Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Cervell ,ALZHEIMERS ,NEURONS ,Animals ,Brain ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Humans ,Neurons ,Parkinson Disease ,Transcriptome ,11 Medical and Health Sciences ,Genetics & Heredity ,0303 health sciences ,Parkinson Disease/etiology/genetics/pathology ,HERITABILITY ,International Headache Genetics Consortium ,Biological Sciences ,Transcriptome/genetics ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurological ,Genome-Wide Association Study/methods ,Alzheimer's disease ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,Gens ,Cell type ,TISSUES ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Biology ,IMMUNITY ,23andMe Research Team ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,ENTERIC NERVOUS-SYSTEM ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,Underpinning research ,medicine ,Genetics ,Brain/pathology ,GENOME-WIDE ASSOCIATION ,NUCLEUS ,METAANALYSIS ,030304 developmental biology ,Science & Technology ,Neurons/pathology ,Human Genome ,Neurosciences ,06 Biological Sciences ,medicine.disease ,RISK LOCI ,Brain Disorders ,Genes ,Enteric nervous system ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Genome-wide association studies have discovered hundreds of loci associated with complex brain disorders, but it remains unclear in which cell types these loci are active. Here we integrate genome-wide association study results with single-cell transcriptomic data from the entire mouse nervous system to systematically identify cell types underlying brain complex traits. We show that psychiatric disorders are predominantly associated with projecting excitatory and inhibitory neurons. Neurological diseases were associated with different cell types, which is consistent with other lines of evidence. Notably, Parkinson’s disease was genetically associated not only with cholinergic and monoaminergic neurons (which include dopaminergic neurons) but also with enteric neurons and oligodendrocytes. Using post-mortem brain transcriptomic data, we confirmed alterations in these cells, even at the earliest stages of disease progression. Our study provides an important framework for understanding the cellular basis of complex brain maladies, and reveals an unexpected role of oligodendrocytes in Parkinson’s disease. Eating Disorders Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium Roger Adan17,18,19, Lars Alfredsson20, Tetsuya Ando21, Ole Andreassen22, Jessica Baker9, Andrew Bergen23,24, Wade Berrettini25, Andreas Birgegård26,27, Joseph Boden28, Ilka Boehm29, Claudette Boni30, Vesna Boraska Perica31,32, Harry Brandt33, Gerome Breen13,14, Julien Bryois1, Katharina Buehren34, Cynthia Bulik1,9,15, Roland Burghardt35, Matteo Cassina36, Sven Cichon37, Maurizio Clementi36, Jonathan Coleman13,14, Roger Cone38, Philippe Courtet39, Steven Crawford33, Scott Crow40, James Crowley16,26, unna Danner18, Oliver Davis41,42, Martina de Zwaan43, George Dedoussis44, Daniela Degortes45, Janiece DeSocio46, Danielle Dick47, Dimitris Dikeos48, Christian Dina49,50, Monika Dmitrzak-Weglarz51, Elisa Docampo Martinez52,53,54, Laramie Duncan55, Karin Egberts56, Stefan Ehrlich29, Geòrgia Escaramís52,53,54, Tõnu Esko57,58, Xavier Estivill52,53,54,59, Anne Farmer13, Angela Favaro45, Fernando Fernández-Aranda60,61, Manfred Fichter62,63, Krista Fischer57, Manuel Föcker64, Lenka Foretova65, Andreas Forstner37,66,67,68,69, Monica Forzan36, Christopher Franklin31, Steven Gallinger70, Héléna Gaspar13,14, Ina Giegling71, Johanna Giuranna64, Paola Giusti-Rodríquez16, Fragiskos Gonidakis72, Scott Gordon73, Philip Gorwood30,74, Monica Gratacos Mayora52,53,54, Jakob Grove75,76,77,78, Sébastien Guillaume39, Yiran Guo79, Hakon Hakonarson79,80, Katherine Halmi81, Ken Hanscombe82, Konstantinos Hatzikotoulas31, Joanna Hauser83, Johannes Hebebrand64, Sietske Helder13,84, Anjali Henders85, Stefan Herms37,69, Beate Herpertz-Dahlmann34, Wolfgang Herzog86, Anke Hinney64, L. John Horwood28, Christopher Hübel1,13, Laura Huckins31,87, James Hudson88, Hartmut Imgart89, Hidetoshi Inoko90, Vladimir Janout91, Susana Jiménez-Murcia60,61, Craig Johnson92, Jennifer Jordan93,94, Antonio Julià95, Anders Juréus1, Gursharan Kalsi13, Deborah Kaminská96, Allan Kaplan97, Jaakko Kaprio98,99, Leila Karhunen100, Andreas Karwautz101, Martien Kas17,102, Walter Kaye103, James Kennedy97, Martin Kennedy104, Anna Keski-Rahkonen98, Kirsty Kiezebrink105, Youl-Ri Kim106, Katherine Kirk73, Lars Klareskog107, Kelly Klump108, Gun Peggy Knudsen109, Maria La Via9, Mikael Landén1,19, Janne Larsen76,110,111, Stephanie Le Hellard112,113,114, Virpi Leppä1, Robert Levitan115, Dong Li79, Paul Lichtenstein1, Lisa Lilenfeld116, Bochao Danae Lin17, Jolanta Lissowska117, Jurjen Luykx17, Pierre Magistretti118,119, Mario Maj120, Katrin Mannik57,121, Sara Marsal95, Christian Marshall122, Nicholas Martin73, Manuel Mattheisen26,27,75,123, Morten Mattingsdal22, Sara McDevitt124,125, Peter McGuffin13, Sarah Medland73, Andres Metspalu57,126, Ingrid Meulenbelt127, Nadia Micali128,129, James Mitchell130, Karen Mitchell131, Palmiero Monteleone132, Alessio Maria Monteleone120, Grant Montgomery73,85,133, Preben Bo Mortensen76,110,111, Melissa Munn-Chernoff9, Benedetta Nacmias134, Marie Navratilova65, Claes Norring26,27, Ioanna Ntalla44, Catherine Olsen73, Roel Ophoff17,135, Julie O’Toole136, Leonid Padyukov107, Aarno Palotie58,99,137, Jacques Pantel30, Hana Papezova96, Richard Parker73, John Pearson138, Nancy Pedersen1, Liselotte Petersen76,110,111, Dalila Pinto87, Kirstin Purves13, Raquel Rabionet139,140,141, Anu Raevuori98, Nicolas Ramoz30, Ted Reichborn-Kjennerud109,142, Valdo Ricca134,143, Samuli Ripatti144, Stephan Ripke145,146,147, Franziska Ritschel29,148, Marion Roberts13, Alessandro Rotondo149, Dan Rujescu62,71, Filip Rybakowski150, Paolo Santonastaso151, André Scherag152, Stephen Scherer153, ulrike Schmidt13, Nicholas Schork154, Alexandra Schosser155, Jochen Seitz34, Lenka Slachtova156, P. Eline Slagboom127, Margarita Slof-Op ‘t Landt157,158, Agnieszka Slopien159, Sandro Sorbi134,160, Michael Strober161,162, Garret Stuber9,163, Patrick Sullivan1,16, Beata Świątkowska164, Jin Szatkiewicz16, Ioanna Tachmazidou31, Elena Tenconi45, Laura Thornton9, Alfonso Tortorella165,166, Federica Tozzi167, Janet Treasure13, Artemis Tsitsika168, Marta Tyszkiewicz-Nwafor150, Konstantinos Tziouvas169, Annemarie van Elburg18,170, Eric van Furth157,158, Tracey Wade171, Gudrun Wagner101, Esther Walton29, Hunna Watson9,10,11, Thomas Werge172, David Whiteman73, Elisabeth Widen99, D. Blake Woodside173,174, Shuyang Yao1, Zeynep Yilmaz9,16, Eleftheria Zeggini31,175, Stephanie Zerwas9 and Stephan Zipfel176 17Brain Center Rudolf Magnus, Department of Translational Neuroscience, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, the Netherlands. 18Center for Eating Disorders Rintveld, Altrecht Mental Health Institute, Zeist, the Netherlands. 19Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, Sweden. 20Institute of Environmental Medicine, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden. 21Department of Behavioral Medicine, National Institute of Mental Health, National Center of Neurology and Psychiatry, Tokyo, Japan. 22NORMENT KG Jebsen Centre, Division of Mental Health and Addiction, University of Oslo, Oslo University Hospital, Oslo, Norway. 23BioRealm, LLC, Walnut, CA, USA. 24Oregon Research Institute, Eugene, OR, USA. 25Department of Psychiatry, Center for Neurobiology and Behavior, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA. 26Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden. 27Center for Psychiatry Research, Stockholm Health Care Services, Stockholm City Council, Stockholm, Sweden. 28Christchurch Health and Development Study, University of Otago, Christchurch, New Zealand. 29Division of Psychological and Social Medicine and Developmental Neurosciences, Faculty of Medicine, Technische Universität Dresden, Dresden, Germany. 30INSERM U894, Centre of Psychiatry and Neuroscience, Paris, France. 31Wellcome Sanger Institute, Hinxton, Cambridge, UK. 32Department of Medical Biology, School of Medicine, University of Split, Split, Croatia. 33The Center for Eating Disorders at Sheppard Pratt, Baltimore, MD, USA. 34Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Psychosomatics and Psychotherapy, RWTH Aachen University, Aachen, Germany. 35Klinikum Frankfurt/Oder, Frankfurt, Germany. 36Clinical Genetics Unit, Department of Woman and Child Health, University of Padova, Padua, Italy. 37Institute of Medical Genetics and Pathology, University Hospital Basel, Basel, Switzerland. 38Life Sciences Institute and Department of Molecular and Integrative Physiology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA. 39Department of Emergency Psychiatry and Post-Acute Care, CHRU Montpellier, University of Montpellier, Montpellier, France. 40Department of Psychiatry, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA. 41MRC Integrative Epidemiology Unit, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK. 42School of Social and Community Medicine, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK. 43Department of Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy, Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany. 44Department of Nutrition and Dietetics, Harokopio University, Athens, Greece. 45Department of Neurosciences, University of Padova, Padua, Italy. 46College of Nursing, Seattle University, Seattle, WA, USA. 47Department of Psychology, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, USA. 48Department of Psychiatry, Athens University Medical School, Athens University, Athens, Greece. 49L’institut du thorax, INSERM, CNRS, UNIV Nantes, Nantes, France. 50L’institut du thorax, CHU Nantes, Nantes, France. 51Department of Psychiatric Genetics, Poznań University of Medical Sciences, Poznań, Poland. 52Barcelona Institute of Science and Technology, Barcelona, Spain. 53Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain. 54Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red en Epidemiología y Salud Pública (CIBERESP), Barcelona, Spain. 55Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University Stanford, CA, USA. 56Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Psychosomatics and Psychotherapy, University Hospital of Würzburg, Centre for Mental Health, Würzburg, Germany. 57Estonian Genome Center, University of Tartu, Tartu, Estonia. 58Program in Medical and Population Genetics, Broad Institute of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA. 59Genomics and Disease, Bioinformatics and Genomics Programme, Centre for Genomic Regulation, Barcelona, Spain. 60Department of Psychiatry, University Hospital of Bellvitge –IDIBELL and CIBERobn, Barcelona, Spain. 61Department of Clinical Sciences, School of Medicine, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain. 62Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Ludwig-Maximilians-University (LMU), Munich, Germany. 63Schön Klinik Roseneck affiliated with the Medical Faculty of the University of Munich (LMU), Munich, Germany. 64Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, University Hospital Essen, University of Duisburg-Essen, Essen, Germany. 65Department of Cancer, Epidemiology and Genetics, Masaryk Memorial Cancer Institute, Brno, Czech Republic. 66Institute of Human Genetics, University of Bonn School of Medicine & University Hospital Bonn, Bonn, Germany. 67Department of Genomics, Life and Brain Center, University of Bonn, Bonn, Germany. 68Department of Psychiatry (UPK), University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland. 69Department of Biomedicine, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland. 70Department of Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. 71Department of Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg, Halle, Germany. 721st Psychiatric Department, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Medical School, Eginition Hospital, Athens, Greece. 73QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. 74CMME (Groupe Hospitalier Sainte-Anne), Paris Descartes University, Paris, France. 75Department of Biomedicine, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark. 76The Lundbeck Foundation Initiative for Integrative Psychiatric Research (iPSyCH), Aarhus, Denmark. 77Centre for Integrative Sequencing, iSEQ, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark. 78Bioinformatics Research Centre, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark. 79Center for Applied Genomics, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA, USA. 80Department of Pediatrics, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA. 81Department of Psychiatry, Weill Cornell Medical College, New york, Ny, USA. 82Department of Medical and Molecular Genetics, King’s College London, Guy’s Hospital, London, UK. 83Department of Adult Psychiatry, Poznań University of Medical Sciences, Poznań, Poland. 84Zorg op Orde, Leidschendam, the Netherlands. 85Institute for Molecular Bioscience, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. 86Department of General Internal Medicine and Psychosomatics, Heidelberg University Hospital, Heidelberg University, Heidelberg, Germany. 87Department of Psychiatry, and Genetics and Genomics Sciences, Division of Psychiatric Genomics, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New york, Ny, USA. 88Biological Psychiatry Laboratory, McLean Hospital/Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA. 89Eating Disorders Unit, Parklandklinik, Bad Wildungen, Germany. 90Department of Molecular Life Science, Division of Basic Medical Science and Molecular Medicine, School of Medicine, Tokai University, Isehara, Japan. 91Faculty of Health Sciences, Palacky University, Olomouc, Czech Republic. 92Eating Recovery Center, Denver, CO, USA. 93Department of Psychological Medicine, University of Otago, Christchurch, New Zealand. 94Canterbury District Health Board, Christchurch, New Zealand. 95Rheumatology Research Group, Vall d’Hebron Research Institute, Barcelona, Spain. 96Department of Psychiatry, First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic. 97Center for Addiction and Mental Health, Department of Psychiatry, Institute of Medical Science, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. 98Department of Public Health, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland. 99Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland, Helsinki Institute of Life Science, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland. 100Institute of Public Health and Clinical Nutrition, Department of Clinical Nutrition, University of Eastern Finland, Kuopio, Finland. 101Eating Disorders Unit, Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria. 102Groningen Institute for Evolutionary Life Sciences, University of Groningen, Groningen, the Netherlands. 103Department of Psychiatry, University of California San Diego, San Diego, CA, USA. 104Department of Pathology and Biomedical Science, University of Otago, Christchurch, New Zealand. 105Health Services Research Unit, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK. 106Department of Psychiatry, Seoul Paik Hospital, Inje University, Seoul, Korea. 107Rheumatology Unit, Department of Medicine, Center for Molecular Medicine, Karolinska Institutet and Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden. 108Department of Psychology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA. 109Department of Mental Disorders, Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Oslo, Norway. 110National Centre for Register-Based Research, Aarhus BSS, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark. 111Centre for Integrated Register-based Research (CIRRAU), Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark. 112Department of Clinical Science, K.G. Jebsen Centre for Psychosis Research, Norwegian Centre for Mental Disorders Research (NORMENT), University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway. 113Dr. Einar Martens Research Group for Biological Psychiatry, Center for Medical Genetics and Molecular Medicine, Haukeland University Hospital, Bergen, Norway. 114Department of Clinical Medicine, Laboratory Building, Haukeland University Hospital, Bergen, Norway. 115Institute of Medical Science, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. 116American School of Professional Psychology, Argosy University, Northern Virginia, Arlington, VA, USA. 117Department of Cancer Epidemiology and Prevention, M Skłodowska-Curie Cancer Center - Oncology Center, Warsaw, Poland. 118BESE Division, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, Thuwal, Saudi Arabia. 119Department of Psychiatry, University of Lausanne-University Hospital of Lausanne (UNIL-CHUV), Lausanne, Switzerland. 120Department of Psychiatry, University of Campania ‘Luigi Vanvitelli’, Naples, Italy. 121Center for Integrative Genomics, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland. 122Department of Paediatric Laboratory Medicine, The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. 123Department of Psychiatry, Psychosomatics and Psychotherapy, University of Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany. 124Department of Psychiatry, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland. 125Eist Linn Adolescent Unit, Bessborough, Health Service Executive South, Cork, Ireland. 126Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of Tartu, Tartu, Estonia. 127Molecular Epidemiology Section (Department of Medical Statistics), Leiden University Medical Centre, Leiden, the Netherlands. 128Department of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland. 129Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Geneva University Hospital, Geneva, Switzerland. 130Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science, University of North Dakota School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Fargo, ND, USA. 131National Center for PTSD, VA Boston Healthcare System, Department of Psychiatry, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, USA. 132Department of Medicine, Surgery and Dentistry ‘Scuola Medica Salernitana’, University of Salerno, Salerno, Italy. 133Queensland Brain Institute, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. 134Department of Neuroscience, Psychology, Drug Research and Child Health (NEUROFARBA), University of Florence, Florence, Italy. 135Center for Neurobehavioral Genetics, Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, USA. 136Kartini Clinic, Portland, OR, USA. 137Center for Human Genome Research at the Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA. 138Biostatistics and Computational Biology Unit, University of Otago, Christchurch, New Zealand. 