20 research outputs found

    CDH12 as a Candidate Gene for Kidney Injury in Posterior Urethral Valve Cases:A Genome-wide Association Study Among Patients with Obstructive Uropathies

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    Background: Posterior urethral valves (PUVs) and ureteropelvic junction obstruction (UPJO) are congenital obstructive uropathies that may impair kidney development. Objective: To identify genetic variants associated with kidney injury in patients with obstructive uropathy. Design, setting, and participants: We included 487 patients born in 1981 or later who underwent pyeloplasty or valve resection before 18 yr of age in the discovery phase, 102 PUV patients in a first replication phase, and 102 in a second replication phase

    The ANTENATAL multicentre study to predict postnatal renal outcome in fetuses with posterior urethral valves: objectives and design

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    Abstract Background Posterior urethral valves (PUV) account for 17% of paediatric end-stage renal disease. A major issue in the management of PUV is prenatal prediction of postnatal renal function. Fetal ultrasound and fetal urine biochemistry are currently employed for this prediction, but clearly lack precision. We previously developed a fetal urine peptide signature that predicted in utero with high precision postnatal renal function in fetuses with PUV. We describe here the objectives and design of the prospective international multicentre ANTENATAL (multicentre validation of a fetal urine peptidome-based classifier to predict postnatal renal function in posterior urethral valves) study, set up to validate this fetal urine peptide signature. Methods Participants will be PUV pregnancies enrolled from 2017 to 2021 and followed up until 2023 in >30 European centres endorsed and supported by European reference networks for rare urological disorders (ERN eUROGEN) and rare kidney diseases (ERN ERKNet). The endpoint will be renal/patient survival at 2 years postnatally. Assuming α = 0.05, 1–β = 0.8 and a mean prevalence of severe renal outcome in PUV individuals of 0.35, 400 patients need to be enrolled to validate the previously reported sensitivity and specificity of the peptide signature. Results In this largest multicentre study of antenatally detected PUV, we anticipate bringing a novel tool to the clinic. Based on urinary peptides and potentially amended in the future with additional omics traits, this tool will be able to precisely quantify postnatal renal survival in PUV pregnancies. The main limitation of the employed approach is the need for specialized equipment. Conclusions Accurate risk assessment in the prenatal period should strongly improve the management of fetuses with PUV

    Genomic studies of sex development

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    Previous miscarriages and GLI2 are associated with anorectal malformations in offspring

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    STUDY QUESTION: Are anorectal malformations (ARMs) associated with previous miscarriages or single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the Bone Morphogenetic Protein 4 (BMP4) and GLI family zinc finger 2 (GLI2) genes? SUMMARY ANSWER: The SNP rs3738880 in GLI2 and miscarriages were associated with ARM, especially in patients with multiple congenital anomalies (MCA). WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADY: ARM are one of the most common birth defects of the gastrointestinal tract. The etiology is likely to be multifactorial, involving both environmental and genetic factors. SNPs in BMP4 and GLI2 genes were associated with ARM in non-Caucasian populations. During a patient information day, several mothers of ARM patients reported their concerns about previous miscarriages. STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION: A case-control study was performed among 427 ARM patients and 663 population-based controls. PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS: We examined the associations of ARM with SNPs in GLI2 and BMP4 using DNA samples of the children and associations with previous miscarriages using parental questionnaires. In addition, gene-gene and geneenvironment interaction analyses were performed. MAIN RESULTS AND THE ROLE OF CHANCE: The SNP rs3738880 in GLI2 was associated with ARM, especially in patients with MCA (homozygous GG-genotype: odds ratio (OR): 2.1; 95% CI: 1.2, 3.7). We identified previous miscarriages as a new risk factor for ARM, especially when occurring in the pregnancy directly preceding the index pregnancy and in patients with MCA (OR: 2.1; 95% CI: 1.3, 3.5). No association with rs17563 in BMP4, nor gene-gene or gene-environment interactions were found. LIMITATIONS, REASONS FOR CAUTION: The possibility of recall errors for previous miscarriage, but we expect these errors to be limited, as a miscarriage is a major life event. In addition, potential misclassification regarding miscarriages and stillbirth, but sensitivity analyses showed that this did not influence our results. WIDER IMPLICATIONS OF THE FINDINGS: This study showed associations of ARM with rs3738880 in GLI2 and with previous miscarriages. Both associations were stronger in patients with MCA, showing the importance of stratifying the analyses by patients with isolated ARM or MCA. STUDY FUNDING/COMPETING INTEREST(S): This study was funded by the Radboudumc. The authors have no conflict of interest to disclose

    Compensatory Hypertrophy in Paediatric Patients with a Unilateral Ureteropelvic Junction Obstruction

