Searched for: school:SOM
Department/Unit:Neurology
"It's not any one thing, it's always all of them, all at the same time": quality of life in NF2-related schwannomatosis from patient and clinician perspectives
Carias, Sophia C; Buono, Frank D; Von Imhof, Liesel; Yelamanchili, Sneha M; Chan, Hilary; Yohay, Kaleb H; Nghiemphu, P Leia; Babovic-Vuksanovic, Dusica; Plotkin, Scott R; Merker, Vanessa L
While the physical manifestations of NF2-related schwannomatosis (NF2-SWN) have been well documented, there are a limited number of qualitative studies on health-related quality of life in NF2-SWN. The present study sought to explore the cumulative impact of symptoms, treatments, and healthcare on the quality of life of individuals with NF2-SWN. We interviewed 16 adolescent and adult patients with NF2-SWN enrolled in the INTUITT-NF2 clinical trial and 10 clinicians with NF2-SWN expertise from the United States, United Kingdom, and Australia. Analysis of patient and clinician interviews yielded five overall themes: (1) impacts on daily living, (2) impacts on life roles, (3) impacts on relationships and social integration, (4) impacts on psychological and emotional wellbeing, and (5) burden of treatment and healthcare. Multiple symptom areas contributed to impairments in quality of life across each theme. These findings reveal that quality of life in NF2-SWN is shaped not only by individual symptoms, but by their complex, cumulative impact-highlighting the urgent need for disease-specific tools and holistic care approaches that reflect the lived realities of patients across the lifespan.
PMID: 41400724
ISSN: 1573-7292
CID: 5979232
Cardiorespiratory cross-frequency coupling biomarker for sudden unexpected death in epilepsy
Gravitis, Adam C; Wennberg, Richard; Carlen, Peter L; Chinvarun, Yotin; Lira, Victor; Laze, Juliana; Devinsky, Orrin; Bardakjian, Berj L
OBJECTIVE:Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) often follows generalized tonic-clonic seizures during sleep, likely resulting from impaired brainstem cardiorespiratory function. We used ictal electrocardiogram (ECG)-based cross-frequency phase-amplitude coupling (PAC) to detect cardiorespiratory disruptions, comparing SUDEP to non-SUDEP cohorts. Leveraging respiratory modulation of ECG signals can provide a robust indirect proxy of respiratory monitoring despite high-amplitude noise. METHODS:We analyzed ictal ECG and electroencephalographic recordings in 21 SUDEP cases and 21 non-SUDEP epilepsy controls. Ictal ECG segments from 76 seizures (38 SUDEP, 38 non-SUDEP) were processed using continuous wavelet transformation to compute PAC between respiratory (.1-.55 Hz, 6-33 breaths per minute) and cardiac (.7-3.7 Hz, 42-222 beats per minute) frequencies. Relative PAC coupling strength was evaluated for respiratory frequencies > .25 Hz (15 breaths per minute) and cardiac frequencies > 1.7 Hz (102 beats per minute). Furthermore, a 3 × 3 grid of PAC ranges was derived for each 20-s window, yielding 18 features (mean and SD) as inputs to a logistic regression model. RESULTS:Elevated ictal PAC at higher respiratory (>.25 Hz, p < .0001) and cardiac (>1.7 Hz, p < .0142) frequencies in SUDEP patients suggests ictal respiration modulates ictal tachycardia, leading to cardiorespiratory dysfunction, probably brainstem-mediated. The logistic model accurately distinguished 38 seizures in SUDEP cases from 38 seizures in non-SUDEP cases (receiver operating characteristic area under the curve = 91%). Seizures in SUDEP patients had higher propensity scores (p < .001) both per seizure and per patient. All six test seizures (three SUDEP, three non-SUDEP) were correctly classified using the optimal threshold. SIGNIFICANCE/CONCLUSIONS:Ictal ECG-based PAC analysis is a potential noninvasive biomarker for SUDEP risk, capturing cardiorespiratory dysregulation during seizures. Its integration into wearable ECG devices could enable real-time risk assessment, informing clinical interventions such as rescue medications, antiseizure medication adjustments, or surgical evaluations.