139Saint Joan de Déu Research Institute, Saint Joan de Déu Barcelona Children’s Hospital, Barcelona, Spain. 140Institute of Biomedicine (IBUB), University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain. 141Department of Genetics, Microbiology and Statistics, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain. 142Institute of Clinical Medicine, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway. 143Department of Health Science, University of Florence, Florence, Italy. 144Department of Biometry, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland. 145Analytic and Translational Genetics Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA. 146Stanley Center for Psychiatric Research, Broad Institute of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA. 147Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Charité - Universitätsmedizin, Berlin, Germany. 148Eating Disorders Research and Treatment Center, Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine, Technische Universität Dresden, Dresden, Germany. 149Department of Psychiatry, Neurobiology, Pharmacology, and Biotechnologies, University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy. 150Department of Psychiatry, Poznań University of Medical Sciences, Poznań, Poland. 151Department of Neurosciences, Padua Neuroscience Center, University of Padova, Padua, Italy. 152Institute of Medical Statistics, Computer and Data Sciences, Jena University Hospital, Jena, Germany. 153Department of Genetics and Genomic Biology, The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. 154J. Craig Venter Institute (JCVI), La Jolla, CA, USA. 155Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria. 156Department of Pediatrics and Center of Applied Genomics, First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic. 157Center for Eating Disorders Ursula, Rivierduinen, Leiden, the Netherlands. 158Department of Psychiatry, Leiden University Medical Centre, Leiden, the Netherlands. 159Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Poznań University of Medical Sciences, Poznań, Poland. 160IRCCS Fondazione Don Carlo Gnocchi, Florence, Italy. 161Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Science, Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, USA. 162David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, USA. 163Department of Cell Biology and Physiology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA. 164Department of Environmental Epidemiology, Nofer Institute of Occupational Medicine, Lodz, Poland. 165Department of Psychiatry, University of Naples SUN, Naples, Italy. 166Department of Psychiatry, University of Perugia, Perugia, Italy. 167Brain Sciences Department, Stremble Ventures, Limassol, Cyprus. 168Adolescent Health Unit, Second Department of Pediatrics, ‘P. & A. Kyriakou’ Children’s Hospital, University of Athens, Athens, Greece. 169Pediatric Intensive Care Unit, ‘P. & A. Kyriakou’ Children’s Hospital, University of Athens, Athens, Greece. 170Faculty of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Utrecht University, Utrecht, the Netherlands. 171School of Psychology, Flinders University, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia. 172Department of Clinical Medicine, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark. 173Department of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. 174Toronto General Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. 175Institute of Translational Genomics, Helmholtz Zentrum München, Neuherberg, Germany. 176Department of Internal Medicine VI, Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy, University Medical Hospital Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany International Headache Genetics Consortium Verneri Anttila177, Ville Artto178, Andrea Carmine Belin179, Irene de Boer180, Dorret I. Boomsma181, Sigrid Børte182, Daniel I. Chasman183, Lynn Cherkas184, Anne Francke Christensen185, Bru Cormand186, Ester Cuenca-Leon177, George Davey-Smith187, Martin Dichgans188, Cornelia van Duijn189, Tonu Esko57, Ann Louise Esserlind190, Michel Ferrari180, Rune R. Frants180, Tobias Freilinger191, Nick Furlotte192, Padhraig Gormley177, Lyn Griffiths193, Eija Hamalainen194, Thomas Folkmann Hansen6, Marjo Hiekkala195, M. Arfan Ikram189, Andres Ingason196, Marjo-Riitta Järvelin197, Risto Kajanne194, Mikko Kallela178, Jaakko Kaprio98,99, Mari Kaunisto195, Lisette J. A. Kogelman6, Christian Kubisch198, Mitja Kurki177, Tobias Kurth199, Lenore Launer200, Terho Lehtimaki201, Davor Lessel198, Lannie Ligthart181, Nadia Litterman192, Arn van den Maagdenberg180, Alfons Macaya202, Rainer Malik188, Massimo Mangino184, George McMahon187, Bertram Muller-Myhsok203, Benjamin M. Neale177, Carrie Northover192, Dale R. Nyholt193, Jes Olesen190, Aarno Palotie58,99,137, Priit Palta194, Linda Pedersen182, Nancy Pedersen1, Danielle Posthuma181, Patricia Pozo-Rosich204, Alice Pressman205, Olli Raitakari206, Markus Schürks199, Celia Sintas186, Kari Stefansson196, Hreinn Stefansson196, Stacy Steinberg196, David Strachan207, Gisela Terwindt180, Marta Vila-Pueyo202, Maija Wessman195, Bendik S. Winsvold182, Huiying Zhao193 and John Anker Zwart182 177Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Cambridge, MA, USA. 178Department of Neurology, Helsinki University Central Hospital, Helsinki, Finland. 179Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden. 180Leiden University Medical Centre, Leiden, the Netherlands. 181VU University, Amsterdam, the Netherlands. 182Oslo University Hospital and University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway. 183Harvard Medical School, Cambridge, MA, USA. 184Department of Twin Research and Genetic Epidemiology, King’s College London, London, UK. 185Danish Headache Center, Copenhagen University Hospital, Copenhagen, Denmark. 186University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain. 187Medical Research Council (MRC) Integrative Epidemiology Unit, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK. 188Institute for Stroke and Dementia Research, Munich, Germany. 189Erasmus University Medical Centre, Rotterdam, the Netherlands. 190Danish Headache Center, Department of Neurology, Rigshospitalet, Glostrup, Denmark. 191University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany. 19223&Me Inc., Mountain View, CA, USA. 193Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. 194Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland (FIMM), University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland. 195Folkhälsan Institute of Genetics, Helsinki, Finland. 196Decode genetics Inc., Reykjavik, Iceland. 197University of Oulu, Biocenter Oulu, Finland. 198University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany. 199Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA. 200National Institute on Aging, Bethesda, MD, USA. 201School of Medicine, University of Tampere, Tampere, Finland. 202Vall d’Hebron Research Institute, Barcelona, Spain. 203Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry, Munich, Germany. 204Headache Research Group, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain. 205Sutter Health, Sacramento, CA, USA. 206Department of Medicine, University of Turku, Turku, Finland. 207Population Health Research Institute, St George’s University of London, London, UK. 23andMe Research Team Michelle Agee208, Babak Alipanahi208, Adam Auton208, Robert Bell208, Katarzyna Bryc208, Sarah Elson208, Pierre Fontanillas208, Nicholas Furlotte208, Karl Heilbron208, David Hinds208, Karen Huber208, Aaron Kleinman208, Nadia Litterman208, Jennifer McCreight208, Matthew McIntyre208, Joanna Mountain208, Elizabeth Noblin208, Carrie Northover208, Steven Pitts208, J. Sathirapongsasuti208, Olga Sazonova208, Janie Shelton208, Suyash Shringarpure208, Chao Tian208, Joyce Tung208, Vladimir Vacic208 and Catherine Wilson208 20823andMe, Inc., Mountain View, CA, US
- Published
- 2020
25. Factors associated with first- versus second-generation long-acting antipsychotics prescribed under ordinary clinical practice in Italy
- Author
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Ostuzzi, G., Mazzi, M. A., Terlizzi, S., Bertolini, F., Aguglia, A., Bartoli, F., Bortolaso, P., Callegari, C., Caroleo, M., Carrà, G., Corbo, M., D'Agostino, A., Gastaldon, C., Lucii, C., Magliocco, F., Martinotti, G., Nosé, M., Ostinelli, E. G., Papola, D., Piccinelli, M. P., Piccoli, A., Purgato, M., Tabacchi, T., Turrini, G., Ruggeri, M., Barbui, C., De Fazio, P., Raffaele, G., Chirico, M., Cavallotti, S., Bolognesi, S., Debolini, S., Pierantozzi, E., Fargnoli, F., Del Zanna, M., Giannini, A., Luccarelli, L., De Capua, A., Annese, P. M., Cerretini, M., Tozzi, F. E., Magnani, N., Cardamone, G., Bardicchia, F., Facchi, E., Soscia, F., Zotos, S., Biancosino, B., Zonta, F., Pompei, F., Zizolfi, D., Poloni, N., Ielmini, M., Caselli, I., Giana, E., Buzzi, A., Diurni, M., Milano, A., Sani, E., Calzolari, Roberta, Cazzamalli, S., Alberini, Gabrio, Piantanida, Silvia, Costantini, C., Paronelli, Chiara, Di Caro, A., Moretti, V., Gozzi, M., D'Ippolito, C., Barbanti, S. V., Alessandro, P., Campese, O., Fiori, F., Lorusso, M., Di Capro, L., Viceconte, D., Mancini, V., Suraniti, F., Signorelli, M. S., Rossi, E., Lupoli, P., Menchetti, M., Terzi, L., Boso, M., Risaro, P., De Paoli, G., Catania, C., Tarricone, I., Caretto, V., Storbini, V., Emiliani, R., Balzarro, B., Nava, R., Bono, A., Provenzi, M., Brambilla, G., Aspesi, F., Tremolada, M., Castagna, G., Bava, M., Verrengia, E., Lucchi, S., Oriani, M. G., Barchiesi, M., Pacetti, M., Magni, L. R., Rossi, G., Beneduce, R., Tura, G. B., Laffranchini, L., Mastromo, D., Ferrato, F., Restaino, F., Monzani, E., Porcellana, M., Limosani, I., Ghio, L., Ferro, M., Parise, V. F., Balletta, G., Addeo, L., De Vivo, E., Benedetto, R. D., Pinna, F., Carpiniello, B., Spano, M., Giacomin, M., Pecile, D., Mattei, C., Fabrici, E. P., Panarello, S., Peresson, G., Vitucci, C., Bonavigo, T., Perini, G., Boschello, F., Strizzolo, S., Gardellin, F., Di Giannantonio, M., Moretti, D., Fizzotti, C., Cossetta, E., Gregorio, L. D., Sozzi, F., Boncompagni, G., Barbera, D. L., Colli, G., Laurenzi, S., Calandra, C., Luca, M., Ostuzzi, Giovanni, Mazzi, Maria Angela, Terlizzi, Samira, Bertolini, Federico, Aguglia, Andrea, Bartoli, Francesco, Bortolaso, Paola, Callegari, Camilla, Caroleo, Mariarita, Carrà, Giuseppe, Corbo, Mariangela, D'Agostino, Armando, Gastaldon, Chiara, Lucii, Claudio, Magliocco, Fabio, Martinotti, Giovanni, Nosé, Michela, Ostinelli, Edoardo Giuseppe, Papola, Davide, Piccinelli, Marco Piero, Piccoli, Alberto, Purgato, Marianna, Tabacchi, Tommaso, Turrini, Giulia, Ruggeri, Mirella, Barbui, Corrado, De Fazio, Pasquale, Raffaele, Gaetano, Chirico, Margherita, Cavallotti, Simone, Bolognesi, Simone, Debolini, Sara, Pierantozzi, Elisa, Fargnoli, Francesco, Del Zanna, Maria, Giannini, Alessandra, Luccarelli, Livia, De Capua, Alberto, Annese, Pasqua Maria, Cerretini, Massimiliano, Tozzi, Fior-Ella, Magnani, Nadia, Cardamone, Giuseppe, Bardicchia, Francesco, Facchi, Edvige, Soscia, Federica, Zotos, Spyridon, Biancosino, Bruno, Zonta, Filippo, Pompei, Francesco, Zizolfi, Daniele, Poloni, Nicola, Ielmini, Marta, Caselli, Ivano, Giana, Edoardo, Buzzi, Aldo, Diurni, Marcello, Milano, Anna, Sani, Emanuele, Calzolari, Roberta, Piccinelli, Marco, Cazzamalli, Sara, Alberini, Gabrio, Piantanida, Silvia, Costantini, Chiara, Paronelli, Chiara, Di Caro, Angela, Moretti, Valentina, Gozzi, Mauro, D'Ippolito, Chiara, Barbanti, Silva Veronica, Alessandro, Papalini, Campese, Ornella, Fiori, Federica, Lorusso, Marco, Di Capro, Lucia, Viceconte, Daniela, Mancini, Valerio, Suraniti, Francesco, Signorelli, Maria Salvina, Rossi, Eugenio, Lupoli, Pasqualino, Menchetti, Marco, Terzi, Laura, Boso, Marianna, Risaro, Paolo, De Paoli, Giuseppe, Catania, Cristina, Tarricone, Ilaria, Caretto, Valentina, Storbini, Viviana, Emiliani, Roberta, Balzarro, Beatrice, Nava, Roberto, Bono, Adele, Provenzi, Milena, Brambilla, Giulia, Aspesi, Flora, Tremolada, Martina, Castagna, Gloria, Bava, Mattia, Verrengia, Enrica, Lucchi, Sara, Oriani, Maria Ginevra, Barchiesi, Michela, Pacetti, Monica, Magni, Laura Rosa, Rossi, Giuseppe, Beneduce, Rossella, Tura, Giovanni Battista, Laffranchini, Laura, Mastromo, Daniele, Ferrato, Farida, Restaino, Francesco, Monzani, Emiliano, Porcellana, Matteo, Limosani, Ivan, Ghio, Lucio, Ferro, Maurizio, Parise, Vincenzo Fricchione, Balletta, Giovanni, Addeo, Lelio, De Vivo, Elisa, Benedetto, Rossella Di, Pinna, Federica, Carpiniello, Bernardo, Spano, Mariangela, Giacomin, Marzio, Pecile, Damiano, Mattei, Chiara, Fabrici, Elisabetta Pascolo, Panarello, Sofia, Peresson, Giulia, Vitucci, Claudio, Bonavigo, Tommaso, Perini, Giovanni, Boschello, Filippo, Strizzolo, Stefania, Gardellin, Francesco, Di Giannantonio, Massimo, Moretti, Daniele, Fizzotti, Carlo, Cossetta, Edoardo, Gregorio, Luana Di, Sozzi, Francesca, Boncompagni, Giancarlo, Barbera, Daniele La, Colli, Giuseppe, Laurenzi, Sabrina, Calandra, Carmela, Luca, Maria, Ostuzzi, G, Mazzi, M, Terlizzi, S, Bertolini, F, Aguglia, A, Bartoli, F, Bortolaso, P, Callegari, C, Caroleo, M, Carrà, G, Corbo, M, D'Agostino, A, Gastaldon, C, Lucii, C, Magliocco, F, Martinotti, G, Nosé, M, Ostinelli, E, Papola, D, Piccinelli, M, Piccoli, A, Purgato, M, Tabacchi, T, Turrini, G, Ruggeri, M, Barbui, C, De Fazio, P, Raffaele, G, Chirico, M, Cavallotti, S, Bolognesi, S, Debolini, S, Pierantozzi, E, Fargnoli, F, Del Zanna, M, Giannini, A, Luccarelli, L, De Capua, A, Annese, P, Cerretini, M, Tozzi, F, Magnani, N, Cardamone, G, Bardicchia, F, Facchi, E, Soscia, F, Zotos, S, Biancosino, B, Zonta, F, Pompei, F, Zizolfi, D, Poloni, N, Ielmini, M, Caselli, I, Giana, E, Buzzi, A, Diurni, M, Milano, A, Sani, E, Calzolari, R, Cazzamalli, S, Alberini, G, Piantanida, S, Costantini, C, Paronelli, C, Di Caro, A, Moretti, V, Gozzi, M, D'Ippolito, C, Barbanti, S, Alessandro, P, Campese, O, Fiori, F, Lorusso, M, Di Capro, L, Viceconte, D, Mancini, V, Suraniti, F, Signorelli, M, Rossi, E, Lupoli, P, Menchetti, M, Terzi, L, Boso, M, Risaro, P, De Paoli, G, Catania, C, Tarricone, I, Caretto, V, Storbini, V, Emiliani, R, Balzarro, B, Nava, R, Bono, A, Provenzi, M, Brambilla, G, Aspesi, F, Tremolada, M, Castagna, G, Bava, M, Verrengia, E, Lucchi, S, Oriani, M, Barchiesi, M, Pacetti, M, Magni, L, Rossi, G, Beneduce, R, Tura, G, Laffranchini, L, Mastromo, D, Ferrato, F, Restaino, F, Monzani, E, Porcellana, M, Limosani, I, Ghio, L, Ferro, M, Parise, V, Balletta, G, Addeo, L, De Vivo, E, Benedetto, R, Pinna, F, Carpiniello, B, Spano, M, Giacomin, M, Pecile, D, Mattei, C, Fabrici, E, Panarello, S, Peresson, G, Vitucci, C, Bonavigo, T, Perini, G, Boschello, F, Strizzolo, S, Gardellin, F, Di Giannantonio, M, Moretti, D, Fizzotti, C, Cossetta, E, Gregorio, L, Sozzi, F, Boncompagni, G, Barbera, D, Colli, G, Laurenzi, S, Calandra, C, and Luca, M
- Subjects
Genetics and Molecular Biology (all) ,Male ,Pediatrics ,European People ,Bipolar Disorder ,Cross-sectional study ,Economics ,Epidemiology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,assessment ,viruses ,lcsh:Medicine ,Social Sciences ,Longitudinal Studie ,Biochemistry ,Prescription ,Geographical locations ,0302 clinical medicine ,Mathematical and Statistical Techniques ,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (all) ,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (all) ,immune system diseases ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,long-acting intramuscular (LAI) antipsychotics ,clinical practice ,second-generation antipsychotic (SGA) LAIs ,Antipsychotics ,Ethnicities ,Longitudinal Studies ,lcsh:Science ,Multidisciplinary ,virus diseases ,Drugs ,Middle Aged ,Italian People ,Europe ,Prescriptions ,Italy ,Physical Sciences ,Aripiprazole ,Female ,Bivariate Analysis ,Statistics (Mathematics) ,medicine.drug ,Human ,Research Article ,Antipsychotic Agents ,Employment ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Research and Analysis Methods ,03 medical and health sciences ,Mental Health and Psychiatry ,medicine ,Humans ,Paliperidone ,Bipolar disorder ,European Union ,Statistical Methods ,Antipsychotic ,Cross-Sectional Studie ,Pharmacology ,Risperidone ,business.industry ,Mood Disorders ,lcsh:R ,medicine.disease ,030227 psychiatry ,Antipsychotic Agent ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Labor Economics ,Multivariate Analysis ,Schizophrenia ,Observational study ,lcsh:Q ,Population Groupings ,People and places ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Mathematics - Abstract
Background For many years, long-acting intramuscular (LAI) antipsychotics have been prescribed predominantly to chronic and severe patients, as a last resort when other treatments failed. Recently, a broader and earlier use of LAIs, particularly second-generation LAIs, has been emphasized. To date, few studies attempted to frame how this change in prescribing took place in real-world practice. Therefore, this study aimed to describe the clinical features of patients prescribed with LAIs, and to explore possible prescribing differences between first- and second-generations LAIs under ordinary clinical practice in Italy. Methods The STAR Network "Depot" Study is an observational, longitudinal, multicenter study involving 35 centers in Italy. In the cross-sectional phase, patients prescribed with LAIs were consecutively recruited and assessed over a period of 12 months. Descriptive statistics and multivariable logistic regression analyses were employed. Results Of the 451 recruited patients, 61% were males. The level of social and working functioning was heterogeneous, as was the severity of disease. Seventy-two per cent of the patients had a diagnosis of the schizophrenia spectrum. Seventy per cent were prescribed with second-generation antipsychotic (SGA) LAIs (mostly paliperidone, aripiprazole and risperidone). Compared to first-generation antipsychotic (FGA) LAIs, patients prescribed with SGA LAIs were more often younger; employed; with a diagnosis of the schizophrenia spectrum or bipolar disorder; with higher levels of affective symptoms; with fewer LAI prescriptions in the past. Discussion LAIs' prescribing practices appear to be more flexible as compared to the past, although this change is mostly restricted to SGA LAIs.
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- 2018
26. Family history of depression is associated with younger age of onset in patients with recurrent depression
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Tozzi, F., Prokopenko, I., Perry, J. D., Kennedy, J. L., McCarthy, A. D., Holsboer, F., Berrettini, W., Middleton, L. T., Chilcoat, H. D., and Muglia, P.