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    BACKGROUND: Compensatory hypertrophy is common in children with solitary functioning kidney, but it is unknown whether it also develops in children with unilateral partial reduction of kidney function. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to assess whether children with a unilateral ureteropelvic junction obstruction (UPJO) show compensatory growth of the unaffected kidney. Furthermore, we investigated whether the length of the unaffected kidney was related to the degree of split kidney function lost and other possible risk factors. Lastly, we studied a possible relationship with signs of kidney injury. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: We retrospectively analysed clinical information from 194 children with a unilateral UPJO who participated in the Aetiologic research into Genetic and Occupational/environmental Risk factors for Anomalies in children (AGORA) data- and biobank. Data on kidney length, split kidney function, and other factors possibly associated with kidney length were extracted from electronic patient records. OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS AND STATISTICAL ANALYSIS: Pearson’s correlation coefficients between the split kidney function and unaffected kidney length were calculated. Multivariable logistic regression analyses were performed to identify factors associated with kidney length and signs of kidney injury. RESULTS AND LIMITATIONS: Most children with a UPJO had an unaffected kidney length above the reference for age at the end of follow-up (median age 6.5 yr). A correlation with split kidney function was present only in children with a split kidney function of ≥60% in the unaffected kidney (r = 0.41). Aside from split kidney function, UPJO side was the only determinant of kidney length, while no associations between kidney length and kidney injury were identified. CONCLUSIONS: Compensatory growth was visible in most children with a UPJO after sufficient follow-up time and was correlated with split kidney function in children with a severe UPJO. Contralateral kidney length provided no clear prognostic value for developing kidney injury. Studies with more patients and additional biomarkers of kidney injury are needed to further personalise care. PATIENT SUMMARY: Children with obstruction of urine outflow in one kidney often had a larger contralateral kidney. However, the size of this kidney could not be used to predict which children would develop kidney injury

    Genetics of hypospadias: are single-nucleotide polymorphisms in SRD5A2, ESR1, ESR2, and ATF3 really associated with the malformation?

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    Contains fulltext : 88536.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)CONTEXT: Hypospadias is a common congenital malformation of the male external genitalia with a multifactorial etiology. Little is known about the genes involved in hypospadias. A few genetic associations have been reported but mainly in studies of small sample size. Most of these associations have not been replicated. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to investigate whether previously reported associations for four single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in genes involved in hormonal pathways could be replicated in a large Dutch hypospadias sample. The SNPs investigated are rs523349 in steroid-5 alpha-reductase (SRD5A2), rs6932902 in estrogen receptor 1 (ESR1), rs2987983 in ESR2, and rs11119982 in activating transcription factor 3 (ATF3). DESIGN, PARTICIPANTS, AND METHODS: We genotyped 620 Caucasian hypospadias cases and 596 controls for these SNPs using TaqMan-based genotyping. RESULTS: We did not replicate the associations of the SNPs in SRD5A2 and ESR1 with hypospadias. The SNPs in ESR2 and ATF3 were borderline associated with hypospadias [odds ratios 0.9 (95% confidence interval 0.7-1.0) and 1.2 (95% confidence interval 1.0-1.4), respectively] but in the opposite direction compared with earlier publications. Stratification according to localization of the urethral opening produced comparable results in the subgroups. CONCLUSIONS: The lack of consistency between our and previously performed studies might represent spurious results or chance findings in our or the earlier studies, differences in criteria used to select the study populations, or a real difference between populations, i.e. different genes contributing to disease risk. These results once again confirm the importance of replication in genetic association approaches.1 mei 201

    Common variants in DGKK are strongly associated with risk of hypospadias

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    Contains fulltext : 95737.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access) Contains fulltext : 95737a.pdf (postprint version ) (Open Access)Hypospadias is a common congenital malformation of the male external genitalia. We performed a genome-wide association study using pooled DNA from 436 individuals with hypospadias (cases) and 494 controls of European descent and selected the highest ranked SNPs for individual genotyping in the discovery sample, an additional Dutch sample of 133 cases and their parents, and a Swedish series of 266 cases and 402 controls. Individual genotyping of two SNPs (rs1934179 and rs7063116) in DGKK, encoding diacylglycerol kinase kappa, produced compelling evidence for association with hypospadias in the discovery sample (allele-specific odds ratio (OR) = 2.5, P = 2.5 x 10(1)(1) and OR = 2.3, P = 2.9 x 10, respectively) and in the Dutch (OR = 3.9, P = 2.4 x 10 and OR = 3.8, P = 3.4 x 10) and Swedish (OR = 2.5, P = 2.6 x 10 and OR = 2.2, P = 2.7 x 10) replication samples. Expression studies showed expression of DGKK in preputial tissue of cases and controls, which was lower in carriers of the risk allele of rs1934179 (P = 0.047). We propose DGKK as a major risk gene for hypospadias

    Prioritization and burden analysis of rare variants in 208 candidate genes suggest they do not play a major role in CAKUT