PMID: 41389016
ISSN: 1528-1167
CID: 5978202
Exploratory Analysis of ELP1 Expression in Whole Blood From Patients With Familial Dysautonomia
González-Duarte, Alejandra; Norcliffe-Kaufmann, Lucy; Cotrina, Maria Luisa; Khan, Zenith; Dalamo, Kaia; Vernetti, Patricio Millar; Lawless, Matthew; Morini, Elisabetta; Salani, Monica; Weetall, Marla; Narasimhan, Jana; Rocha, Agostino G; Slaugenhaupt, Susan A; Kaufmann, Horacio
BACKGROUND:Familial dysautonomia (FD) is a hereditary neurodevelopmental disorder caused by aberrant splicing of the ELP1 gene, leading to a tissue-specific reduction in ELP1 protein expression. Preclinical models indicate that increasing ELP1 levels can mitigate disease manifestations. A blood-based ELP-1 protein assay may provide a reliable way to monitor gene target engagement. DESIGN AND METHODS/METHODS:Using a newly developed radioimmunoassay, we quantified ELP1 protein levels in peripheral blood samples collected from 59 homozygous FD patients carrying the IVS20 + 6T>C mutation and 66 heterozygous carriers. To assess the reproducibility of the measurement, replicate samples were collected in 43 participants. Longitudinal variability was evaluated in 22 participants who underwent repeat sampling 1 year later. RESULTS: = 0.827, p < 0.001). An ELP1 threshold of 492 pg/mL yielded a sensitivity of 80.2% (CI of 70.6 to 87.2%) and a specificity of 98.2% (95% CI of 90%-99%) with a positive likelihood ratio of 46.5, indicating that individuals with FD were over 46 times more likely to have ELP1 levels below this threshold compared to non-affected carriers. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Blood ELP1 levels are robust and reproducible, with concentrations below 492 pg/mL strongly indicative of disease. Moreover, given their longitudinal stability, ELP1 can serve as a marker of target engagement to evaluate the efficacy of gene-targeted therapies aimed at correcting ELP1 gene splicing and protein production.
PMID: 41385477
ISSN: 2328-9503
CID: 5978072
Sex-Specific Differences in Intracranial Aneurysm Rupture Presentation and Model Performance: Evidence from a Retrospective Cohort
Taduka, Hemanth Krishna; Garigapuram, Prithvinath Reddy; Katore, Srushti; Zeid, Alia; Favate, Albert S
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:Examine sex-specific differences in Intracranial Aneurysms (IA) rupture at presentation and to retrospectively benchmark sex-stratified versus pooled classification models for their ability to discriminate rupture status, using a cross-sectional cohort. METHODS:We retrospectively analyzed 203 patients (46 males, 157 females) with 303 IAs from a single-center, IRB-approved registry. Of these, 76 IAs were ruptured and 227 unruptured at presentation. Clinical data and lesion characteristics were summarized into patient-level variables and used to develop sex-specific logistic regression models. Adjusted Odds ratios (ORs) were produced for clinical covariates. Cross-application assessed generalizability across sexes. RESULTS:Among females, 58.7% of ruptures were < 5 mm, with a median ruptured size of 4.2 mm at Anterior Communicating Artery (ACOM). Rupture likelihood in females peaked between ages 40 and 59 (aORs = 2.8 and 1.7), coinciding with perimenopause. In males, ACOM was the most frequent rupture site; although males had higher mean hemoglobin levels (14.1 vs. 12.5 g/dL, p < 0.0001), hemoglobin contributed less to rupture compared to sex-specific models incorporating age, location, and metabolic factors (hemoglobin concentration, blood glucose). Metabolic factors contributed significantly to the female-specific model, achieving strong discrimination (AUC-ROC: 0.80), while the male-specific model underperformed (AUC-ROC: 0.50), due to limited rupture events (n = 19). Cross-application of features between sexes drastically reduced performance, providing the first computational evidence that male and female rupture mechanisms represent distinct biological feature spaces requiring separate modeling architectures CONCLUSION: Women in this cohort more often presented with rupture IAs at smaller sizes and at midlife ages than men. These sex-specific patterns, though strictly cross-sectional and associative rather than predictive, highlight potential biological and clinical contributors to rupture presentation and may partly explain misclassification by pooled risk models. Future longitudinal, multicenter studies with balanced cohorts are required to validate these findings and to develop robust rupture-risk prediction tools that incorporate sex as a biological variable.