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- 2008
27. Genome-wide association study identifies eight risk loci and implicates metabo-psychiatric origins for anorexia nervosa
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Watson, H.J., Yilmaz, Z., Thorntont, L.M., Hubel, C., Coleman, J.R.I., Gaspar, H.A., Bryois, J., Hinney, A., Leppa, V.M., Mattheisen, M., Medland, S.E., Ripke, S., Yao, S.Y., Giusti-Rodriguez, P., Hanscombe, K.B., Purves, K.L., Adan, R.A.H., Alfredsson, L., Ando, T., Andreassen, O.A., Baker, J.H., Berrettini, W.H., Boehm, I., Boni, C., Perica, V.B., Buehren, K., Burghardt, R., Cassina, M., Cichon, S., Clementi, M., Cone, R.D., Courtet, P., Crow, S., Crowley, J.J., Danner, U.N., Davis, O.S.P., Zwaan, M. de, Dedoussis, G., Degortes, D., DeSocio, J.E., Dick, D.M., Dikeos, D., Dina, C., Dmitrzak-Weglarz, M., Docampo, E., Duncan, L.E., Egberts, K., Ehrlich, S., Escaramis, G., Eskos, T., Estivill, X., Farmer, A., Favaro, A., Fernandez-Aranda, F., Fichter, M.M., Fischer, K., Focker, M., Foretova, L., Forstner, A.J., Forzan, M., Franklin, C.S., Gallinger, S., Giegling, I., Giuranna, J., Gonidakis, F., Gorwood, P., Mayora, M.G., Guillaume, S., Guo, Y.R., Hakonarson, H., Hatzikotoulas, K., Hauser, J., Hebebrand, J., Helder, S.G., Herms, S., Herpertz-Dahlmann, B., Herzog, W., Huckins, L.M., Hudson, J.I., Imgart, H., Inoko, H., Janout, V., Jimenez-Murcia, S., Julia, A., Kalsi, G., Kaminska, D., Kaprio, J., Karhunen, L., Karwautz, A., Kas, M.J.H., Kennedy, J.L., Keski-Rahkonen, A., Kiezebrink, K., Kim, Y.R., Klareskog, L., Klump, K.L., Knudsen, G.P.S., Via, M.C. la, Hellard, S. le, Levitan, R.D., Li, D., Lilenfeld, L., Lin, B.D., Lissowska, J., Luykx, J., Magistretti, P.J., Maj, M., Mannik, K., Marsal, S., Marshall, C.R., Mattingsdal, M., McDevitt, S., McGuffin, P., Metspalu, A., Meulenbelt, I., Micali, N., Mitchell, K., Monteleone, A.M., Monteleone, P., Munn-Chernoff, M.A., Nacmias, B., Navratilova, M., Ntalla, I., O'Toole, J.K., Ophoff, R.A., Padyukov, L., Palotie, A., Pantel, J., Papezova, H., Pinto, D., Rabionet, R., Raevuori, A., Ramoz, N., Reichborn-Kjennerud, T., Ricca, V., Ripatti, S., Ritschel, F., Roberts, M., Rotondo, A., Rujescu, D., Rybakowski, F., Santonastaso, P., Scherag, A., Scherer, S.W., Schmidt, U., Schork, N.J., Schosser, A., Seitz, J., Slachtova, L., Slagboom, P.E., Landt, M.C.T.S.O. 't, Slopien, A., Sorbi, S., Swiatkowska, B., Szatkiewicz, J.P., Tachmazidou, I., Tenconi, E., Tortorella, A., Tozzi, F., Treasure, J., Tsitsika, A., Tyszkiewicz-Nwafor, M., Tziouvas, K., Elbur, A.A. van, Furth, E.F. van, Wagner, G., Walton, E., Widen, E., Zeggini, E., Zerwas, S., Zipfel, S., Bergen, A.W., Boden, J.M., Brandt, H., Crawford, S., Halmi, K.A., Horwood, L.J., Johnson, C., Kaplan, A.S., Kaye, W.H., Mitchell, J.E., Olsen, C.M., Pearson, J.F., Pedersen, N.L., Strober, M., Werge, T., Whiteman, D.C., Woodside, D.B., Stuber, G.D., Gordon, S., Grove, J., Henders, A.K., Jureus, A., Kirk, K.M., Larsen, J.T., Parker, R., Petersen, L., Jordan, J., Kennedy, M., Montgomery, G.W., Wade, T.D., Birgegard, A., Lichtenstein, P., Norring, C., Landen, M., Martin, N.G., Mortensen, P.B., Sullivan, P.F., Breen, G., Bulik, C.M., Anorexia Nervosa Genetics Initiati, and Psychiat Genomics Consortium
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- 2019
28. Genome-wide association study identifies eight risk loci and implicates metabo-psychiatric origins for anorexia nervosa
- Author
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Watson HJ, Yilmaz Z, Thornton LM, Hübel C, Coleman JRI, Gaspar HA, Bryois J, Hinney A, Leppä VM, Mattheisen M, Medland SE, Ripke S, Yao S, Giusti-Rodríguez P, Anorexia Nervosa Genetics Initiative, Hanscombe KB, Purves KL, Eating Disorders Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium, Adan RAH, Alfredsson L, Ando T, Andreassen OA, Baker JH, Berrettini WH, Boehm I, Boni C, Perica VB, Buehren K, Burghardt R, Cassina M, Cichon S, Clementi M, Cone RD, Courtet P, Crow S, Crowley JJ, Danner UN, Davis OSP, de Zwaan M, Dedoussis G, Degortes D, DeSocio JE, Dick DM, Dikeos D, Dina C, Dmitrzak-Weglarz M, Docampo E, Duncan LE, Egberts K, Ehrlich S, Escaramís G, Esko T, Estivill X, Farmer A, Favaro A, Fernández-Aranda F, Fichter MM, Fischer K, Föcker M, Foretova L, Forstner AJ, Forzan M, Franklin CS, Gallinger S, Giegling I, Giuranna J, Gonidakis F, Gorwood P, Mayora MG, Guillaume S, Guo Y, Hakonarson H, Hatzikotoulas K, Hauser J, Hebebrand J, Helder SG, Herms S, Herpertz-Dahlmann B, Herzog W, Huckins LM, Hudson JI, Imgart H, Inoko H, Janout V, Jiménez-Murcia S, Julià A, Kalsi G, Kaminská D, Kaprio J, Karhunen L, Karwautz A, Kas MJH, Kennedy JL, Keski-Rahkonen A, Kiezebrink K, Kim YR, Klareskog L, Klump KL, Knudsen GPS, La Via MC, Le Hellard S, Levitan RD, Li D, Lilenfeld L, Lin BD, Lissowska J, Luykx J, Magistretti PJ, Maj M, Mannik K, Marsal S, Marshall CR, Mattingsdal M, McDevitt S, McGuffin P, Metspalu A, Meulenbelt I, Micali N, Mitchell K, Monteleone AM, Monteleone P, Munn-Chernoff MA, Nacmias B, Navratilova M, Ntalla I, O'Toole JK, Ophoff RA, Padyukov L, Palotie A, Pantel J, Papezova H, Pinto D, Raquel Rabionet Janssen, Raevuori A, Ramoz N, Reichborn-Kjennerud T, Ricca V, Ripatti S, Ritschel F, Roberts M, Rotondo A, Rujescu D, Rybakowski F, Santonastaso P, Scherag A, Scherer SW, Schmidt U, Schork NJ, Schosser A, Seitz J, Slachtova L, Slagboom PE, Slof-Op 't Landt MCT, Slopien A, Sorbi S, Swiatkowska B, Szatkiewicz JP, Tachmazidou I, Tenconi E, Tortorella A, Tozzi F, Treasure J, Tsitsika A, Tyszkiewicz-Nwafor M, Tziouvas K, van Elburg AA, van Furth EF, Wagner G, Walton E, Widen E, Zeggini E, Zerwas S, Zipfel S, Bergen AW, Boden JM, Brandt H, Crawford S, Halmi KA, Horwood LJ, Johnson C, Kaplan AS, Kaye WH, Mitchell JE, Olsen CM, Pearson JF, Pedersen NL, Strober M, Werge T, Whiteman DC, Woodside DB, Stuber GD, Gordon S, Grove J, Henders AK, Juréus A, Kirk KM, Larsen JT, Parker R, Petersen L, Jordan J, Kennedy M, Montgomery GW, Wade TD, Birgegård A, Lichtenstein P, Norring C, Landén M, Martin NG, Mortensen PB, Sullivan PF, Breen G, and Bulik CM
- Subjects
mental disorders - Abstract
Characterized primarily by a low body-mass index, anorexia nervosa is a complex and serious illness 1 , affecting 0.9-4% of women and 0.3% of men 2-4 , with twin-based heritability estimates of 50-60% 5 . Mortality rates are higher than those in other psychiatric disorders 6 , and outcomes are unacceptably poor 7 . Here we combine data from the Anorexia Nervosa Genetics Initiative (ANGI) 8,9 and the Eating Disorders Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium (PGC-ED) and conduct a genome-wide association study of 16,992 cases of anorexia nervosa and 55,525 controls, identifying eight significant loci. The genetic architecture of anorexia nervosa mirrors its clinical presentation, showing significant genetic correlations with psychiatric disorders, physical activity, and metabolic (including glycemic), lipid and anthropometric traits, independent of the effects of common variants associated with body-mass index. These results further encourage a reconceptualization of anorexia nervosa as a metabo-psychiatric disorder. Elucidating the metabolic component is a critical direction for future research, and paying attention to both psychiatric and metabolic components may be key to improving outcomes.
- Published
- 2019
29. Genome-wide association study identifies eight risk loci and implicates metabo-psychiatric origins for anorexia nervosa
- Author
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Watson, H.J. Yilmaz, Z. Thornton, L.M. Hübel, C. Coleman, J.R.I. Gaspar, H.A. Bryois, J. Hinney, A. Leppä, V.M. Mattheisen, M. Medland, S.E. Ripke, S. Yao, S. Giusti-Rodríguez, P. Hanscombe, K.B. Purves, K.L. Adan, R.A.H. Alfredsson, L. Ando, T. Andreassen, O.A. Baker, J.H. Berrettini, W.H. Boehm, I. Boni, C. Perica, V.B. Buehren, K. Burghardt, R. Cassina, M. Cichon, S. Clementi, M. Cone, R.D. Courtet, P. Crow, S. Crowley, J.J. Danner, U.N. Davis, O.S.P. de Zwaan, M. Dedoussis, G. Degortes, D. DeSocio, J.E. Dick, D.M. Dikeos, D. Dina, C. Dmitrzak-Weglarz, M. Docampo, E. Duncan, L.E. Egberts, K. Ehrlich, S. Escaramís, G. Esko, T. Estivill, X. Farmer, A. Favaro, A. Fernández-Aranda, F. Fichter, M.M. Fischer, K. Föcker, M. Foretova, L. Forstner, A.J. Forzan, M. Franklin, C.S. Gallinger, S. Giegling, I. Giuranna, J. Gonidakis, F. Gorwood, P. Mayora, M.G. Guillaume, S. Guo, Y. Hakonarson, H. Hatzikotoulas, K. Hauser, J. Hebebrand, J. Helder, S.G. Herms, S. Herpertz-Dahlmann, B. Herzog, W. Huckins, L.M. Hudson, J.I. Imgart, H. Inoko, H. Janout, V. Jiménez-Murcia, S. Julià, A. Kalsi, G. Kaminská, D. Kaprio, J. Karhunen, L. Karwautz, A. Kas, M.J.H. Kennedy, J.L. Keski-Rahkonen, A. Kiezebrink, K. Kim, Y.-R. Klareskog, L. Klump, K.L. Knudsen, G.P.S. La Via, M.C. Le Hellard, S. Levitan, R.D. Li, D. Lilenfeld, L. Lin, B.D. Lissowska, J. Luykx, J. Magistretti, P.J. Maj, M. Mannik, K. Marsal, S. Marshall, C.R. Mattingsdal, M. McDevitt, S. McGuffin, P. Metspalu, A. Meulenbelt, I. Micali, N. Mitchell, K. Monteleone, A.M. Monteleone, P. Munn-Chernoff, M.A. Nacmias, B. Navratilova, M. Ntalla, I. O’Toole, J.K. Ophoff, R.A. Padyukov, L. Palotie, A. Pantel, J. Papezova, H. Pinto, D. Rabionet, R. Raevuori, A. Ramoz, N. Reichborn-Kjennerud, T. Ricca, V. Ripatti, S. Ritschel, F. Roberts, M. Rotondo, A. Rujescu, D. Rybakowski, F. Santonastaso, P. Scherag, A. Scherer, S.W. Schmidt, U. Schork, N.J. Schosser, A. Seitz, J. Slachtova, L. Slagboom, P.E. Slof-Op ‘t Landt, M.C.T. Slopien, A. Sorbi, S. Świątkowska, B. Szatkiewicz, J.P. Tachmazidou, I. Tenconi, E. Tortorella, A. Tozzi, F. Treasure, J. Tsitsika, A. Tyszkiewicz-Nwafor, M. Tziouvas, K. van Elburg, A.A. van Furth, E.F. Wagner, G. Walton, E. Widen, E. Zeggini, E. Zerwas, S. Zipfel, S. Bergen, A.W. Boden, J.M. Brandt, H. Crawford, S. Halmi, K.A. Horwood, L.J. Johnson, C. Kaplan, A.S. Kaye, W.H. Mitchell, J.E. Olsen, C.M. Pearson, J.F. Pedersen, N.L. Strober, M. Werge, T. Whiteman, D.C. Woodside, D.B. Stuber, G.D. Gordon, S. Grove, J. Henders, A.K. Juréus, A. Kirk, K.M. Larsen, J.T. Parker, R. Petersen, L. Jordan, J. Kennedy, M. Montgomery, G.W. Wade, T.D. Birgegård, A. Lichtenstein, P. Norring, C. Landén, M. Martin, N.G. Mortensen, P.B. Sullivan, P.F. Breen, G. Bulik, C.M. Anorexia Nervosa Genetics Initiative Eating Disorders Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium
- Subjects
mental disorders - Abstract
Characterized primarily by a low body-mass index, anorexia nervosa is a complex and serious illness1, affecting 0.9–4% of women and 0.3% of men2–4, with twin-based heritability estimates of 50–60%5. Mortality rates are higher than those in other psychiatric disorders6, and outcomes are unacceptably poor7. Here we combine data from the Anorexia Nervosa Genetics Initiative (ANGI)8,9 and the Eating Disorders Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium (PGC-ED) and conduct a genome-wide association study of 16,992 cases of anorexia nervosa and 55,525 controls, identifying eight significant loci. The genetic architecture of anorexia nervosa mirrors its clinical presentation, showing significant genetic correlations with psychiatric disorders, physical activity, and metabolic (including glycemic), lipid and anthropometric traits, independent of the effects of common variants associated with body-mass index. These results further encourage a reconceptualization of anorexia nervosa as a metabo-psychiatric disorder. Elucidating the metabolic component is a critical direction for future research, and paying attention to both psychiatric and metabolic components may be key to improving outcomes. © 2019, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature America, Inc.