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    The leading cause of end-stage renal disease in children is attributed to congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract (CAKUT). Familial clustering and mouse models support the presence of monogenic causes. Genetic testing is insufficient as it mainly focuses on HNF1B and PAX2 mutations that are thought to explain CAKUT in 5-15% of patients. To identify novel, potentially pathogenic variants in additional genes, we designed a panel of genes identified from studies on familial forms of isolated or syndromic CAKUT and genes suggested by in vitro and in vivo CAKUT models. The coding exons of 208 genes were analyzed in 453 patients with CAKUT using next-generation sequencing. Rare truncating, splice-site variants, and non-synonymous variants, predicted to be deleterious and conserved, were prioritized as the most promising variants to have an effect on CAKUT. Previously reported disease-causing mutations were detected, but only five were fully penetrant causal mutations that improved diagnosis. We prioritized 148 candidate variants in 151 patients, found in 82 genes, for follow-up studies. Using a burden test, no significant excess of rare variants in any of the genes in our cohort compared with controls was found. Thus, in a study representing the largest set of genes analyzed in CAKUT patients to date, the contribution of previously implicated genes to CAKUT risk was significantly smaller than expected, and the disease may be more complex than previously assumed.Kidney International advance online publication, 21 October 2015; doi:10.1038/ki.2015.319

    Live design as living process

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    Live events and performance are fundamental aspects of our culture. They are the spaces where communities form and where productive dialogues occur between strangers. As the United States of America faces social isolation due to the novel coronavirus along with increasingly divisive politics, live performance is sorely needed to heal our communities. However, due to the pandemic, live performance defined as an event with performer and audience co-located in a shared time and space is no longer a safe avenue for creating art. The current pandemic is by no means the only force shaping our current reality; climate change, political unrest, digital technology, and global capitalism are all looming ecological forces we are facing. All of these forces need collective action to be effectively addressed. Live experiences are a critical component of manifesting the necessary social cohesion to redefine our relationships with the Earth. The current state of the world leaves ecologically minded artists with a fundamental question, what are the vital ingredients of a live experience? This thesis is an exploration of live experience and how we can look to the properties of living systems as lens for guiding successful design decisions. My goal is to reveal the elements that index a performance as live from an audience's perspective and re-imagine my design methodology as a living process. Through the design and implementation of an interactive installation titled, Elemental Media, I experiment with novel modes of audience interaction and involvement that respond to our current moment. Creating a hybrid event that takes place both virtually and physically offers a lens for considering how differing mediums and modes of spectatorship are involved in generating experiences of liveness. Assessing the success of this process and performance involves gathering audience responses, documenting and reflecting upon personal experiences, engaging with the writing of other researchers, and synthesizing these findings into principles for live design as a living process.Theatre and Danc

    The ANTENATAL multicentre study to predict postnatal renal outcome in fetuses with posterior urethral valves : objectives and design

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    Altres ajuts: The study is partially made possible by support of the 'Programme Hospitalier de Recherche Clinique and 'La Foundation de la Recherche Médicale (grant number DEQ20170336759, France). M.T. was supported by the Polish Mothers Memorial Hospital Research Institute (internal grant number 2016/IV/54-GW. LvdZ is supported by a Kolff grant from the Dutch Kidney Foundation (13OKJ36) and a ZonMW-VENI grant from the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (91618036). This project has been supported by ERN ERKNet and ERN eUROGEN, which are partly co-funded by the European Union within the framework of the Third Health Programme 'ERN-2016-Framework Partnership Agreement 2017-2021'.Posterior urethral valves (PUV) account for 17% of paediatric end-stage renal disease. A major issue in the management of PUV is prenatal prediction of postnatal renal function. Fetal ultrasound and fetal urine biochemistry are currently employed for this prediction, but clearly lack precision. We previously developed a fetal urine peptide signature that predicted in utero with high precision postnatal renal function in fetuses with PUV. We describe here the objectives and design of the prospective international multicentre ANTENATAL (multicentre validation of a fetal urine peptidome-based classifier to predict postnatal renal function in posterior urethral valves) study, set up to validate this fetal urine peptide signature. Participants will be PUV pregnancies enrolled from 2017 to 2021 and followed up until 2023 in >30 European centres endorsed and supported by European reference networks for rare urological disorders (ERN eUROGEN) and rare kidney diseases (ERN ERKNet). The endpoint will be renal/patient survival at 2 years postnatally. Assuming α = 0.05, 1-β = 0.8 and a mean prevalence of severe renal outcome in PUV individuals of 0.35, 400 patients need to be enrolled to validate the previously reported sensitivity and specificity of the peptide signature. In this largest multicentre study of antenatally detected PUV, we anticipate bringing a novel tool to the clinic. Based on urinary peptides and potentially amended in the future with additional omics traits, this tool will be able to precisely quantify postnatal renal survival in PUV pregnancies. The main limitation of the employed approach is the need for specialized equipment. Accurate risk assessment in the prenatal period should strongly improve the management of fetuses with PUV
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