PMID: 41381934
ISSN: 1573-9686
CID: 5977932
Editing DNA methylation in vivo
Pan, Richard; Ren, Jingwei; Chen, Xinyue; Flores, Luis F; Gonzalez, Rachel V L; Adonnino, Andre Antonio; Lofts, Brandon; Waldo, Jennifer; Halmai, Julian; Devinsky, Orrin; Fink, Kyle; Liu, X Shawn
DNA methylation is a crucial epigenetic mechanism that regulates gene expression. Precise editing of DNA methylation has emerged as a promising tool for dissecting its biological function. However, challenges in delivery have limited most applications of DNA methylation editing to in vitro systems. Here, we develop two transgenic mouse lines harboring an inducible dCas9-DNMT3A or dCas9-TET1 editor to enable tissue-specific DNA methylation editing in vivo. We demonstrate that targeted methylation of the Psck9 promoter in the liver of dCas9-DNMT3A mice results in decreased Pcsk9 expression and a subsequent reduction in serum low-density lipoprotein cholesterol level. Targeted demethylation of the Mecp2 promoter in dCas9-TET1 mice reactivates Mecp2 expression from the inactive X chromosome and rescues neuronal nuclear size in Mecp2+/- mice. Genome-wide sequencing analyses reveal minimal transcriptional off-targets, demonstrating the specificity of the system. These results demonstrate the feasibility and versatility of methylation editing, to functionally interrogate DNA methylation in vivo.
PMID: 41372159
ISSN: 2041-1723
CID: 5977522
Seizing the Heart: Late-Onset Epilepsy and Cardiovascular Disease in Older Adults [Editorial]
Stefanidou, Maria; Friedman, Daniel
PMID: 41191855
ISSN: 1526-632x
CID: 5959802
International evaluation of the SEIZUre Risk in Encephalitis (SEIZURE) score for predicting acute seizure risk
Hughes, Thomas; Venkatesan, Arun; Hetherington, Claire; Egbe, Franklyn Nkongho; Netravathi, M; Thakur, Kiran T; Baykan, Betul; Hui Jan, Tan; Arias, Susana; García-de Soto, Jesús; Kahwagi, Jamil; Vogrig, Alberto; Versace, Salvatore; Habis, Ralph; Sowmitran, Swathi; Husari, Khalil S; Probasco, John; Hasbun, Rodrigo; Bean, Paris; Heck, Ashley; GözübatıkÇelik, Gökçen R; Ataklı, Dilek; Mayda Domac, Fusun; Ferreira, Vitor; Calado, Sofia; Sangeeth, Thuppanattumadam Ananthasubramanian; Defres, Sylviane; Romozzi, Marina; Iorio, Raffaele; Pensato, Umberto; Pleshkevich, Maria; Steriade, Claude; Sharifi-Razavi, Athena; Tabrizi, Nasim; Sipila, Jussi; Kim, Carla Y; Diaz-Ariza, Alexandra; Satish, Poorvikha; Gowda, Vinutha; Gowda, Chandrakanta; Oh, Seong-Il; Del Capio-Orantes, Luis; Cotelli, Mariasofia; Ferreira, Luís; Kovalchuk, Maria; Goncharova, Anna; Solomon, Tom; Winkler, Andrea; Guekht, Alla; Wood, Greta K; ,; Michael, Benedict D
OBJECTIVE:Encephalitis is brain parenchyma inflammation, frequently resulting in seizures which worsens outcomes. Early anti-seizure medication could improve outcomes but requires identifying patients at greatest risk of acute seizures. The SEIZURE (SEIZUre Risk in Encephalitis) score was developed in UK cohorts to stratify patients by acute seizure risk. A 'basic score' used Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS), fever and age; the 'advanced score' added aetiology. This study aimed to evaluate the score internationally to determine its global applicability. DESIGN/METHODS:Patients were retrospectively analysed regionally, and by country, in this international evaluation study. Univariate analysis was conducted between patients who did and did not have inpatient seizures, followed by multivariable logistic regression, hierarchical clustering and analysis of the area under the receiver operating curves (AUROC) with 95% CIs. PARTICIPANTS AND SETTING/METHODS:2032 patients across 13 countries were identified, among whom 1324 were included in SEIZURE score calculations and 970 were included in regression modelling. The involved countries comprised 19 organisations spanning all WHO regions. OUTCOME MEASURES/METHODS:The primary outcome was measuring inpatient seizure rates. RESULTS:Autoantibody-associated encephalitis, low GCS and presenting with a seizure were frequently associated with inpatient seizures; fever showed no association. Globally, the score had limited discriminatory ability (basic AUROC 0.58 (95% CI 0.55 to 0.62), advanced AUROC 0.63 (95% CI 0.60 to 0.66)). The scoring system performed acceptably in western Europe, excluding Spain, with the best performance in Portugal (basic AUROC 0.82 (95% CI 0.69 to 0.94), advanced AUROC 0.83 (95% CI 0.72 to 0.95)). CONCLUSIONS:The SEIZURE score performed best in several countries in Western Europe but performed poorly elsewhere, partly due to differing and unknown aetiologies. In most regions, the score did not reach a threshold to be clinically useful. The Western European results could aid in designing clinical trials assessing primary anti-seizure prophylaxis in encephalitis following further prospective trials. Beyond Western Europe, there is a need for tailored, localised scoring systems and future large-scale prospective studies with optimised aetiological testing to accurately identify high-risk patients.
PMCID:12699598
PMID: 41360470
ISSN: 2044-6055
CID: 5977142
Deubiquitinases cleave ubiquitin-fused ribosomal proteins and physically counteract their targeting to the UFD pathway
Patchett, Stephanie; Moghadasi, Seyed Arad; Shukla, Ankita; El Oualid, Farid; Ueberheide, Beatrix M; Olsen, Shaun K; Huang, Tony T
In eukaryotes, each ribosomal subunit includes a ribosomal protein (RP) that is encoded as a fusion protein with ubiquitin (Ub). In yeast, each Ub-RP fusion requires processing by deubiquitylating enzymes (DUBs) to generate ribosome assembly-competent RPs and contribute to the cellular Ub pool. However, how Ub-RP fusions are processed by DUBs in human cells remains unclear. Here, we discovered that Ub-RPs are substrates of the Ub-fusion degradation (UFD) pathway in human cells via lysine 29 and 48 (K29/K48)-specific ubiquitylation and proteasomal degradation. We identified a pool of DUBs that catalytically process Ub-RPs, as well as DUBs that physically occlude Ub-RP interaction with UFD pathway Ub E3 ligases to prevent their degradation in a non-catalytic manner. Our results suggest that DUBs both process and stabilize Ub-RPs, whereas the UFD pathway regulates levels of Ub-RPs that cannot be fully processed by DUBs to fine-tune protein homeostasis.
PMCID:12679894
PMID: 41270756
ISSN: 1097-4164
CID: 5974442
Comparative Safety and Efficacy of Balloon-Mounted and Self-Expanding Stents in Rescue Stenting for Large Vessel Occlusion: Secondary Analysis of the RESCUE-ICAS Registry
Al Kasab, Sami; Mierzwa, Adam T; Tahhan, Imad Samman; Yaghi, Shadi; Jumaa, Mouhammad; Inoa, Violiza; Capassoe, Francesco; Nahhas, Michael; Starke, Robert M; Fragata, Isabel; Bender, Matthew T; Moldovan, Krisztina; Maier, Ilko; Grossberg, Jonathan A; Jabbour, Pascal; Psychogios, Marios; Samaniego, Edgar A; Burkhardt, Jan-Karl; Altschul, David; Mascitelli, Justin; Ezzeldin, Mohamad; Grandhi, Ramesh; de Havenon, Adam; Nguyen, Thanh N; Hassan, Ameer E; ,; ,
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:Patients with intracranial stenosis-related large-vessel occlusion (ICAS-LVO) may experience better outcomes with stent placement compared with stand-alone mechanical thrombectomy (MT). This study evaluates the safety and clinical outcomes of self-expanding stents (SES) versus balloon-mounted stents (BMS) in patients with ICAS-LVO treated with MT and stent placement. MATERIALS AND METHODS/METHODS:This secondary analysis of the Registry of Emergent Large-Vessel Occlusion Due to Intracranial Stenosis, a multicenter observational study, included patients with ICAS-LVO from 25 stroke centers who underwent stent placement. Patients were stratified by stent type (SES or BMS). The primary end point was 90-day mRS = 0-2. Secondary outcomes included successful reperfusion, recurrent stroke, and infarct volume. Symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage was the primary safety outcome. Inverse probability-weighting was adjusted for confounders. RESULTS:= .001), particularly in patients without prestenting angioplasty (14% versus 1%). CONCLUSIONS:SES and BMS demonstrated comparable safety and clinical outcomes in patients with ICAS-LVO. However, SES were linked to higher rates of restenosis and recurrent strokes, potentially influenced by the absence of prestenting angioplasty. Further research is needed to refine stent-placement strategies in this population.