- Published
- 2019
30. Specific Features of Differentiated Thyroid Carcinoma in Patients Over 70 Years of Age
- Author
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Biliotti, G. C., Martini, F., Vezzosi, V., Seghi, P., Tozzi, F., Castagnoli, A., Basili, G., and Peri, A.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Investigation of common, low-frequency and rare genome-wide variation in anorexia nervosa
- Author
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Huckins, L. M., Hatzikotoulas, K., Curtis, C., Esko, T., Espeseth, T., Estivill, X., Favaro, A., Fernández-Aranda, F., Fichter, M. M., Finan, C., Fischer, K., Floyd, J. A. B., Foretova, L., Rhodes, D., Forzan, M., Franklin, C. S., Gallinger, S., Gambaro, G., Gaspar, H. A., Giegling, I., Gonidakis, F., Gorwood, P., Gratacos, M., Guillaume, S., Moens, J., Guo, Y., Hakonarson, H., Halmi, K. A., Hauser, J., Hebebrand, J., Helder, S., Herms, S., Herpertz-Dahlmann, B., Herzog, W., Kalsi, G., Hilliard, C. E., Hinney, A., Hübel, C., Hudson, J. I., Huemer, J., Inoko, H., Janout, V., Jiménez-Murcia, S., Johnson, C., Dempster, D., Julià, A., Juréus, A., Kaminska, D., Kaplan, A. S., Kaprio, J., Karhunen, L., Karwautz, A., Kas, M. J. H., Kaye, W., Leung, R., Kennedy, J. L., Keski-Rahkonen, A., Kiezebrink, K., Klareskog, L., Klump, K. L., Knudsen, G. P. S., Koeleman, B. P. C., Koubek, D., La Via, M. C., Landén, M., Keohane, A., Le Hellard, S., Levitan, R. D., Li, D., Lichtenstein, P., Lilenfeld, L., Lissowska, J., Lundervold, A., Magistretti, P., Maj, M., Mannik, K., Burghardt, R., Marsal, S., Martin, N., Mattingsdal, M., McDevitt, S., McGuffin, P., Merl, E., Metspalu, A., Meulenbelt, I., Micali, N., Mitchell, J., Ehrlich, S., Mitchell, K., Monteleone, P., Monteleone, A. M., Mortensen, P., Munn-Chernoff, M. A., Navratilova, M., Nilsson, I., Norring, C., Ntalla, I., Ophoff, R. A., O'Toole, J. K., Palotie, A., Pante, J., Papezova, H., Pinto, D., Rabionet, R., Raevuori, A., Rajewski, A., Ramoz, N., Rayner, N. W., Southam, L., Reichborn-Kjennerud, T., Ripatti, S., Roberts, M., Rotondo, A., Rujescu, D., Rybakowski, F., Santonastaso, P., Scherag, A., Scherer, S. W., Schmidt, U., Ludolph, A., Schork, N. J., Schosser, A., Slachtova, L., Sladek, R., Slagboom, P. E., Slof-Op 't Landt, M. C. T., Slopien, A., Soranzo, N., Steen, V. M., Walton, E., Strengman, E., Strober, M., Sullivan, P. F., Szatkiewicz, J. P., Szeszenia-Dabrowska, N., Tachmazidou, I., Tenconi, E., Thornton, L. M., Tortorella, A., Tozzi, F., Deloukas, P., Treasure, J., Tsitsika, A., Tziouvas, K., van Elburg, A. A., van Furth, E. F., Wagner, G., Watson, H., Wichmann, H-E, Widen, E., Hofman, A., Woodside, D. B., Yanovski, J., Yao, S., Yilmaz, Z., Zeggini, E., Zerwas, S., Zipfel, S., Palta, P., van Rooij, F. J. A., Stirrups, K., Adan, R., Boni, C., Cone, R., Dedoussis, G., van Furth, E., Hudson, J., Kas, M., Keski-Rahonen, A., Steinberg, J., Knudsen, G-P, Raevuori, A. H., Aguilera-McKay, F., van Elburg, A., Consortium, Eating Disorder Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics, Collier, D. A., Breen, G., Bulik, C. M., Adan, R. A. H., Alfredsson, L., Ando, T., Andreassen, O. A., Aschauer, H., Baker, J. H., Barrett, J. C., Bencko, V., Bergen, A. W., Berrettini, W. H., Birgegard, A., Boraska Perica, V., Brandt, H., Carlberg, L., Cassina, M., Cichon, S., Clementi, M., Cohen-Woods, S., Coleman, J., Cone, R. D., Gunasinghe, C., Courtet, P., Crawford, S., Crow, S., Crowley, J., Danner, U. N., Davis, O. S. P., de Zwaan, M., Degortes, D., DeSocio, J. E., Romero, A., Dick, D. M., Dikeos, D., Dina, C., Ding, B., Dmitrzak-Weglarz, M., Docampo, E., Duncan, L., Egberts, K., Escaramís, G., Inconnu, Institut Pasteur de Côte d'Ivoire, Réseau International des Instituts Pasteur (RIIP), Laboratoire de bactériologie-virologie, CHU de Yopougon, Department of Nutrition Science & Dietetics, Harokopio University, Analyse Phenotypique, Developpementale et Genetique des Comportements Addictifs, Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7 (UPD7)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Centre of Excellence in Complex Disease Genetics, Aarno Palotie / Principal Investigator, Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland, Clinicum, University of Helsinki, Department of Public Health, Anna Keski-Rahkonen / Principal Investigator, HUS Children and Adolescents, Genomics of Neurological and Neuropsychiatric Disorders, Genetic Epidemiology, Eating Disorder Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium, Epidemiology, Kas lab, Huckins, L. M., Hatzikotoulas, K., Southam, L., Thornton, L. M., Steinberg, J., Aguilera-Mckay, F., Treasure, J., Schmidt, U., Gunasinghe, C., Romero, A., Curtis, C., Rhodes, D., Moens, J., Kalsi, G., Dempster, D., Leung, R., Keohane, A., Burghardt, R., Ehrlich, S., Hebebrand, J., Hinney, A., Ludolph, A., Walton, E., Deloukas, P., Hofman, A., Palotie, A., Palta, P., van Rooij, F. J. A., Stirrups, K., Adan, R., Boni, C., Cone, R., Dedoussis, G., van Furth, E., Gonidakis, F., Gorwood, P., Hudson, J., Kaprio, J., Kas, M., Keski-Rahonen, A., Kiezebrink, K., Knudsen, G. -P., Slof-Op 'T Landt, M. C. T., Maj, M., Monteleone, A. M., Monteleone, P., Raevuori, A. H., Reichborn-Kjennerud, T., Tozzi, F., Tsitsika, A., Elburg, A., Collier, D. A., Sullivan, P. F., Breen, G., Bulik, C. M., Zeggini, E., Adan, R. A. H., Alfredsson, L., Ando, T., Andreassen, O. A., Aschauer, H., Baker, J. H., Barrett, J. C., Bencko, V., Bergen, A. W., Berrettini, W. H., Birgegard, A., Perica, V. B., Brandt, H., Carlberg, L., Cassina, M., Cichon, S., Clementi, M., Cohen-Woods, S., Coleman, J., Cone, R. D., Courtet, P., Crawford, S., Crow, S., Crowley, J., Danner, U. N., Davis, O. S. P., Zwaan, M., Degortes, D., Desocio, J. E., Dick, D. M., Dikeos, D., Dina, C., Ding, B., Dmitrzak-Weglarz, M., Docampo, E., Duncan, L., Egberts, K., Escaramis, G., Esko, T., Espeseth, T., Estivill, X., Favaro, A., Fernandez-Aranda, F., Fichter, M. M., Finan, C., Fischer, K., Floyd, J. A. B., Foretova, L., Forzan, M., Franklin, C. S., Gallinger, S., Gambaro, G., Gaspar, H. A., Giegling, I., Gratacos, M., Guillaume, S., Guo, Y., Hakonarson, H., Halmi, K. A., Hauser, J., Helder, S., Herms, S., Herpertz-Dahlmann, B., Herzog, W., Hilliard, C. E., Hubel, C., Hudson, J. I., Huemer, J., Inoko, H., Janout, V., Jimenez-Murcia, S., Johnson, C., Julia, A., Jureus, A., Kaminska, D., Kaplan, A. S., Karhunen, L., Karwautz, A., Kas, M. J. H., Kaye, W., Kennedy, J. L., Keski-Rahkonen, A., Klareskog, L., Klump, K. L., Knudsen, G. P. S., Koeleman, B. P. C., Koubek, D., Via, M. C. L., Landen, M., Hellard, S. L., Levitan, R. D., Li, D., Lichtenstein, P., Lilenfeld, L., Lissowska, J., Lundervold, A., Magistretti, P., Mannik, K., Marsal, S., Martin, N., Mattingsdal, M., Mcdevitt, S., Mcguffin, P., Merl, E., Metspalu, A., Meulenbelt, I., Micali, N., Mitchell, J., Mitchell, K., Mortensen, P., Munn-Chernoff, M. A., Navratilova, M., Nilsson, I., Norring, C., Ntalla, I., Ophoff, R. A., O'Toole, J. K., Pantel, J., Papezova, H., Pinto, D., Rabionet, R., Raevuori, A., Rajewski, A., Ramoz, N., Rayner, N. W., Ripatti, S., Roberts, M., Rotondo, A., Rujescu, D., Rybakowski, F., Santonastaso, P., Scherag, A., Scherer, S. W., Schork, N. J., Schosser, A., Slachtova, L., Sladek, R., Slagboom, P. E., Slopien, A., Soranzo, N., Steen, V. M., Strengman, E., Strober, M., Szatkiewicz, J. P., Szeszenia-Dabrowska, N., Tachmazidou, I., Tenconi, E., Tortorella, A., Tziouvas, K., Elburg, A. A., Furth, E. F., Wagner, G., Watson, H., Wichmann, H. -E., Widen, E., Woodside, D. B., Yanovski, J., Yao, S., Yilmaz, Z., Zerwas, S., and Zipfel, S.
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Anorexia Nervosa ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,Intron ,Medizin ,Genome-wide association study ,Genome ,3124 Neurology and psychiatry ,Intergenic region ,Molecular Biology ,Psychiatry and Mental Health ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Exome ,HYPOGONADOTROPIC HYPOGONADISM ,GENE-EXPRESSION ,Genetics ,Bulimia nervosa ,ASSOCIATION ,GPI-Linked Protein ,3. Good health ,CONTROLLED-TRIALS ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Eating disorders ,Phenotype ,CONTROLLED FAMILY ,Female ,Original Article ,Human ,Genotype ,In silico ,European Continental Ancestry Group ,Locus (genetics) ,Biology ,GPI-Linked Proteins ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,White People ,03 medical and health sciences ,BULIMIA-NERVOSA ,medicine ,Journal Article ,Humans ,Family ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,ddc:610 ,Genetic association ,AUTISM SPECTRUM DISORDER ,3112 Neurosciences ,Genetic Variation ,Correction ,EATING-DISORDERS ,ARACHIDONIC-ACID ,medicine.disease ,Introns ,030104 developmental biology ,Cell Adhesion Molecule ,RISK-FACTORS ,3111 Biomedicine ,Cell Adhesion Molecules ,Genome-Wide Association Study - Abstract
Anorexia nervosa (AN) is a complex neuropsychiatric disorder presenting with dangerously low body weight, and a deep and persistent fear of gaining weight. To date, only one genome-wide significant locus associated with AN has been identified. We performed an exome-chip based genome-wide association studies (GWAS) in 2158 cases from nine populations of European origin and 15 485 ancestrally matched controls. Unlike previous studies, this GWAS also probed association in low-frequency and rare variants. Sixteen independent variants were taken forward for in silico and de novo replication (11 common and 5 rare). No findings reached genome-wide significance. Two notable common variants were identified: rs10791286, an intronic variant in OPCML (P=9.89 × 10−6), and rs7700147, an intergenic variant (P=2.93 × 10−5). No low-frequency variant associations were identified at genome-wide significance, although the study was well-powered to detect low-frequency variants with large effect sizes, suggesting that there may be no AN loci in this genomic search space with large effect sizes.
- Published
- 2017
32. Investigation of common, low-frequency and rare genome-wide variation in anorexia nervosa
- Author
-
Huckins, Laura M., Hatzikotoulas, Konstantinos, Southam, L., Thornton, Laura M., Steinberg, J.S., Aguilera-McKay, F, Treasure, J., Schmidt, U., Gunasinghe, C, Romero, Atocha, Curtis, Charles, Rhodes, Davina H., Bernelot Moens, Hein J, Kalsi, Gursharan, Dempster, D, Leung, R, Keohane, A, Burghardt, Roland, Ehrlich, S., Hebebrand, J., Hinney, A., Ludolph, A., Walton, Esther, Deloukas, P., Hofman, A., Palotie, A., Palta, P., Van Rooij, Frank J A, Stirrups, Kathleen, Adan, R, Boni, Claudette, Cone, Roger, Dedoussis, George, Furth, E.E., Gonidakis, Fragiskos, Gorwood, P., Hudson, Thomas J., Kaprio, Jaakko, Kas, M, Keski-Rahonen, A, Kiezebrink, K., Knudsen, Gun Peggy S., Slof-Op 't Landt, M C T, Maj, Mario, Monteleone, Alessio Maria, Monteleone, Palmiero, Raevuori, A H, Reichborn-Kjennerud, Ted, Tozzi, F., Tsitsika, Artemis, and Eating Disorder Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium
- Abstract
Anorexia nervosa (AN) is a complex neuropsychiatric disorder presenting with dangerously low body weight, and a deep and persistent fear of gaining weight. To date, only one genome-wide significant locus associated with AN has been identified. We performed an exome-chip based genome-wide association studies (GWAS) in 2158 cases from nine populations of European origin and 15 485 ancestrally matched controls. Unlike previous studies, this GWAS also probed association in low-frequency and rare variants. Sixteen independent variants were taken forward for in silico and de novo replication (11 common and 5 rare). No findings reached genome-wide significance. Two notable common variants were identified: rs10791286, an intronic variant in OPCML (P=9.89 × 10-6), and rs7700147, an intergenic variant (P=2.93 × 10-5). No low-frequency variant associations were identified at genome-wide significance, although the study was well-powered to detect low-frequency variants with large effect sizes, suggesting that there may be no AN loci in this genomic search space with large effect sizes.Molecular Psychiatry advance online publication, 25 July 2017; doi:10.1038/mp.2017.88.
- Published
- 2018
33. Correction to: Investigation of common, low-frequency and rare genome-wide variation in anorexia nervosa (Molecular Psychiatry, (2018), 23, 5, (1169-1180), 10.1038/mp.2017.88)
- Author
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Huckins, L.M. Hatzikotoulas, K. Southam, L. Thornton, L.M. Steinberg, J. Aguilera-McKay, F. Treasure, J. Schmidt, U. Gunasinghe, C. Romero, A. Curtis, C. Rhodes, D. Moens, J. Kalsi, G. Dempster, D. Leung, R. Keohane, A. Burghardt, R. Ehrlich, S. Hebebrand, J. Hinney, A. Ludolph, A. Walton, E. Deloukas, P. Hofman, A. Palotie, A. Palta, P. van Rooij, F.J.A. Stirrups, K. Adan, R. Boni, C. Cone, R. Dedoussis, G. van Furth, E. Gonidakis, F. Gorwood, P. Hudson, J. Kaprio, J. Kas, M. Keski-Rahonen, A. Kiezebrink, K. Knudsen, G.-P. Maj, M. Monteleone, A.M. Monteleone, P. Raevuori, A.H. Reichborn-Kjennerud, T. Tozzi, F. Tsitsika, A. van Elburg, A. Collier, D.A. Sullivan, P.F. Breen, G. Bulik, C.M. Zeggini, E. MCT Slof-Op 't Landt Eating Disorder Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium
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GeneralLiterature_INTRODUCTORYANDSURVEY - Abstract
The fortieth author’s name was listed incorrectly. The correct presentation is A Keski-Rahkonen. © 2018, Springer Nature Limited.
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- 2018
34. An interactive storytelling game for mobile devices for children's stress management
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Iolie Nicolaidou, Tozzi, F., Kindynis, P., Panagiotou, M., and Antoniades, A.
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Stress management ,Interactive story-telling ,Kids stress relief ,Social Sciences ,Prevention intervention ,Educational Sciences ,Serious game (app) ,Children - Abstract
Around 40% of children experience subclinical anxiety and the median onset age for anxiety disorders is 6 years-old. Informal-learning, stress prevention interventions, accessible on children's mobile devices, could be one way to address this problem. Most existing mobile applications are adapted from adult-targeted approaches for anxiety treatment. There are limited game-based apps available for helping children identify and self-manage stress. To address this gap, an interactive storytelling serious game for mobile devices was designed for 5-11 year-olds, to help children identify body signs of stress and overcome stress through relaxation techniques. It was developed by Stremble Ventures LTD (www.stremble.com) and it is offered at www.kidsstressrelief.com currently on Android. The aim of this study was to evaluate the game's acceptability and usability, focusing on design characteristics with wide applicability in future prevention interventions in children. The research questions are: a) How do children between 5-11 years-old perceive stress signs and relaxation techniques presented through an interactive storytelling game? b) What are children's perceptions of the game's usability? Participants were eleven children (5-11 years old). Convenience sampling was used, reaching families with different socioeconomic background. Data sources included: a) a researcher-led usability evaluation protocol guiding children's videotaped interaction with the game, b) the System Usability Scale (SUS), and c) automatically-collected data capturing children's interaction with the app. Preliminary findings show promising results for the game's acceptability for identifying stress signs and practicing relaxation techniques, especially for children older than seven. Preliminary findings were also satisfactory with respect to the game's usability (raw average SUS scores=74.77). Instructional and design implications, of interest to developers of psychology-based apps, are drawn.
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- 2017
35. The interactions of piperonyl butoxide and analogues with the metabolic enzymes FE4 and CYP6CY3 of the green peach aphid Myzus persicae (Hemiptera: Aphididae)
- Author
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Panini, M., Tozzi, F., Bass, C., Zimmer, C. T., Field, L. M., Borzatta, V., Mazzoni, E., and Moores, G. D.
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Piperonyl butoxide (PBO) is a well-known insecticide synergist capable of interacting with phase 1 metabolic enzymes, specifically esterases and cytochrome P450s. In this study, structure–activity relationship analyses were used to characterise the interaction of around 30 analogues of PBO with the esterase FE4 and the P450 CYP6CY3 from insecticide-resistant Myzus persicae (Sulzer), in order to predict the synthesis of more potent inhibitors. RESULTS: Enzyme inhibition studies were performed against esterase and oxidase activities and, together with in silico modelling, key activity determinants of the analogues were identified and optimised. Novel analogues were then designed and synthesised, some of which showed greater inhibition against both enzymatic systems: specifically, dihydrobenzofuran moieties containing an alkynyl side chain and a butyl side chain against FE4, and benzodioxole derivatives with a propyl/butyl side chain and an alkynyl ether moiety for CYP6CY3. CONCLUSIONS: In vitro assays identified potential candidate synergists with high inhibitory potency. The in vivo confirmation of such results will allow consideration for a possible use in agriculture. © 2016 Society of Chemical Industry
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- 2017
36. Biochemical evaluation of interactions between synergistic molecules and phase I enzymes involved in insecticide resistance in B- and Q-type Bemisia tabaci (Hemiptera: Aleyrodidae)
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Panini, M., Tozzi, F., Zimmer, C. T., Bass, C., Field, L. M., Borzatta, V., Mazzoni, E., and Moores, G. D.
- Subjects
synergist ,esterase ,Settore AGR/11 - ENTOMOLOGIA GENERALE E APPLICATA ,P450s ,synergists ,piperonyl butoxide ,Bemisia tabaci ,SAR - Abstract
BACKGROUND Metabolic resistance is an important consideration in the whitefly Bemisia tabaci, where an esterase‐based mechanism has been attributed to pyrethroid resistance and over‐expression of the cytochrome P450, CYP6CM1, has been correlated to resistance to imidacloprid and other neonicotinoids. RESULTS In vitro interactions between putative synergists and CYP6CM1, B and Q‐type esterases were investigated, and structure–activity relationship analyses allowed the identification of chemical structures capable of acting as inhibitors of esterase and oxidase activities. Specifically, methylenedioxyphenyl (MDP) moieties with a polyether chain were preferable for optimum inhibition of B‐type esterase, whilst corresponding dihydrobenzofuran structures were potent for the Q‐esterase variation. Potent inhibition of CYP6CM1 resulted from structures which contained an alkynyl chain with a terminal methyl group. CONCLUSIONS Synergist candidates could be considered for field control of B. tabaci, especially to abrogate neonicotinoid resistance. © 2017 Society of Chemical Industry
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- 2017
37. A genome-wide association study of anorexia nervosa suggests a risk locus implicated in dysregulated leptin signaling
- Author
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Li, D. Chang, X. Connolly, J.J. Tian, L. Liu, Y. Bhoj, E.J. Robinson, N. Abrams, D. Li, Y.R. Bradfield, J.P. Kim, C.E. Li, J. Wang, F. Snyder, J. Lemma, M. Hou, C. Wei, Z. Guo, Y. Qiu, H. Mentch, F.D. Thomas, K.A. Chiavacci, R.M. Cone, R. Li, B. Sleiman, P.A. Hakonarson, H. Perica, V.B. Franklin, C.S. Floyd, J.A.B. Thornton, L.M. Huckins, L.M. Southam, L. Rayner, N.W. Tachmazidou, I. Schmidt, U. Tozzi, F. Kiezebrink, K. Hebebrand, J. Gorwood, P. Adan, R.A.H. Kas, M.J.H. Favaro, A. Santonastaso, P. Fernánde-Aranda, F. Gratacos, M. Rybakowski, F. Dmitrzak-Weglarz, M. Kaprio, J. Keski-Rahkonen, A. Raevuori-Helkamaa, A. Furth, E.F.V. Slof-Opt Landt, M.C.T. Hudson, J.I. Reichborn-Kjennerud, T. Knudsen, G.P.S. Monteleone, P. Karwautz, A. Berrettini, W.H. Schork, N.J. Ando, T. Inoko, H. Esko, T. Fischer, K. Männik, K. Metspalu, A. Baker, J.H. DeSocio, J.E. Hilliard, C.E. O'Toole, J.K. Pantel, J. Szatkiewicz, J.P. Zerwas, S. Davis, O.S.P. Helder, S. Bühren, K. Burghardt, R. De Zwaan, M. Egberts, K. Ehrlich, S. Herpertz-Dahlmann, B. Herzog, W. Imgart, H. Scherag, A. Zipfel, S. Boni, C. Ramoz, N. Versini, A. Danner, U.N. Hendriks, J. Koeleman, B.P.C. Ophoff, R.A. Strengman, E. Van Elburg, A.A. Bruson, A. Clementi, M. Degortes, D. Forzan, M. Tenconi, E. Docampo, E. Escaramís, G. Jiménez-Murcia, S. Lissowska, J. Rajewski, A. Szeszenia-Dabrowska, N. Slopien, A. Hauser, J. Karhunen, L. Meulenbelt, I. Slagboom, P.E. Tortorella, A. Maj, M. Dedoussis, G. DIkeos, D. Gonidakis, F. Tziouvas, K. Tsitsika, A. Papezova, H. Slachtova, L. Martaskova, D. Kennedy, J.L. Levitan, R.D. Yilmaz, Z. Huemer, J. Koubek, D. Merl, E. Wagner, G. Lichtenstein, P. Breen, G. Cohen-Woods, S. Farmer, A. McGuffin, P. Cichon, S. Giegling, I. Herms, S. Rujescu, D. Schreiber, S. Wichmann, H.-E. DIna, C. Sladek, R. Gambaro, G. Soranzo, N. Julia, A. Marsal, S. Rabionet, R. Gaborieau, V. DIck, D.M. Palotie, A. Ripatti, S. Widén, E. Andreassen, O.A. Espeseth, T. Lundervold, A. Reinvang, I. Steen, V.M. Le Hellard, S. Mattingsdal, M. Ntalla, I. Bencko, V. Foretova, L. Janout, V. Navratilova, M. Gallinger, S. Pinto, D. Scherer, S.W. Aschauer, H. Carlberg, L. Schosser, A. Alfredsson, L. DIng, B. Klareskog, L. Padyukov, L. Finan, C. Kalsi, G. Roberts, M. Barrett, J.C. Estivill, X. Hinney, A. Sullivan, P.F. Zeggini, E. Bulik, C.M. Brandt, H. Crawford, S. Crow, S. Fichter, M.M. Halmi, K.A. Johnson, C. Kaplan, A.S. La Via, M.C. Mitchell, J. Strober, M. Rotondo, A. Treasure, J. Woodside, D.B. Keel, P.K. Klump, K.L. Lilenfeld, L. Bergen, A.W. Kaye, W. Magistretti, P.
