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result(s) for
"McMahon, Lillian E"
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A double-blind, randomized, multicenter phase 2 study of prasugrel versus placebo in adult patients with sickle cell disease
by
Ataga, Kenneth I
,
Heath, Lori E
,
Jakubowski, Joseph A
in
Acute coronary syndromes
,
Adolescent
,
Adult
2013
Background
Platelet activation has been implicated in the pathogenesis of sickle cell disease (SCD) suggesting antiplatelet agents may be therapeutic. To evaluate the safety of prasugrel, a thienopyridine antiplatelet agent, in adult patients with SCD, we conducted a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study.
Methods
The primary endpoint, safety, was measured by hemorrhagic events requiring medical intervention. Patients were randomized to prasugrel 5 mg daily (n = 41) or placebo (n = 21) for 30 days. Platelet function by VerifyNow® P2Y12 and vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein assays at days 10 and 30 were significantly inhibited in prasugrel- compared with placebo-treated SCD patients.
Results
There were no hemorrhagic events requiring medical intervention in either study arm. Mean pain rate (percentage of days with pain) and intensity in the prasugrel arm were decreased compared with placebo. However, these decreases did not reach statistical significance. Platelet surface P-selectin and plasma soluble P-selectin, biomarkers of in vivo platelet activation, were significantly reduced in SCD patients receiving prasugrel compared with placebo. In sum, prasugrel was well tolerated and not associated with serious hemorrhagic events.
Conclusions
Despite the small size and short duration of this study, there was a decrease in platelet activation biomarkers and a trend toward decreased pain.
Journal Article
Case records of the Massachusetts General Hospital: Case 34-1997
by
Phillips, Lucy D
,
McMahon, Lillian EC
,
Cabot, Richard C
in
Abdomen
,
Back pain
,
Cardiac arrhythmia
1997
The patient was known to have sickle cell disease but had had few problems during childhood except for priapism, which required surgical treatment. A cardiac ultrasonographic examination showed diffuse hypokinesis and a slight dilatation of the right ventricle, an estimated right ventricular systolic pressure of at least 20 mm Hg, systolic septal flattening consistent with right ventricular systolic hypertension, diastolic flattening consistent with right ventricular volume overload, and paradoxical septal motion.
Journal Article
A joint NCBI and EMBL-EBI transcript set for clinical genomics and research
by
Cunningham, Fiona
,
Joardar, Vinita S.
,
Webb, David
in
631/114/129
,
631/114/2184
,
631/114/2416
2022
Comprehensive genome annotation is essential to understand the impact of clinically relevant variants. However, the absence of a standard for clinical reporting and browser display complicates the process of consistent interpretation and reporting. To address these challenges, Ensembl/GENCODE
1
and RefSeq
2
launched a joint initiative, the Matched Annotation from NCBI and EMBL-EBI (MANE) collaboration, to converge on human gene and transcript annotation and to jointly define a high-value set of transcripts and corresponding proteins. Here, we describe the MANE transcript sets for use as universal standards for variant reporting and browser display. The MANE Select set identifies a representative transcript for each human protein-coding gene, whereas the MANE Plus Clinical set provides additional transcripts at loci where the Select transcripts alone are not sufficient to report all currently known clinical variants. Each MANE transcript represents an exact match between the exonic sequences of an Ensembl/GENCODE transcript and its counterpart in RefSeq such that the identifiers can be used synonymously. We have now released MANE Select transcripts for 97% of human protein-coding genes, including all American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics Secondary Findings list v3.0 (ref.
3
) genes. MANE transcripts are accessible from major genome browsers and key resources. Widespread adoption of these transcript sets will increase the consistency of reporting, facilitate the exchange of data regardless of the annotation source and help to streamline clinical interpretation.
Matched Annotation from NCBI and EMBL-EBI (MANE) delivers joint transcript sets from Ensembl/GENCODE and RefSeq for standardizing variant reporting in clinical genomics and research.
Journal Article