PMCID:12687945
PMID: 40550702
ISSN: 1936-959x
CID: 5980012
Seizure Frequency Trends Over Time in Treatment-Resistant Focal Epilepsy
Potnis, Ojas; Biondo, Gabriel; Sukonik, Rachel; Grzeskowiak, Caitlin; Cutter, Gary; Altalib, Hamada; Kuzniecky, Ruben; Lowenstein, Daniel; French, Jacqueline; ,
IMPORTANCE/UNASSIGNED:Open-label trials of antiseizure medications (ASMs) and devices suggest seizure reduction in focal treatment-resistant epilepsy (FTRE) may demonstrate treatment-related disease-modifying effects. Understanding FTRE trends can provide insight into treatment responses. OBJECTIVE/UNASSIGNED:To determine whether seizure frequency in FTRE improves over time. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS/UNASSIGNED:The Human Epilepsy Project 2 was a prospective, observational, multicenter study of patients with FTRE from May 2018 to September 2021 who were followed up for 18 to 36 months at 10 US-based comprehensive epilepsy centers. Analysis was performed from 2021 to 2024. Study data included seizure frequency, medication use, device use, surgeries tracked using daily electronic diaries, monthly check-ins, medical record review, and case report forms. Eligibility criteria included focal epilepsy diagnosis, age between 16 and 65 years, and failure of 4 or more ASMs (≥2 due to seizure control failure). Participants were recruited as a volunteer sample. EXPOSURES/UNASSIGNED:Participants were treated with multiple interventions at their physicians' discretion. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES/UNASSIGNED:The primary outcome was seizure frequency trends, evaluated by quantifying seizure freedom rates and frequency reductions. Medication and device treatment responses were assessed by tracking ASM and device changes. RESULTS/UNASSIGNED:Of 196 approached participants, 146 met eligibility criteria and were included in the study. Mean (SD) participant age was 40 (12) years, and epilepsy was diagnosed at a mean (SD) age of 19.8 (13.6) years. The cohort had 84 (57.5%) female participants. A total of 35 participants had implantable devices; 1 had epilepsy surgery during the study. Of 146 participants, 128 provided sufficient seizure data for analysis, and 2 were excluded as outliers. Seizure frequency was reduced in 86 participants (68.3%) during the second half of study participation compared to the first half. In the overall cohort, mean modeled monthly seizure frequency percentage reduction was 68.73% (95% CI, 52.92%-84.54%). From 0 to 12 months (cohort 1), mean modeled percentage reduction was 67.76% (95% CI, 19.42%-116.09%); for 12 to 24 months (cohort 2), 36.00% (95% CI, 9.27%-53.46%); and for longer than 24 months (cohort 3), 66.03% (95% CI, 48.25%-83.80%) (all P < .001). An ASM was added in 69 participants (54.7%), of whom 46 (66.7%) experienced seizure frequency reduction, including seizure freedom. Seizure trajectories in participants with devices did not significantly differ from those without devices. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE/UNASSIGNED:Findings from the HEP2 study imply that FTRE improves over time, ASM additions had low probability of achieving seizure freedom but contributed to seizure reduction, and device-treated participants exhibited similar seizure trajectories to those without devices. Whether improvements reflected the natural history of FTRE or active management remains unclear, but our findings suggest cautious interpretation of open-label studies positing disease-modifying effects and further research into FTRE treatment response.
PMID: 41114972
ISSN: 2168-6157
CID: 5956652