- Abstract
We conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) of anorexia nervosa (AN) using a stringently defined phenotype. Analysis of phenotypic variability led to the identification of a specific genetic risk factor that approached genome-wide significance (rs929626 in EBF1 (Early B-Cell Factor 1); P = 2.04 × 10-7; OR = 0.7; 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.61-0.8) with independent replication (P = 0.04), suggesting a variant-mediated dysregulation of leptin signaling may play a role in AN. Multiple SNPs in LD with the variant support the nominal association. This demonstrates that although the clinical and etiologic heterogeneity of AN is universally recognized, further careful sub-typing of cases may provide more precise genomic signals. In this study, through a refinement of the phenotype spectrum of AN, we present a replicable GWAS signal that is nominally associated with AN, highlighting a potentially important candidate locus for further investigation. © 2017 The Author(s).
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- 2017
38. A genome-wide association study of anorexia nervosa
- Author
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Boraska, V., Franklin, C. S., Floyd, J. A. B., Thornton, L. M., Huckins, L. M., Southam, L., Rayner, N. W., Tachmazidou, I., Klump, K. L., Treasure, J., Lewis, C. M., Schmidt, U., Tozzi, F., Kiezebrink, K., Hebebrand, J., Gorwood, P., Adan, R. A. H., Kas, M. J. H., Favaro, Angela, Santonastaso, Paolo, Fernández Aranda, F., Gratacos, M., Rybakowski, F., Dmitrzak Weglarz, M., Kaprio, J., Keski Rahkonen, A., Raevuori, A., Van Furth, E. F., Slof Op 't Landt, M. C. T., Hudson, J. I., Reichborn Kjennerud, T., Knudsen, G. P. S., Monteleone, P., Kaplan, A. S., Karwautz, A., Hakonarson, H., Berrettini, W. H., Guo, Y., Li, D., Schork, N. J., Komaki, G., Ando, T., Inoko, H., Esko, T., Fischer, K., Männik, K., Metspalu, A., Baker, J. H., Cone, R. D., Dackor, J., Desocio, J. E., Hilliard, C. E., O'Toole, J. K., Pantel, J., Szatkiewicz, J. P., Taico, C., Zerwas, S., Trace, S. E., Davis, O. S. P., Helder, S., Bühren, K., Burghardt, R., de Zwaan, M., Egberts, K., Ehrlich, S., Herpertz Dahlmann, B., Herzog, W., Imgart, H., Scherag, A., Scherag, S., Zipfel, S., Boni, C., Ramoz, N., Versini, A., Brandys, M. K., Danner, U. N., de Kovel, C., Hendriks, J., Koeleman, B. P. C., Ophoff, R. A., Strengman, E., van Elburg, A. A., Bruson, Alice, Clementi, Maurizio, Degortes, Daniela, Forzan, Monica, Tenconi, Elena, Docampo, E., Escaramís, G., Jiménez Murcia, S., Lissowska, J., Rajewski, A., Szeszenia Dabrowska, N., Slopien, A., Hauser, J., Karhunen, L., Meulenbelt, I., Slagboom, P. E., Tortorella, A., Maj, M., Dedoussis, G., Dikeos, D., Gonidakis, F., Tziouvas, K., Tsitsika, A., Papezova, H., Slachtova, L., Martaskova, D., Kennedy, J. L., Levitan, R. D., Yilmaz, Z., Huemer, J., Koubek, D., Merl, E., Wagner, G., Lichtenstein, P., Breen, G., Cohen Woods, S., Farmer, A., Mcguffin, P., Cichon, S., Giegling, I., Herms, S., Rujescu, D., Schreiber, S., Wichmann, H. E., Dina, C., Sladek, R., Gambaro, G., Soranzo, N., Julia, A., Marsal, S., Rabionet, R., Gaborieau, V., Dick, D. M., Palotie, A., Ripatti, S., Widén, E., Andreassen, O. A., Espeseth, T., Lundervold, A., Reinvang, I., Steen, V. M., Le Hellard, S., Mattingsdal, M., Ntalla, I., Bencko, V., Foretova, L., Janout, V., Navratilova, M., Gallinger, S., Pinto, D., Scherer, S. W., Aschauer, H., Carlberg, L., Schosser, A., Alfredsson, L., Ding, B., Klareskog, L., Padyukov, L., Courtet, P., Guillaume, S., Jaussent, I., Finan, C., Kalsi, G., Roberts, M., Logan, D. W., Peltonen, L., Ritchie, G. R. S., Barrett, J. C., Anderson, Carl A., Barrett, Jeffrey C., Floyd, James A. B., Franklin, Christopher S., Ralph, Mcginnis, Nicole, Soranzo, Eleftheria, Zeggini, Jennifer, Sambrook, Jonathan, Stephens, Ouwehand, Willem H., Mcardle, Wendy L., Ring, Susan M., Strachan, David P., Graeme, Alexander, Bulik, Cynthia M., Collier, David A., Conlon, Peter J., Anna, Dominiczak, Audrey, Duncanson, Adrian, Hill, Cordelia, Langford, Graham, Lord, Maxwell, Alexander P., Linda, Morgan, Leena, Peltonen, Sandford, Richard N., Neil, Sheerin, Vannberg, Fredrik O., Hannah, Blackburn, Wei Min Chen, Sarah, Edkins, Mathew, Gillman, Emma, Gray, Hunt, Sarah E., Suna Onengut Gumuscu, Simon, Potter, Rich, Stephen S., Douglas, Simpkin, Pamela, Whittaker, Estivill, X., Hinney, A., Sullivan, P. F., Collier, D. A., Zeggini, E., Bulik, C. M., Boraska, V., Franklin, Christopher S., Floyd, James A. B., Thornton, L. M., Huckins, L. M., Southam, L., Rayner, N. W., Tachmazidou, I., Klump, K. L., Treasure, J., Lewis, C. M., Schmidt, U., Tozzi, F., Kiezebrink, K., Hebebrand, J., Gorwood, P., Adan, R. A. H., Kas, M. J. H., Favaro, A., Santonastaso, P., Fernández-Aranda, F., Gratacos, M., Rybakowski, F., Dmitrzak-Weglarz, M., Kaprio, J., Keski-Rahkonen, A., Raevuori, A., Van Furth, E. F., Slof-Op 't Landt, M. C. T., Hudson, J. I., Reichborn-Kjennerud, T., Knudsen, G. P. S., Monteleone, P., Kaplan, A. S., Karwautz, A., Hakonarson, H., Berrettini, W. H., Guo, Y., Li, D., Schork, N. J., Komaki, G., Ando, T., Inoko, H., Esko, T., Fischer, K., Männik, K., Metspalu, A., Baker, J. H., Cone, R. D., Dackor, J., Desocio, J. E., Hilliard, C. E., O'Toole, J. K., Pantel, J., Szatkiewicz, J. P., Taico, C., Zerwas, S., Trace, S. E., Davis, O. S. P., Helder, S., Bühren, K., Burghardt, R., De Zwaan, M., Egberts, K., Ehrlich, S., Herpertz-Dahlmann, B., Herzog, W., Imgart, H., Scherag, A., Scherag, S., Zipfel, S., Boni, C., Ramoz, N., Versini, A., Brandys, M. K., Danner, U. N., De Kovel, C., Hendriks, J., Koeleman, B. P. C., Ophoff, R. A., Strengman, E., Van Elburg, A. A., Bruson, A., Clementi, M., Degortes, D., Forzan, M., Tenconi, E., Docampo, E., Escaramís, G., Jiménez-Murcia, S., Lissowska, J., Rajewski, A., Szeszenia-Dabrowska, N., Slopien, A., Hauser, J., Karhunen, L., Meulenbelt, I., Slagboom, P. E., Tortorella, A., Maj, M., Dedoussis, G., Dikeos, D., Gonidakis, F., Tziouvas, K., Tsitsika, A., Papezova, H., Slachtova, L., Martaskova, D., Kennedy, J. L., Levitan, R. D., Yilmaz, Z., Huemer, J., Koubek, D., Merl, E., Wagner, G., Lichtenstein, P., Breen, G., Cohen-Woods, S., Farmer, A., Mcguffin, P., Cichon, S., Giegling, I., Herms, S., Rujescu, D., Schreiber, S., Wichmann, H. -E., Dina, C., Sladek, R., Gambaro, G., Soranzo, Nicole, Julia, A., Marsal, S., Rabionet, R., Gaborieau, V., Dick, D. M., Palotie, A., Ripatti, S., Widén, E., Andreassen, O. A., Espeseth, T., Lundervold, A., Reinvang, I., Steen, V. M., Le Hellard, S., Mattingsdal, M., Ntalla, I., Bencko, V., Foretova, L., Janout, V., Navratilova, M., Gallinger, S., Pinto, D., Scherer, S. W., Aschauer, H., Carlberg, L., Schosser, A., Alfredsson, L., Ding, B., Klareskog, L., Padyukov, L., Courtet, P., Guillaume, S., Jaussent, I., Finan, C., Kalsi, G., Roberts, M., Logan, D. W., Peltonen, Leena, Ritchie, G. R. S., Barrett, Jeffrey C., Anderson, Carl A., Mcginnis, Ralph, Zeggini, Eleftheria, Sambrook, Jennifer, Stephens, Jonathan, Ouwehand, Willem H., Mcardle, Wendy L., Ring, Susan M., Strachan, David P., Alexander, Graeme, Bulik, C. M., Collier, David A., Conlon, Peter J., Dominiczak, Anna, Duncanson, Audrey, Hill, Adrian, Langford, Cordelia, Lord, Graham, Maxwell, Alexander P., Morgan, Linda, Sandford, Richard N., Sheerin, Neil, Vannberg, Fredrik O., Blackburn, Hannah, Chen, Wei-Min, Edkins, Sarah, Gillman, Mathew, Gray, Emma, Hunt, Sarah E., Onengut-Gumuscu, Suna, Potter, Simon, Rich, Stephen S., Simpkin, Dougla, Whittaker, Pamela, Estivill, X., Hinney, A., Sullivan, P. F., Martaskova D., Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium 3, Anderson, CA., Barrett, JC., Floyd, JA., Franklin, CS., McGinnis, R., Soranzo, N., Zeggini, E., Sambrook, J., Stephens, J., Ouwehand, WH., McArdle, WL., Ring, SM., Strachan, DP., Alexander, G., Bulik, CM., Collier, DA., Conlon, PJ., Dominiczak, A., Duncanson, A., Hill, A., Langford, C., Lord, G., Maxwell, AP., Morgan, L., Peltonen, L., Sandford, RN., Sheerin, N., Vannberg, FO., Blackburn, H., Chen, WM., Edkins, S., Gillman, M., Gray, E., Hunt, SE., Onengut-Gumuscu, S., Potter, S., Rich, SS., Simpkin, D., and Whittaker, P.
- Subjects
Male ,Candidate gene ,Anorexia Nervosa ,Medizin ,Genome-wide association study ,anorexia nervosa ,body mass index ,eating disorders ,genome-wide association study ,GWAS ,metabolic ,Japan ,Settore MED/14 - NEFROLOGIA ,Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Factors ,genome wide association study ,Nuclear Protein ,Genetics ,Calcineurin ,Eating disorder ,Anorèxia nerviosa ,Nuclear Proteins ,Genomics ,Cullin Proteins ,3. Good health ,Anorexia ,VDP::Midical sciences: 700::Basic medical, dental and veterinary sciences: 710::Medical genetics: 714 ,Anorexia nervosa (differential diagnoses) ,Psychiatry and Mental Health ,Female ,Case-Control Studie ,Human ,Asian Continental Ancestry Group ,European Continental Ancestry Group ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,Biology ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Article ,White People ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Asian People ,Meta-Analysis as Topic ,Genetic linkage ,Humans ,Genotyping ,Molecular Biology ,anorexia nervosa, body mass index, eating disorders, genome wide association study, GWAS, metabolic ,Cullin Protein ,Case-control study ,Anorexia nervosa ,VDP::Medisinske fag: 700::Basale medisinske, odontologiske og veterinærmedisinske fag: 710::Medisinsk genetikk: 714 ,Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Factor ,Genòmica ,Case-Control Studies ,Carrier Protein ,Carrier Proteins ,Body mass index ,Genome-Wide Association Study - Abstract
Anorexia nervosa (AN) is a complex and heritable eating disorder characterized by dangerously low body weight. Neither candidate gene studies nor an initial genome-wide association study (GWAS) have yielded significant and replicated results. We performed a GWAS in 2907 cases with AN from 14 countries (15 sites) and 14 860 ancestrally matched controls as part of the Genetic Consortium for AN (GCAN) and the Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium 3 (WTCCC3). Individual association analyses were conducted in each stratum and meta-analyzed across all 15 discovery data sets. Seventy-six (72 independent) single nucleotide polymorphisms were taken forward for in silico (two data sets) or de novo (13 data sets) replication genotyping in 2677 independent AN cases and 8629 European ancestry controls along with 458 AN cases and 421 controls from Japan. The final global meta-analysis across discovery and replication data sets comprised 5551 AN cases and 21 080 controls. AN subtype analyses (1606 AN restricting; 1445 AN binge-purge) were performed. No findings reached genome-wide significance. Two intronic variants were suggestively associated: rs9839776 (P = 3.01 x 10(-7)) in SOX2OT and rs17030795 (P = 5.84 x 10(-6)) in PPP3CA. Two additional signals were specific to Europeans: rs1523921 (P = 5.76 x 10(-6)) between CUL3 and FAM124B and rs1886797 (P = 8.05 x 10(-6)) near SPATA13. Comparing discovery with replication results, 76% of the effects were in the same direction, an observation highly unlikely to be due to chance (P= 4x10(-6)), strongly suggesting that true findings exist but our sample, the largest yet reported, was underpowered for their detection. The accrual of large genotyped AN case-control samples should be an immediate priority for the field.
