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Browsing by Author "Nyegaard, Mette"
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Item Clinical presentation of calmodulin mutations: the International Calmodulinopathy Registry(Oxford University Press, 2023) Crotti, Lia; Spazzolini, Carla; Nyegaard, Mette; Overgaard, Michael T.; Kotta, Maria-Christina; Dagradi, Federica; Sala, Luca; Aiba, Takeshi; Ayers, Mark D.; Baban, Anwar; Barc, Julien; Beach, Cheyenne M.; Behr, Elijah R.; Bos, J. Martijn; Cerrone, Marina; Covi, Peter; Cuneo, Bettina; Denjoy, Isabelle; Donner, Birgit; Elbert, Adrienne; Eliasson, Håkan; Etheridge, Susan P.; Fukuyama, Megumi; Girolami, Francesca; Hamilton, Robert; Horie, Minoru; Iascone, Maria; Jiménez-Jaimez, Juan; Jensen, Henrik Kjærulf; Kannankeril, Prince J.; Kaski, Juan P.; Makita, Naomasa; Muñoz-Esparza, Carmen; Odland, Hans H.; Ohno, Seiko; Papagiannis, John; Porretta, Alessandra Pia; Prandstetter, Christopher; Probst, Vincent; Robyns, Tomas; Rosenthal, Eric; Rosés-Noguer, Ferran; Sekarski, Nicole; Singh, Anoop; Spentzou, Georgia; Stute, Fridrike; Tfelt-Hansen, Jacob; Till, Jan; Tobert, Kathryn E.; Vinocur, Jeffrey M.; Webster, Gregory; Wilde, Arthur A. M.; Wolf, Cordula M.; Ackerman, Michael J.; Schwartz, Peter J.; Pediatrics, School of MedicineAims: Calmodulinopathy due to mutations in any of the three CALM genes (CALM1-3) causes life-threatening arrhythmia syndromes, especially in young individuals. The International Calmodulinopathy Registry (ICalmR) aims to define and link the increasing complexity of the clinical presentation to the underlying molecular mechanisms. Methods and results: The ICalmR is an international, collaborative, observational study, assembling and analysing clinical and genetic data on CALM-positive patients. The ICalmR has enrolled 140 subjects (median age 10.8 years [interquartile range 5-19]), 97 index cases and 43 family members. CALM-LQTS and CALM-CPVT are the prevalent phenotypes. Primary neurological manifestations, unrelated to post-anoxic sequelae, manifested in 20 patients. Calmodulinopathy remains associated with a high arrhythmic event rate (symptomatic patients, n = 103, 74%). However, compared with the original 2019 cohort, there was a reduced frequency and severity of all cardiac events (61% vs. 85%; P = .001) and sudden death (9% vs. 27%; P = .008). Data on therapy do not allow definitive recommendations. Cardiac structural abnormalities, either cardiomyopathy or congenital heart defects, are present in 30% of patients, mainly CALM-LQTS, and lethal cases of heart failure have occurred. The number of familial cases and of families with strikingly different phenotypes is increasing. Conclusion: Calmodulinopathy has pleiotropic presentations, from channelopathy to syndromic forms. Clinical severity ranges from the early onset of life-threatening arrhythmias to the absence of symptoms, and the percentage of milder and familial forms is increasing. There are no hard data to guide therapy, and current management includes pharmacological and surgical antiadrenergic interventions with sodium channel blockers often accompanied by an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator.Item Genome-wide meta-analysis of problematic alcohol use in 435,563 individuals yields insights into biology and relationships with other traits(Nature, 2020-07) Zhou, Hang; Sealock, Julia M.; Sanchez-Roige, Sandra; Clarke, Toni-Kim; Levey, Daniel F.; Cheng, Zhongshan; Li, Boyang; Polimanti, Renato; Kember, Rachel L.; Smith, Rachel Vickers; Thygesen, Johan H.; Morgan, Marsha Y.; Atkinson, Stephen R.; Thursz, Mark R.; Nyegaard, Mette; Mattheisen, Manuel; Børglum, Anders D.; Johnson, Emma C.; Justice, Amy C.; Palmer, Abraham A.; McQuillin, Andrew; Davis, Lea K.; Edenberg, Howard J.; Agrawal, Arpana; Kranzler, Henry R.; Gelernter, Joel; Medical and Molecular Genetics, School of MedicineProblematic alcohol use (PAU) is a leading cause of death and disability worldwide. Although genome-wide association studies have identified PAU risk genes, the genetic architecture of this trait is not fully understood. We conducted a proxy-phenotype meta-analysis of PAU, combining alcohol use disorder and problematic drinking, in 435,563 European-ancestry individuals. We identified 29 independent risk variants, 19 of them novel. PAU was genetically correlated with 138 phenotypes, including substance use and psychiatric traits. Phenome-wide polygenic risk score analysis in an independent biobank sample (BioVU, n = 67,589) confirmed the genetic correlations between PAU and substance use and psychiatric disorders. Genetic heritability of PAU was enriched in brain and in conserved and regulatory genomic regions. Mendelian randomization suggested causal effects on liability to PAU of substance use, psychiatric status, risk-taking behavior and cognitive performance. In summary, this large PAU meta-analysis identified novel risk loci and revealed genetic relationships with numerous other traits.