- Published
- 2014
39. Using ancestry-informative markers to identify fine structure across 15 populations of European origin
- Author
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Huckins, Laura M, Boraska, Vesna, Southam, L, Karhunen, L, Meulenbelt, I, Slagboom, P E, Tortorella, A, Maj, M, Dedoussis, G, Dikeos, D, Gonidakis, F, Tziouvas, K, Tsitsika, A, Rayner, N William, Papezova, H, Slachtova, L, Martaskova, D, Kennedy, J L, Levitan, R D, Yilmaz, Z, Huemer, J, Koubek, D, Merl, E, Wagner, G, Tachmazidou, I, Lichtenstein, P, Breen, G, Cohen-Woods, S, Farmer, A, McGuffin, P, Cichon, Sven, Giegling, I, Herms, S, Rujescu, D, Schreiber, S, Klump, K L, Wichmann, H-E, Dina, C, Sladek, R, Gambaro, G, Soranzo, N, Julia, A, Marsal, S, Rabionet, R a, Gaborieau, V, Dick, D M, Treasure, J, Palotie, A, Ripatti, S, Widén, E, Andreassen, O A, Espeseth, T, Lundervold, A, Reinvang, I, Steen, V M, Hellard, S Le, Mattingsda, M, Lewis, C M, Ntalla, I, Bencko, V, Foretova, L, Janout, V, Navratilova, M, Gallinger, S, Pinto, D, Scherer, S W, Aschauer, H, Carlberg, L, Schmidt, U, Schosser, A, Alfredsson, L, Ding, B, Klareskog, L, Padyukov, L, Finan, C, Kalsi, G, Roberts, M, Logan, D W, Peltonen, L, Tozzi, F, Ritchie, G R S, Courtet, P, Guillame, S, Jaussent, I, Barrett, J C, Estivill, X, Hinney, A, Sullivan, P F, Collier, D A, Zeggini, E, Kiezebrink, K, Bulik, C M, Anderson, Carl A, Barrett, Jeffrey C, Floyd, James AB, Franklin, Christopher S, McGinnis, Ralph, Soranzo, Nicole, Zeggini, Eleftheria, Sambrook, Jennifer, Stephens, Jonathan, Hebebrand, J, Ouwehand, Willem H, McArdle, Wendy L, Ring, Susan M, Strachan, David P, Alexander, Graeme, Bulik, Cynthia M, Collier, David A, Conlon, Peter J, Dominiczak, Anna, Duncanson, Audrey, Gorwood, P, Hill, Adrian, Langford, Cordelia, Lord, Graham, Maxwell, Alexander P, Morgan, Linda, Peltonen, Leena, Sandford, Richard N, Sheerin, Neil, Vannberg, Fredrik O, Adan, R A H, Genotyping, D N A, Blackburn, Hannah, Chen, Wei-Min, Edkins, Sarah, Gillman, Mathew, Gray, Emma, Hunt, Sarah E, nengut-Gumuscu, Suna, Kas, M J H, Potter, Simon, Rich, Stephen S, Simpkin, Douglas, Whittaker, Pamela, Sullivan, Patrick F, Tyler-Smith, Chris, Tachmazidou, Ioanna, avaro, A F, Santonastaso, P, Fernández-Aranda, F, Gratacos, M, Rybakowski, F, Dmitrzak-Weglarz, M, Kaprio, J, Floyd, James A B, Keski-Rahkonen, A, Raevuori, A, Van Furth, E F, Slof-Op t Landt, M C T, Hudson, J I, Reichborn-Kjennerud, T, Knudsen, G P S, Monteleone, P, Kaplan, A S, Karwautz, A, Southam, Lorraine, Hakonarson, H, Berrettini, W H, Guo, Y, Li, D, Schork, N J, Komaki, G, Ando, T, Inoko, H, Esko, T, Fischer, K, Boraska, V, Männik, K, Metspalu, A, Baker, J H, Cone, R D, Dackor, J, DeSocio, J E, Hilliard, C E, O'Toole, J K, Pantel, J, Szatkiewicz, J P, Franklin, C S, Taico, C, Zerwas, S, Trace, S E, Davis, O S P, Helder, S, Bühren, K, Burghardt, R, de Zwaan, M, Egberts, K, Ehrlich, S, Floyd, J A B, Herpertz-Dahlmann, B, Herzog, W, Imgart, H, Scherag, A, Scherag, S, Zipfel, S, Boni, C, Ramoz, N, Versini, A, Brandys, M K, Thornton, L M, Danner, U N, de Kove, C, Hendriks, J, Koeleman, B P C, Ophoff, R A, Strengman, E, van Elburg, A A, Bruson, A, Clementi, M, Degortes, D, Huckins, L M, Forzan, M, Tenconi, E, Docampo, E, Escaramís, G, Jiménez-Murcia, S, Lissowska, J, Rajewski, A, Szeszenia-Dabrowska, N, Slopien, A, Hauser, J, Huckins, Laura M., Boraska, Vesna, Franklin, Christopher S., Floyd, J. A. B., Southam, Lorraine, Sullivan, P. F., Bulik, Cynthia M, Collier, David A, Tyler-Smith, Chri, Zeggini, Eleftheria, Tachmazidou, Ioanna, Thornton, L. M., William Rayner, N., Klump, K. L., Lewis, C. M., Schmidt, U., Tozzi, F., Kiezebrink, K., Hebebrand, J., Gorwood, P., Adan, R. A. H., Kas, M. J. H., Favaro, A., Santonastaso, P., Fernández-Aranda, F., Gratacos, M., Rybakowski, F., Dmitrzak-Weglarz, M., Kaprio, J., Raevuori, A., Van Furth, E. F., Slof-Op t Landt, M. C. T., Hudson, J. I., Reichborn-Kjennerud, T., Knudsen, G. P. S., Monteleone, P., Kaplan, A. S., Karwautz, A., Hakonarson, H., Berrettini, W. H., Guo, Y., Li, D., Schork, N. J., Komaki, G., Ando, T., Inoko, H., Esko, T., Fischer, K., Männik, K., Metspalu, A., Baker, J. H., Davis, O. S. P., Dackor, J., Desocio, J. E., Hilliard, C. E., O'Toole, J. K., Pantel, J., Szatkiewicz, J. P., Taico, C., Zerwas, S., Trace, S. E., Helder, S., Bühren, K., Burghardt, R., de Zwaan, M., Egberts, K., Ehrlich, S., Herpertz-Dahlmann, B., Herzog, W., Imgart, H., Scherag, A., Zipfel, S., Boni, C., Ramoz, N., Versini, A., Brandys, M. K., Danner, U. N., de Kovel, C., Hendriks, J., Koeleman, B. P. C., Ophoff, R. A., Strengman, E., van Elburg, A. A., Bruson, A., Clementi, M., Degortes, D., Forzan, M., Docampo, E., Escaramís, G., Jiménez-Murcia, S., Lissowska, J., Rajewski, A., Szeszenia-Dabrowska, N., Slopien, A., Hauser, J., Karhunen, L., Meulenbelt, I., Slagboom, P. E., Tortorella, A., Maj, M., Dedoussis, G., Dikeos, D., Gonidakis, F., Tziouvas, K., Tsitsika, A., Papezova, H., Slachtova, L., Martaskova, D., Kennedy, J. L., Levitan, R. D., Yilmaz, Z., Huemer, J., Koubek, D., Merl, E., Wagner, G., Lichtenstein, P., Breen, G., Cohen-Woods, S., Farmer, A., Mcguffin, P., Cichon, S., Giegling, I., Herms, S., Rujescu, D., Schreiber, S., Wichmann, H. -E., Dina, C., Sladek, R., Gambaro, G., Soranzo, N., Julia, A., Marsal, S., Rabionet, Ra, Gaborieau, V., Dick, D. M., Palotie, A., Ripatti, S., Widén, E., Andreassen, O. A., Espeseth, T., Lundervold, A., Reinvang, I., Steen, V. M., Le Hellard, S., Mattingsdal, M., Ntalla, I., Bencko, V., Foretova, L., Janout, V., Navratilova, M., Gallinger, S., Pinto, D., Scherer, S. W., Aschauer, H., Carlberg, L., Schosser, A., Alfredsson, L., Ding, B., Klareskog, L., Padyukov, L., Finan, C., Kalsi, G., Roberts, M., Logan, D. W., Peltonen, Leena, Ritchie, G. R. S., Courtet, P., Guillame, S., Jaussent, I., Barrett, J. C., Estivill, X., Hinney, A., Bulik, C. M., Mcginnis, Ralph, Sambrook, Jennifer, Stephens, Jonathan, Ouwehand, Willem H, Mcardle, Wendy L, Ring, Susan M, Strachan, David P, Alexander, Graeme, Conlon, Peter J, Dominiczak, Anna, Duncanson, Audrey, Hill, Adrian, Langford, Cordelia, Lord, Graham, Maxwell, Alexander P, Morgan, Linda, Sandford, Richard N, Sheerin, Neil, Vannberg, Fredrik O, Blackburn, Hannah, Chen, Wei-Min, Edkins, Sarah, Gillman, Mathew, Gray, Emma, Hunt, Sarah E, Onengut-Gumuscu, Suna, Potter, Simon, Rich, Stephen S, Simpkin, Dougla, Whittaker, Pamela, Hebebrand, Johannes (Beitragende*r), Scherag, S (Beitragende*r), Hinney, Anke (Beitragende*r), Hjelt Institute (-2014), Department of Public Health, Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland, Research Programs Unit, Research Programme of Molecular Medicine, Biostatistics Helsinki, Complex Disease Genetics, Genomics of Neurological and Neuropsychiatric Disorders, Genetic Epidemiology, Sullivan, Patrick F [0000-0002-6619-873X], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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Anorexia Nervosa ,Genotyping Techniques ,DIVERSITY ,Medizin ,SNPne ,Genome-wide association study ,0302 clinical medicine ,Gene Frequency ,Genetic Marker ,Settore MED/14 - NEFROLOGIA ,AIM ,WTCCC3 ,Genetics (clinical) ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis ,Genetics ,Genetics & Heredity ,0303 health sciences ,education.field_of_study ,Principal Component Analysis ,ASSOCIATION ,Single Nucleotide ,3142 Public health care science, environmental and occupational health ,3. Good health ,Phylogeography ,population stratification, AIMs, principal component analysis ,SET ,Human ,Genetic Markers ,population stratification ,Population ,Clinical Sciences ,European Continental Ancestry Group ,AIMs ,Reproducibility of Result ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,Ancestry-informative marker ,Biology ,principal component analysi ,Population stratification ,population stratification ,principal component analysis ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Article ,White People ,03 medical and health sciences ,Genetic ,Clinical Research ,ddc:570 ,Humans ,Polymorphism ,education ,Allele frequency ,030304 developmental biology ,GCAN ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysi ,Human Genome ,Reproducibility of Results ,Minor allele frequency ,Genetics, Population ,Evolutionary biology ,Sample Size ,3111 Biomedicine ,Genotyping Technique ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Genome-Wide Association Study - Abstract
The Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium 3 anorexia nervosa genome-wide association scan includes 2907 cases from 15 different populations of European origin genotyped on the Illumina 670K chip. We compared methods for identifying population stratification, and suggest list of markers that may help to counter this problem. It is usual to identify population structure in such studies using only common variants with minor allele frequency (MAF) >5%; we find that this may result in highly informative SNPs being discarded, and suggest that instead all SNPs with MAF >1% may be used. We established informative axes of variation identified via principal component analysis and highlight important features of the genetic structure of diverse European-descent populations, some studied for the first time at this scale. Finally, we investigated the substructure within each of these 15 populations and identified SNPs that help capture hidden stratification. This work can provide information regarding the designing and interpretation of association results in the International Consortia.European Journal of Human Genetics advance online publication, 19 February 2014; doi:10.1038/ejhg.2014.1.
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- 2014
40. Robotic total pancreatectomy with splenectomy for multifocal intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm
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Konstantinidis, I., primary, Tozzi, F., additional, Warner, S., additional, Melstrom, L., additional, Woo, Y., additional, Fong, Y., additional, Lee, B., additional, and Singh, G., additional
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- 2017
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41. Robotic liver resection for recurrent metastatic gastrointestinal stromal tumor of the stomach
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Konstantinidis, I.T., primary, Tozzi, F., additional, Warner, S., additional, Melstrom, L.G., additional, Fong, Y., additional, Singh, G., additional, and White, M., additional
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- 2017
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42. Liver resection synchronous with hepatic arterial infusion pump (HAIP) for colorectal cancer liver metastases is associated with improved survival compared to HAIP alone
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Konstantinidis, I.T., primary, Tozzi, F., additional, Warner, S., additional, Ituarte, P., additional, Fong, Y., additional, and Singh, G., additional
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- 2017
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43. The association between lower educational attainment and depression owing to shared genetic effects? Results in ∼25 000 subjects: Results in ~25,000 subjects
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Peyrot, W. J., Lee, S. H., Milaneschi, Y., Abdellaoui, A., Byrne, E. M., Esko, T., de Geus, E. J. C., Hemani, G., Hottenga, J. J., Kloiber, S., Levinson, D. F., Lucae, S., Martin, N. G., Medland, S. E., Metspalu, A., Milani, L., Noethen, M. M., Potash, J. B., Rietschel, M., Rietveld, C. A., Ripke, S., Shi, J., Willemsen, G., Zhu, Z., Boomsma, D. I., Wray, N. R., Penninx, B. W. J. H., Lewis, C. M., Hamilton, S. P., Weissman, M. M., Breen, G., Blackwood, D. H., Cichon, S., Heath, A. C., Holsboer, F., Madden, Pamela A., McGuffin, P., Muglia, P., Pergadia, M. L., Lin, D., Müller-Myhsok, B., Steinberg, S., Grabe, H. J., Lichtenstein, P., Magnusson, P., Perlis, R. H., Preisig, M., Smoller, J. W., Stefansson, K., Uher, R., Kutalik, Z., Tansey, K. E., Teumer, A., Viktorin, A., Barnes, M. R., Bettecken, T., Binder, E. B., Breuer, R., Castro, V. M., Churchill, S. E., Coryell, W. H., Craddock, N., Craig, I. W., Czamara, D., Degenhardt, F., Farmer, A. E., Fava, M., Frank, J., Gainer, V. S., Gallagher, P. J., Gordon, S. D., Goryachev, S., Gross, M., Guipponi, M., Henders, A. K., Herms, S., Hickie, I. B., Hoefels, S., Hoogendijk, W., Iosifescu, D. V., Ising, M., Jones, I., Jones, L., Jung-Ying, T., Knowles, J. A., Kohane, I. S., Kohli, M. A., Korszun, A., Landen, M., Lawson, W. B., Lewis, G., Macintyre, D., Maier, W., Mattheisen, M., McGrath, P. J., McIntosh, A., McLean, A., Middeldorp, C. M., Middleton, L., Montgomery, G. M., Murphy, S. N., Nauck, M., Nolen, W. A., Nyholt, Dale R., O'Donovan, M., Oskarsson, H., Pedersen, N., Scheftner, W. A., Schulz, A., Schulze, T. G., Shyn, S. I., Sigurdsson, E., Slager, S. L., Smit, J. H., Stefansson, H., Steffens, M., Thorgeirsson, T., Tozzi, F., Treutlein, J., Uhr, M., van den Oord, E. J., van Grootheest, G., Völzke, H., Weilburg, J. B., Zitman, F. G., Neale, B., Daly, M., Sullivan, P. F., Agrawal, Arpana, Albrecht, Eva, Z Alizadeh, Behrooz, Allik, J. ri, Amin, Najaf, Attia, John R., Bandinelli, Stefania, Barnard, John, Bastardot, Franois, e Baumeister, Sebastian, Beauchamp, Jonathan, Benjamin, Daniel J., Benke, Kelly S., Bennett, David A., Berger, Klaus, Bielak, Lawrence F., Bierut, Laura J., Boatman, Jeffrey A., Boyle, Patricia A., Bültmann, Ute, Campbell, Harry, Cesarini, David, Chabris, Christopher F., Cherkas, Lynn, Chung, Mina K., Conley, Dalton, Cucca, Francesco, Davey-Smith, George, Davies, Gail, de Andrade, Mariza, de Jager, Philip L., de Leeuw, Christiaan, de Neve, Jan-Emmanuel, Deary, Ian J., Dedoussis, George V., Deloukas, Panos, Derringer, Jaime, Dimitriou, Maria, Eiriksdottir, Gudny, Eklund, Niina, Elderson, Martin F., Eriksson, Johan G., Evans, Daniel S., Evans, David M., Faul, Jessica D., Fehrmann, Rudolf, Ferrucci, Luigi, Fischer, Krista, Franke, Lude, Garcia, Melissa E., Gieger, Christian, Gjessing, Hkon K., Groenen, Patrick J. F., Grönberg, Henrik, Gudnason, Vilmundur, Hägg, Sara, Hall, Per, Harris, Jennifer R., Harris, Juliette M., Harris, Tamara B., Hastie, Nicholas D., Hayward, Caroline, Hernandez, Dena G., Hoffmann, Wolgang, Hofman, Adriaan, Hofman, Albert, Holle, Rolf, Holliday, Elizabeth G., Holzapfel, Christina, Iacono, William G., Ibrahim-Verbaas, Carla A., Illig, Thomas, Ingelsson, Erik, Jacobsson, Bo, Järvelin, Marjo-Riitta, Jhun, Min A., Johannesson, Magnus, Joshi, Peter K., Jugessur, Astanand, Kaakinen, Marika, Kähönen, Mika, Kanoni, Stavroula, Kaprio, Jaakkko, Kardia, Sharon L. R., Karjalainen, Juha, Kirkpatrick, Robert M., Koellinger, Philipp D., Kolcic, Ivana, Kowgier, Matthew, Kristiansson, Kati, Krueger, Robert F., Kutalik, Z. ltan, Lahti, Jari, Laibson, David, Latvala, Antti, Launer, Lenore J., Lawlor, Debbie A., Lethimäki, Terho, Li, Jingmei, Lichtenstein, Paul, Lichtner, Peter K., Liewald, David C., Lin, Peng, Lind, Penelope A., Liu, Yongmei, Lohman, Kurt, Loitfelder, Marisa, Magnusson, Patrick K. E., Mäkinen, Tomi E., Vidal, Pedro Marques, Martin, Nicolas W., Masala, Marco, McGue, Matt, McMahon, George, Meirelles, Osorio, Meyer, Michelle N., Mielck, Andreas, Miller, Michael B., Montgomery, Grant W., Mukherjee, Sutapa, Myhre, Ronny, Nuotio, Marja-Liisa, J Oldmeadow, Christopher, Oostra, Ben A., Palmer, Lyle J., Palotie, Aarno, Perola, Markus, Petrovic, Katja E., Peyser, Patricia A., Polašek, Ozren, Posthuma, Danielle, Preisig, Martin, Quaye, Lydia, Räikkönen, Katri, Raitakari, Olli T., Realo, Anu, Reinmaa, Eva, Rice, John P., Ring, Susan M., Ripatti, Samuli, Rivadeneira, Fernando, Rizzi, Thais S., Rudan, Igor, Rustichini, Aldo, Salomaa, Veikko, Sarin, Antti-Pekka, Schlessinger, David, Schmidt, Helena, Schmidt, Reinhold, Scott, Rodney J., Shakhbazov, Konstantin, Smith, Albert V., Smith, Jennifer A., Snieder, Harold, St Pourcain, Beate, Starr, John M., Sul, Jae Hoon, Surakka, Ida, Svento, Rauli, Tanaka, Toshiko, Terracciano, Antonio, Teumer, Alexander, Thurik, A. Roy, Tiemeier, Henning, Timpson, Nicholas J., Uitterlinden, André G., van der Loos, Matthijs J. H. M., van Duijn, Cornelia M., van Rooij, Frank J. A., van Wagoner, David R., Vartiainen, Erkki, Viikari, Jorma, Visscher, Peter M., Vitart, Veronique, Vollenweider, Peter K., Völzke, Henry, Vonk, Judith M., Waeber, G. rard, Weir, David R., Wellmann, J. rgen, Westra, Harm-Jan, Wichmann, H. Erich, Widen, Elisabeth, Wilson, James F., Wright, Alan F., Yang, Jian, Yu, Lei, Zhao, Wei, and Academic Medical Center
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Adult ,Male ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Likelihood Functions ,Genotype ,Estonia/epidemiology ,Netherlands/epidemiology ,Depressive Disorder, Major/epidemiology ,Middle Aged ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide/genetics ,Cohort Studies ,Odds Ratio ,Educational Status ,Humans ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,Gene-Environment Interaction ,Genetic Association Studies ,Aged - Abstract
An association between lower educational attainment (EA) and an increased risk for depression has been confirmed in various western countries. This study examines whether pleiotropic genetic effects contribute to this association. Therefore, data were analyzed from a total of 9662 major depressive disorder (MDD) cases and 14 949 controls (with no lifetime MDD diagnosis) from the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium with additional Dutch and Estonian data. The association of EA and MDD was assessed with logistic regression in 15 138 individuals indicating a significantly negative association in our sample with an odds ratio for MDD 0.78 (0.75-0.82) per standard deviation increase in EA. With data of 884 105 autosomal common single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), three methods were applied to test for pleiotropy between MDD and EA: (i) genetic profile risk scores (GPRS) derived from training data for EA (independent meta-analysis on ∼120 000 subjects) and MDD (using a 10-fold leave-one-out procedure in the current sample), (ii) bivariate genomic-relationship-matrix restricted maximum likelihood (GREML) and (iii) SNP effect concordance analysis (SECA). With these methods, we found (i) that the EA-GPRS did not predict MDD status, and MDD-GPRS did not predict EA, (ii) a weak negative genetic correlation with bivariate GREML analyses, but this correlation was not consistently significant, (iii) no evidence for concordance of MDD and EA SNP effects with SECA analysis. To conclude, our study confirms an association of lower EA and MDD risk, but this association was not because of measurable pleiotropic genetic effects, which suggests that environmental factors could be involved, for example, socioeconomic status.
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- 2015
44. Estudo do Efeito de Mistura de Petróleos na Determinação da Acidez, do Teor de Enxofre, do Ponto de Fluidez, da Viscosidade e da Gravidade API dos blends obtidos
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TOZZI, F. C., ROMAO, W., CARDOSO, F. M. R., QUEIROZ JUNIOR, L. H. K., and LACERDA Jr., V.
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Petróleo ,Enxofre ,Óleos pesados ,Ponto de fluid ,Blend ,NAT - Abstract
Made available in DSpace on 2016-08-29T15:35:38Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 tese_8657_Fabrício Carlos Tozzi.pdf: 2062578 bytes, checksum: affe975e528cc53bc578480c06857f6c (MD5) Previous issue date: 2015-03-26 O Brasil não é um grande produtor de óleos leves e, além disso, as refinarias brasileiras ainda não processam integralmente os óleos pesados, logo uma alternativa seria a mistura de óleos leves, ou de características mais leves, com óleos pesados, o que levaria à formação de um novo óleo com característica relativamente leve. O nome deste processo é blending e estas misturas são denominadas de blends. Quando se prepara um blend, há a formação de um novo óleo com características diferenciadas, quando comparado a matriz original (óleo ou blend), logo é importante avaliar o impacto dessa mistura nas novas propriedades físico-químicas produzidas. Neste trabalho, foram utilizados quatro petróleos, sendo dois óleos offshore designados de A e B (Gravidade API = 26,4 e 18,3) e dois onshore designados de C e D (Gravidade API = 12,2 e 19,6, respectivamente) sendo a maior parte classificados como pesados, que foram usados para produção de 68 blends. Estes foram analisados e os novos valores encontrados para as propriedades físico-químicas dos blends como NAT, enxofre total, ponto de fluidez, Gravidade API e viscosidade foram avaliadas e comparadas aos óleos originais. Entre os 68 blends produzidos, 13 blends apresentaram, simultaneamente, uma melhora nos valores para NAT, S total, ponto de fluidez e Gravidade API. Vale destacar que dois blends (nomeados de B30 e B34) apresentaram os melhores resultados para o NAT, S total, viscosidade cinemática e Gravidade API. Como a composição química utilizada na preparação destes blends foram diferenciadas, houve também a necessidade de se verificar a influência da concentração dos óleos A, B, C e D nestes resultados dos blends. É possível verificar uma importante contribuição do óleo A nestes resultados encontrados. Portanto, é possível concluir que quando não há uma grande produção de óleos leves, a mistura destes com os óleos pesados possibilita a formação de misturas com características de óleo relativamente mais leve, otimizando assim, as etapas de produção, processamento e refino.
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- 2015
45. A genome-wide association study of anorexia nervosa
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Boraska, V. Franklin, C.S. Floyd, J.A.B. Thornton, L.M. Huckins, L.M. Southam, L. Rayner, N.W. Tachmazidou, I. Klump, K.L. Treasure, J. Lewis, C.M. Schmidt, U. Tozzi, F. Kiezebrink, K. Hebebrand, J. Gorwood, P. Adan, R.A.H. Kas, M.J.H. Favaro, A. Santonastaso, P. Fernández-Aranda, F. Gratacos, M. Rybakowski, F. Dmitrzak-Weglarz, M. Kaprio, J. Keski-Rahkonen, A. Raevuori, A. Van Furth, E.F. Slof-Op 't Landt, M.C.T. Hudson, J.I. Reichborn-Kjennerud, T. Knudsen, G.P.S. Monteleone, P. Kaplan, A.S. Karwautz, A. Hakonarson, H. Berrettini, W.H. Guo, Y. Li, D. Schork, N.J. Komaki, G. Ando, T. Inoko, H. Esko, T. Fischer, K. Männik, K. Metspalu, A. Baker, J.H. Cone, R.D. Dackor, J. DeSocio, J.E. Hilliard, C.E. O'Toole, J.K. Pantel, J. Szatkiewicz, J.P. Taico, C. Zerwas, S. Trace, S.E. Davis, O.S.P. Helder, S. Bühren, K. Burghardt, R. De Zwaan, M. Egberts, K. Ehrlich, S. Herpertz-Dahlmann, B. Herzog, W. Imgart, H. Scherag, A. Scherag, S. Zipfel, S. Boni, C. Ramoz, N. Versini, A. Brandys, M.K. Danner, U.N. De Kovel, C. Hendriks, J. Koeleman, B.P.C. Ophoff, R.A. Strengman, E. Van Elburg, A.A. Bruson, A. Clementi, M. Degortes, D. Forzan, M. Tenconi, E. Docampo, E. Escaramís, G. Jiménez-Murcia, S. Lissowska, J. Rajewski, A. Szeszenia-Dabrowska, N. Slopien, A. Hauser, J. Karhunen, L. Meulenbelt, I. Slagboom, P.E. Tortorella, A. Maj, M. Dedoussis, G. Dikeos, D. Gonidakis, F. Tziouvas, K. Tsitsika, A. Papezova, H. Slachtova, L. Martaskova, D. Kennedy, J.L. Levitan, R.D. Yilmaz, Z. Huemer, J. Koubek, D. Merl, E. Wagner, G. Lichtenstein, P. Breen, G. Cohen-Woods, S. Farmer, A. McGuffin, P. Cichon, S. Giegling, I. Herms, S. Rujescu, D. Schreiber, S. Wichmann, H.-E. Dina, C. Sladek, R. Gambaro, G. Soranzo, N. Julia, A. Marsal, S. Rabionet, R. Gaborieau, V. Dick, D.M. Palotie, A. Ripatti, S. Widén, E. Andreassen, O.A. Espeseth, T. Lundervold, A. Reinvang, I. Steen, V.M. Le Hellard, S. Mattingsdal, M. Ntalla, I. Bencko, V. Foretova, L. Janout, V. Navratilova, M. Gallinger, S. Pinto, D. Scherer, S.W. Aschauer, H. Carlberg, L. Schosser, A. Alfredsson, L. Ding, B. Klareskog, L. Padyukov, L. Courtet, P. Guillaume, S. Jaussent, I. Finan, C. Kalsi, G. Roberts, M. Logan, D.W. Peltonen, L. Ritchie, G.R.S. Barrett, J.C. Anderson, C.A. McGinnis, R. Zeggini, E. Sambrook, J. Stephens, J. Ouwehand, W.H. McArdle, W.L. Ring, S.M. Strachan, D.P. Alexander, G. Bulik, C.M. Collier, D.A. Conlon, P.J. Dominiczak, A. Duncanson, A. Hill, A. Langford, C. Lord, G. Maxwell, A.P. Morgan, L. Sandford, R.N. Sheerin, N. Vannberg, F.O. Blackburn, H. Chen, W.-M. Edkins, S. Gillman, M. Gray, E. Hunt, S.E. Onengut-Gumuscu, S. Potter, S. Rich, S.S. Simpkin, D. Whittaker, P. Estivill, X. Hinney, A. Sullivan, P.F. The Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium 3
- Abstract
Anorexia nervosa (AN) is a complex and heritable eating disorder characterized by dangerously low body weight. Neither candidate gene studies nor an initial genome-wide association study (GWAS) have yielded significant and replicated results. We performed a GWAS in 2907 cases with AN from 14 countries (15 sites) and 14 860 ancestrally matched controls as part of the Genetic Consortium for AN (GCAN) and the Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium 3 (WTCCC3). Individual association analyses were conducted in each stratum and meta-analyzed across all 15 discovery data sets. Seventy-six (72 independent) single nucleotide polymorphisms were taken forward for in silico (two data sets) or de novo (13 data sets) replication genotyping in 2677 independent AN cases and 8629 European ancestry controls along with 458 AN cases and 421 controls from Japan. The final global meta-analysis across discovery and replication data sets comprised 5551 AN cases and 21 080 controls. AN subtype analyses (1606 AN restricting; 1445 AN binge-purge) were performed. No findings reached genome-wide significance. Two intronic variants were suggestively associated: rs9839776 (P = 3.01 × 10-7) in SOX2OT and rs17030795 (P = 5.84 × 10-6) in PPP3CA. Two additional signals were specific to Europeans: rs1523921 (P = 5.76 × 10-6) between CUL3 and FAM124B and rs1886797 (P = 8.05 × 10-6) near SPATA13. Comparing discovery with replication results, 76% of the effects were in the same direction, an observation highly unlikely to be due to chance (P = 4 × 10-6), strongly suggesting that true findings exist but our sample, the largest yet reported, was underpowered for their detection. The accrual of large genotyped AN case-control samples should be an immediate priority for the field. © 2014 Macmillan Publishers Limited All rights reserved.
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- 2014
46. Using ancestry-informative markers to identify fine structure across 15 populations of European origin
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Huckins, L.M. Boraska, V. Franklin, C.S. Floyd, J.A.B. Southam, L. Sullivan, P.F. Bulik, C.M. Collier, D.A. Tyler-Smith, C. Zeggini, E. Tachmazidou, I. Thornton, L.M. William Rayner, N. Klump, K.L. Treasure, J. Schmidt, U. Tozzi, F. Kiezebrink, K. Hebebrand, J. Gorwood, P. Adan, R.A.H. Kas, M.J.H. Favaro, A. Santonastaso, P. Fernández-Aranda, F. Gratacos, M. Rybakowski, F. Dmitrzak-Weglarz, M. Kaprio, J. Keski-Rahkonen, A. Raevuori, A. Van Furth, E.F. Slof-Op t Landt, M.C.T. Hudson, J.I. Reichborn-Kjennerud, T. Knudsen, G.P.S. Monteleone, P. Kaplan, A.S. Karwautz, A. Hakonarson, H. Berrettini, W.H. Guo, Y. Li, D. Schork, N.J. Komaki, G. Ando, T. Inoko, H. Esko, T. Fischer, K. Männik, K. Metspalu, A. Baker, J.H. Cone, R.D. Dackor, J. DeSocio, J.E. Hilliard, C.E. O'Toole, J.K. Pantel, J. Szatkiewicz, J.P. Taico, C. Zerwas, S. Trace, S.E. Davis, O.S.P. Helder, S. Bühren, K. Burghardt, R. de Zwaan, M. Egberts, K. Ehrlich, S. Herpertz-Dahlmann, B. Herzog, W. Imgart, H. Scherag, S. Zipfel, S. Boni, C. Ramoz, N. Versini, A. Brandys, M.K. Danner, U.N. de Kovel, C. Hendriks, J. Koeleman, B.P.C. Ophoff, R.A. Strengman, E. van Elburg, A.A. Bruson, A. Clementi, M. Degortes, D. Forzan, M. Tenconi, E. Docampo, E. Escaramís, G. Jiménez-Murcia, S. Lissowska, J. Rajewski, A. Szeszenia-Dabrowska, N. Slopien, A. Hauser, J. Karhunen, L. Meulenbelt, I. Slagboom, P.E. Tortorella, A. Maj, M. Dedoussis, G. Dikeos, D. Gonidakis, F. Tziouvas, K. Tsitsika, A. Papezova, H. Slachtova, L. Martaskova, D. Kennedy, J.L. Levitan, R.D. Yilmaz, Z. Huemer, J. Koubek, D. Merl, E. Wagner, G. Lichtenstein, P. Breen, G. Cohen-Woods, S. Farmer, A. McGuffin, P. Cichon, S. Giegling, I. Herms, S. Rujescu, D. Schreiber, S. Wichmann, H.-E. Dina, C. Sladek, R. Gambaro, G. Soranzo, N. Julia, A. Marsal, S. Rabionet, R. Gaborieau, V. Dick, D.M. Palotie, A. Ripatti, S. Widén, E. Andreassen, O.A. Espeseth, T. Lundervold, A. Reinvang, I. Steen, V.M. Le Hellard, S. Mattingsdal, M. Ntalla, I. Bencko, V. Foretova, L. Janout, V. Navratilova, M. Gallinger, S. Pinto, D. Scherer, S.W. Aschauer, H. Carlberg, L. Schosser, A. Alfredsson, L. Ding, B. Klareskog, L. Padyukov, L. Finan, C. Kalsi, G. Roberts, M. Logan, D.W. Peltonen, L. Ritchie, G.R.S. Courtet, P. Guillame, S. Jaussent, I. Barrett, J.C. Estivill, X. Hinney, A. Bulik, C.M. McGinnis, R. Sambrook, J. Stephens, J. Ouwehand, W.H. McArdle, W.L. Ring, S.M. Strachan, D.P. Alexander, G. Conlon, P.J. Dominiczak, A. Anderson, C.A. Hill, A. Langford, C. Lord, G. Maxwell, A.P. Morgan, L. Sandford, R.N. Sheerin, N. Vannberg, F.O. Blackburn, H. Chen, W.-M. Edkins, S. Gillman, M. Gray, E. Hunt, S.E. Onengut-Gumuscu, S. Potter, S. Rich, S.S. Simpkin, D. Whittaker, P.
- Abstract
The Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium 3 anorexia nervosa genome-wide association scan includes 2907 cases from 15 different populations of European origin genotyped on the Illumina 670K chip. We compared methods for identifying population stratification, and suggest list of markers that may help to counter this problem. It is usual to identify population structure in such studies using only common variants with minor allele frequency (MAF) >5%; we find that this may result in highly informative SNPs being discarded, and suggest that instead all SNPs with MAF >1% may be used. We established informative axes of variation identified via principal component analysis and highlight important features of the genetic structure of diverse European-descent populations, some studied for the first time at this scale. Finally, we investigated the substructure within each of these 15 populations and identified SNPs that help capture hidden stratification. This work can provide information regarding the designing and interpretation of association results in the International Consortia. © 2014 Macmillan Publishers Limited All rights reserved.
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- 2014
47. Veränderungen im Fernröntgenbild nach der Behandlung von Klasse-II/1-Fällen mit dem Aktivator oder mit aktivatorähnlichen Geräten
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Brechtold, H., Glaiber, W., Kigele, E., Rheinheimer, F., Rösch, D., Rösch-Tozzi, F., Strauß, H., and Wagenmann, J.
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- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. All SNPs are not created equal: genome-wide association studies reveal a consistent pattern of enrichment among functionally annotated SNPs
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Aj, Schork, Wk, Thompson, Pham P, Torkamani A, Jc, Roddey, Pf, Sullivan, Jr, Kelsoe, Donovan Mc, O., Furberg H, Tobacco and Genetics Consortium, Bipolar Disorder Psychiatric Genomics Consortium, Schizophrenia Psychiatric Genomics Consortium, Nj, Schork, Oa, Andreassen, Am, Dale, Absher D, Agudo A, Almgren P, Ardissino D, Tl, Assimes, Bandinelli S, Barzan L, Bencko V, Benhamou S, Ej, Benjamin, Bernardinelli L, Bis J, Boehnke M, Boerwinkle E, Di, Boomsma, Brennan P, Canova C, Castellsagué X, Chanock S, Chasman D, Di, Conway, Dackor J, Ej, Geus, Duan J, Elosua R, Everett B, Fabianova E, Ferrucci L, Foretova L, Sp, Fortmann, Franceschini N, Frayling T, Furberg C, Pv, Gejman, Groop L, Gu F, Guralnik J, Se, Hankinson, Haritunians T, Healy C, Hofman A, Holcátová I, Dj, Hunter, Sj, Hwang, Jp, Ioannidis, Iribarren C, Au, Jackson, Janout V, Kaprio J, Kim Y, Kjaerheim K, Jw, Knowles, Kraft P, Ladenvall C, Lagiou P, Lanthrop M, Lerman C, Df, Levinson, Levy D, Md, Li, Dy, Lin, Eh, Lips, Lissowska J, Lowry R, Lucas G, Tv, Macfarlane, Maes H, Pm, Mannucci, Mates D, Mauri F, Ja, Mcgovern, Jd, Mckay, McKnight B, Melander O, Pa, Merlini, Milaneschi Y, Kl, Mohlke, Donnell Cj, O., Pare G, Bw, Penninx, Perry J, Posthuma D, Sr, Preis, Psaty B, Quertermous T, Vs, Ramachandran, Richiardi L, Ridker P, Rose J, Rudnai P, Salomaa V, Ar, Sanders, Sm, Schwartz, Shi J, Jh, Smit, Hm, Stringham, Szeszenia-Dabrowska N, Tanaka T, Taylor K, Thacker E, Thornton L, Tiemeier H, Tuomilehto J, Ag, Uitterlinden, Cm, Duijn, Jm, Vink, Vogelzangs N, Bf, Voight, Walter S, Willemsen G, Zaridze D, Znaor A, Akil H, Anjorin A, Backlund L, Ja, Badner, Jd, Barchas, Tb, Barrett, Bass N, Bauer M, Bellivier F, Se, Bergen, Berrettini W, Blackwood D, Cs, Bloss, Breen G, Breuer R, We, Bunner, Burmeister M, Byerley W, Caesar S, Chambert K, Cichon S, St Clair D, Da, Collier, Corvin A, Wh, Coryell, Craddock N, Dw, Craig, Daly M, Day R, Degenhardt F, Djurovic S, Dudbridge F, Hj, Edenberg, Elkin A, Etain B, Ae, Farmer, Ma, Ferreira, Ferrier I, Flickinger M, Foroud T, Frank J, Fraser C, Frisén L, Es, Gershon, Gill M, Gordon-Smith K, Ek, Green, Ta, Greenwood, Grozeva D, Guan W, Gurling H, Ó, Gustafsson, Ml, Hamshere, Hautzinger M, Herms S, Hipolito M, Pa, Holmans, Cm, Hultman, Jamain S, Eg, Jones, Jones I, Jones L, Kandaswamy R, Jl, Kennedy, Gk, Kirov, Dl, Koller, Kwan P, Landén M, Langstrom N, Lathrop M, Lawrence J, Wb, Lawson, Leboyer M, Ph, Lee, Li J, Lichtenstein P, Lin D, Liu C, Fw, Lohoff, Lucae S, Pb, Mahon, Maier W, Ng, Martin, Mattheisen M, Matthews K, Mattingsdal M, Ka, Mcghee, McGuffin P, Mg, Mcinnis, McIntosh A, McKinney R, Aw, Mclean, Fj, Mcmahon, McQuillin A, Meier S, Melle I, Meng F, Pb, Mitchell, Gw, Montgomery, Moran J, Morken G, Dw, Morris, Moskvina V, Muglia P, Tw, Mühleisen, Wj, Muir, Müller-Myhsok B, Rm, Myers, Cm, Nievergelt, Nikolov I, Nimgaonkar V, Mm, Nöthen, Ji, Nurnberger, Ea, Nwulia, O'Dushlaine C, Osby U, Óskarsson H, Mj, Owen, Petursson H, Bs, Pickard, Porgeirsson P, Jb, Potash, Propping P, Sm, Purcell, Quinn E, Raychaudhuri S, Rice J, Rietschel M, Ruderfer D, Schalling M, Af, Schatzberg, Wa, Scheftner, Pr, Schofield, Tg, Schulze, Schumacher J, Mm, Schwarz, Scolnick E, Lj, Scott, Pd, Shilling, Sigurdsson E, Sklar P, En, Smith, Stefansson H, Stefansson K, Steffens M, Steinberg S, Strauss J, Strohmaier J, Szelinger S, Rc, Thompson, Tozzi F, Treutlein J, Jb, Vincent, Sj, Watson, Tf, Wienker, Williamson R, Sh, Witt, Wright A, Xu W, Ah, Young, Pp, Zandi, Zhang P, Zöllner S, Agartz I, Albus M, Alexander M, Rl, Amdur, Amin F, Bitter I, Dw, Black, Ad, Børglum, Ma, Brown, Bruggeman R, Ng, Buccola, Wf, Byerley, Cahn W, Rm, Cantor, Vj, Carr, Sv, Catts, Choudhury K, Cloninger C, Cormican P, Pa, Danoy, Datta S, DeHert M, Demontis D, Dikeos D, Donnelly P, Donohoe G, Duong L, Dwyer S, Fanous A, Fink-Jensen A, Freedman R, Nb, Freimer, Friedl M, Georgieva L, Giegling I, Glenthøj B, Godard S, Golimbet V, de Haan L, Hansen M, Hansen T, Am, Hartmann, Fa, Henskens, Dm, Hougaard, Ingason A, Av, Jablensky, Kd, Jakobsen, Jay M, Eg, Jönsson, Jürgens G, Rs, Kahn, Mc, Keller, Ks, Kendler, Kenis G, Kenny E, Konnerth H, Konte B, Krabbendam L, Krasucki R, Vk, Lasseter, Laurent C, Lencz T, Lerer F, Ky, Liang, Ja, Lieberman, Dh, Linszen, Lönnqvist J, Cm, Loughland, Aw, Maclean, Bs, Maher, Ak, Malhotra, Mallet J, Malloy P, Jj, Mcgrath, McLean DE, Pt, Michie, Milanova V, Mors O, Pb, Mortensen, Bj, Mowry, Myin-Germeys I, Neale B, Da, Nertney, Nestadt G, Nielsen J, Nordentoft M, Norton N, O'Neill F, Olincy A, Olsen L, Ra, Ophoff, Tf, Ørntoft, van Os J, Pantelis C, Papadimitriou G, Cn, Pato, Mt, Pato, Peltonen L, Pickard B, Op, Pietiläinen, Pimm J, Ae, Pulver, Puri V, Digby Quested, Hb, Rasmussen, Jm, Réthelyi, Ribble R, Bp, Riley, Rossin L, Ruggeri M, Rujescu D, Schall U, Sg, Schwab, Rj, Scott, Jm, Silverman, Cc, Spencer, Strange A, Strengman E, Stroup T, Suvisaari J, Terenius L, Thirumalai S, Timm S, Toncheva D, Tosato S, Ej, Den Oord, Veldink J, Pm, Visscher, Walsh D, Ag, Wang, Werge T, Wiersma D, Db, Wildenauer, Hj, Williams, Nm, Williams, van Winkel R, Wormley B., Biological Psychology, Functional Genomics, Educational Neuroscience, Neuroscience Campus Amsterdam - Brain Mechanisms in Health & Disease, LEARN! - Social cognition and learning, Biophotonics and Medical Imaging, LEARN! - Brain, learning and development, Neuroscience Campus Amsterdam - Neurobiology of Mental Health, EMGO+ - Mental Health, Neuroscience Campus Amsterdam - Brain Imaging Technology, LaserLaB - Biophotonics and Microscopy, ANS - Amsterdam Neuroscience, Adult Psychiatry, Psychiatry, Human genetics, Epidemiology and Data Science, NCA - Brain mechanisms in health and disease, NCA - Neurobiology of mental health, EMGO - Mental health, NCA - Brain imaging technology, Psychiatrie & Neuropsychologie, RS: MHeNs School for Mental Health and Neuroscience, Gibson, Greg, Germeys, Inez, van Winkel, Ruud, and De Hert, Marc
- Subjects
False discovery rate ,Netherlands Twin Register (NTR) ,Cancer Research ,Linkage disequilibrium ,Genome-wide association study ,Linkage Disequilibrium ,0302 clinical medicine ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Genetics (clinical) ,Genetics ,0303 health sciences ,Statistics ,Genomics ,Single Nucleotide ,Genome Scans ,Tobacco and Genetics Consortium ,Functional Genomics ,Phenotype ,complex trait ,Research Article ,Bipolar Disorder Psychiatric Genomics Consortium ,lcsh:QH426-470 ,SNP ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,Computational biology ,Biostatistics ,Biology ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,03 medical and health sciences ,"genome-wide association study" ,Genome Analysis Tools ,Clinical Research ,Schizophrenia Psychiatric Genomics Consortium ,Genome-Wide Association Studies ,Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Statistical Methods ,Polymorphism ,Molecular Biology ,Genetic Association Studies ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,030304 developmental biology ,Genetic association ,Linkage (software) ,Human Genome ,Computational Biology ,Human Genetics ,Heritability ,R1 ,schizophrenia ,lcsh:Genetics ,Schizophrenia ,Mathematics ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Recent results indicate that genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have the potential to explain much of the heritability of common complex phenotypes, but methods are lacking to reliably identify the remaining associated single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). We applied stratified False Discovery Rate (sFDR) methods to leverage genic enrichment in GWAS summary statistics data to uncover new loci likely to replicate in independent samples. Specifically, we use linkage disequilibrium-weighted annotations for each SNP in combination with nominal p-values to estimate the True Discovery Rate (TDR = 1−FDR) for strata determined by different genic categories. We show a consistent pattern of enrichment of polygenic effects in specific annotation categories across diverse phenotypes, with the greatest enrichment for SNPs tagging regulatory and coding genic elements, little enrichment in introns, and negative enrichment for intergenic SNPs. Stratified enrichment directly leads to increased TDR for a given p-value, mirrored by increased replication rates in independent samples. We show this in independent Crohn's disease GWAS, where we find a hundredfold variation in replication rate across genic categories. Applying a well-established sFDR methodology we demonstrate the utility of stratification for improving power of GWAS in complex phenotypes, with increased rejection rates from 20% in height to 300% in schizophrenia with traditional FDR and sFDR both fixed at 0.05. Our analyses demonstrate an inherent stratification among GWAS SNPs with important conceptual implications that can be leveraged by statistical methods to improve the discovery of loci., Author Summary Modern genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have failed to identify large portions of the genetic basis of common, complex traits. Recent work suggested this could be because many genetic variants, each with individually small effects, compose their genetic architecture, limiting the power of GWAS. Moreover, these variants appear more abundantly in and near genes. Using genome annotations, summary statistics from several of the largest GWAS, and established statistical methods for quantifying distributions of test statistics, we show a consistency across studies. Namely, we show that, across all assessed traits, the test statistics resulting from SNPs that are related to the 5′ UTR of genes show the largest abundance of associations, while SNPs related to exons and the 3′UTR are also enriched. SNPs related to introns are only moderately enriched, and intergenic SNPs show a depletion of associations relative to the average SNP. This enrichment corresponds directly to increased replication across independent samples and can be incorporated a priori into statistical methods to improve discovery and prediction. Our results contribute to on-going debates about the functional nature of the genetic architecture of complex traits and point to avenues for leveraging existing GWAS data for discovery in future GWA and sequencing studies.
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- 2013
49. Identification of risk loci with shared effects on five major psychiatric disorders:a genome-wide analysis
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Smoller, J.W., Ripke, S., Lee, P.H., Neale, B., Nurnberger, J.I., Santangelo, S., Sullivan, P.F., Perlis, R.H., Purcell, S.M., Fanous, A., Neale, M.C., Rietschel, M., Schulze, T.G., Thapar, A., Anney, R., Buitelaar, J.K., Farone, S.V., Hoogendijk, W.J.G., Levinson, D.F., Lesch, K.P., Riley, B., Schachar, R., Sonuga-Barke, E.J., Absher, D., Agartz, I., Akil, H., Amin, F., Andreassen, O.A., Anjorin, A., Arking, D., Asherson, P., Azevedo, M.H., Backlund, L., Badner, J.A., Banaschewski, T., Barchas, J.D., Barnes, M.R., Bass, N., Bauer, M.C.R., Bellivier, F., Bergen, S.E., Berrettini, W., Bettecken, T., Biederman, J, Binder, E.B., Black, D.W., Blackwood, D.H., Bloss, C.S., Boehnke, M., Boomsma, D.I., Breen, G., Breuer, R., Buccola, N.G., Bunner, W.E., Burmeister, M., Buxbaum, J.D., Byerley, W. F., Sian, C., Cantor, R.M., Chakravarti, A., Chambert, K., Chicon, S., Cloniger, C.R., Collier, D.A., Cook, E., Coon, H., Corvin, A., Coryell, W.H., Craig, D.W., Craig, I.W., Curtis, D., Czamara, D., Daly, M., Datta, S., Day, R., de Geus, E.J.C., Degenhardt, F., Devlin, B., Srdjan, D., Doyle, A.E., Duan, J., Dudbridge, F., Edenberg, H.J., Elkin, A., Etain, B., Farmer, A.E., Ferreira, M.A.R., Ferrier, I.N., Flickinger, M., Foroud, T., Frank, J., Franke, B., Fraser, C., Freedman, R., Freimer, N.B., Friedl, M., Frisén, L., Gejman, P.V., Georgieva, L., Gershon, E.S., Giegling, I., Gill, M., Gordon, S.D., Gordon-Smith, K., Green, E.K., Greenwood, T.A., Gross, M., Grozeva, D., Guan, W., Gurling, H., Gustafsson, O., Hakonarson, H., Hamilton, S.P., Hamshere, M.L., Hansen, T.F., Hartmann, A.M., Hautzinger, M., Heath, A.C., Henders, A.K., Herms, S., Hickie, I.B., Hipolito, M., Hoefels, S., Holmans, P.A., Holsboer, F., Hottenga, J.J., Hultman, C. M., Ingason, A., Ising, M., Jamain, S., Jones, E.G., Jones, L., Jones, I., Jung-Ying, T., Kahler, A., Kandaswamy, R., Keller, M.C., Kelsoe, J., Kennedy, J.L., Kenny, E., Kim, Y., Kirov, G. K., Knowles, J.A., Kohli, M.A., Koller, D.L., Konte, B., Korszun, A., Krasucki, R., Kuntsi, J., Phoenix, K., Landén, M., Langstrom, N., Lathrop, M., Lawrence, J., Lawson, W.B., Leboyer, M., Lencz, T., Lewis, C.M., Li, J., Lichtenstein, P., Lieberman, J. A., Lin, D., Liu, C., Lohoff, F.W., Loo, S.K., Lucae, S., MacIntyre, D.J., Madden, P.A.F., Magnusson, P., Mahon, P.B., Maier, W., Malhotra, A.K., Mattheisen, M., Matthews, K., Mattingsdal, M., McCarroll, S., McGhee, K.A., McGough, J.J., McGrath, P.J., McGuffin, P., McInnis, M.G., McIntosh, A., McKinney, R., McClean, A.W., McMahon, F.J., McQuillin, A., Medeiros, H., Medland, S.E., Meier, S., Melle, I., Meng, F., Middeldorp, C.M., Middleton, L., Vihra, M., Mitchell, P.B., Montgomery, G.W., Moran, J., Morken, G., Morris, D.W., Moskvina, V., Mowry, B. J., Muglia, P., Mühleisen, T.W., Muir, W.J., Müller-Myhsok, B., Myers, R.M., Nelson, S.F., Nievergelt, C.M., Nikolovq, I., Nimgaonkar, V.L., Nolen, W.A., Nöthen, M.M., Nwulia, E.A., Nyholt, DR, O'Donovan, M.C., O'Dushlaine, C., Oades, R.D., Olincy, A., Olsen, L., Ophoff, R.A., Osby, U., Óskarsson, H., Owen, M.J., Palotie, A., Pato, M.T., Pato, C.N., Penninx, B.W.J.H., Pergadia, M.L., Petursson, H., Pickard, B.S., Pimm, J., Piven, J., Porgeirsson, P., Posthuma, D., Potash, J.B., Propping, J., Puri, V., Quested, D., Quinn, E.M., Rasmussen, H.B., Raychaudhuri, S., Rehnström, K., Reif, A., Rice, J., Rossin, L., Rothenberger, A., Rouleau, G., Ruderfer, D., Rujescu, D., Sanders, A.R., Schalling, M., Schatzberg, A.F., Scheftner, W.A., Schellenberg, G.D., Schofield, P.R., Schork, N.J., Schumacher, J., Schwarz, M.M., Scolnick, E., Scott, L.J., Shi, J., Shillling, P.D., Shyn, S.I., Sigurdsson, E., Silverman, J.M., Sklar, P., Slager, S.L., Smalley, S.L., Smit, J.H., Smith, E.N., Sonuga-Barke, E., St Clair, D., State, M., Stefansson, K., Stefansson, H., Steffans, M., Steinberg, S., Steinhausen, H.C., Strauss, J., Strohmaier, J., Stroup, T.S., Sutcliffe, J., Szatmari, P., Szelinger, S., Thirumalai, S., Thompson, R.C., Tozzi, F., Treutlein, J., Uhr, M., van den Oord, E.J., Grootheest, G., Vieland, V., Vincent, J.B., Visscher, P.M., Watson, S.J., Weissman, M.M., Werge, T., Wienker, T.F., Willemsen, G., Williamson, R., Witt, S.H., Wray, N.R., Wright, A., Xu, W., Young, A.H., Zammit, S., Zandi, P.P., Zhang, P., Zitman, F.G., Zöllner, S., Kendler, K.S., Psychiatry, Human genetics, Epidemiology and Data Science, NCA - Brain mechanisms in health and disease, NCA - Neurobiology of mental health, EMGO - Mental health, NCA - Brain imaging technology, Biological Psychology, Functional Genomics, Neuroscience Campus Amsterdam - Brain Mechanisms in Health & Disease, Neuroscience Campus Amsterdam - Neurobiology of Mental Health, EMGO+ - Mental Health, Neuroscience Campus Amsterdam - Brain Imaging Technology, Psychiatrie & Neuropsychologie, Farmacologie en Toxicologie, RS: CARIM School for Cardiovascular Diseases, RS: MHeNs School for Mental Health and Neuroscience, Oades, Robert D. (Beitragende*r), and Oades, Robert D.
- Subjects
Netherlands Twin Register (NTR) ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Bipolar Disorder ,Calcium Channels, L-Type ,Population ,Medizin ,Genome-wide association study ,Biology ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Article ,Genomic disorders and inherited multi-system disorders DCN MP - Plasticity and memory [IGMD 3] ,medicine ,ddc:61 ,Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder ,Humans ,DCN PAC - Perception action and control NCEBP 9 - Mental health ,ddc:610 ,Medizinische Fakultät » Universitätsklinikum Essen » LVR-Klinikum Essen » Klinik für Psychiatrie, Psychosomatik und Psychotherapie des Kindes- und Jugendalters ,Bipolar disorder ,Age of Onset ,Psychiatry ,education ,Child ,Genetics ,education.field_of_study ,Depressive Disorder, Major ,General Medicine ,Genomic disorders and inherited multi-system disorders [DCN PAC - Perception action and control IGMD 3] ,medicine.disease ,Logistic Models ,Autism spectrum disorder ,Schizophrenia ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,Child Development Disorders, Pervasive ,Genetic Loci ,Expression quantitative trait loci ,Major depressive disorder ,Genome-Wide Association Study - Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext BACKGROUND: Findings from family and twin studies suggest that genetic contributions to psychiatric disorders do not in all cases map to present diagnostic categories. We aimed to identify specific variants underlying genetic effects shared between the five disorders in the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium: autism spectrum disorder, attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder, bipolar disorder, major depressive disorder, and schizophrenia. METHODS: We analysed genome-wide single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data for the five disorders in 33,332 cases and 27,888 controls of European ancestory. To characterise allelic effects on each disorder, we applied a multinomial logistic regression procedure with model selection to identify the best-fitting model of relations between genotype and phenotype. We examined cross-disorder effects of genome-wide significant loci previously identified for bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, and used polygenic risk-score analysis to examine such effects from a broader set of common variants. We undertook pathway analyses to establish the biological associations underlying genetic overlap for the five disorders. We used enrichment analysis of expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) data to assess whether SNPs with cross-disorder association were enriched for regulatory SNPs in post-mortem brain-tissue samples. FINDINGS: SNPs at four loci surpassed the cutoff for genome-wide significance (p
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- 2013
50. A mega-analysis of genome-wide association studies for major depressive disorder
- Author
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Major Depressive Disorder Working Group of the Psychiatric GWAS Consortium, Ripke S, Wray NR, Lewis CM, Hamilton SP, Weissman MM, Breen G, Byrne EM, Blackwood DH, Boomsma DI, Cichon S, Heath AC, Holsboer F, Lucae S, Madden PA, Martin NG, Penninx BP, De Geus EJ, Hottenga JJ, Middeldorp CM, Steffens M, Thorgeirsson T, Tozzi F, Treutlein J, Uhr M, van den Oord EJ, Van Grootheest G, Vxf6lzke H, Weilburg JB, Willemsen G, Zitman FG, Neale B, Daly M, Levinson DF, and Sullivan PF
- Published
- 2013
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