Browsing by Author "Afonso, I."
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- High germinal instability of the (CTG)n at the SCA8 locus of both expanded and normal allelesPublication . Silveira, I.; Afonso, I.; Guimarães, L.; Mendonça, P.; Santos, C.; Maciel, P.; Matos, J.; Costa, M.; Barbot, C.; Tuna, A.; Barros, J.; Jardim, L.; Coutinho, P.; Sequeiros, J.Abstract The autosomal dominant spinocerebellar ataxias (SCAs) are a group of late-onset, neurodegenerative disorders for which 10 loci have been mapped (SCA1, SCA2, SCA4-SCA8, SCA10, MJD, and DRPLA). The mutant proteins have shown an expanded polyglutamine tract in SCA1, SCA2, MJD/SCA3, SCA6, SCA7, and DRPLA; a glycine-to-arginine substitution was found in SCA6 as well. Recently, an untranslated (CTG)n expansion on chromosome 13q was described as being the cause of SCA8. We have now (1) assessed the repeat size in a group of patients with ataxia and a large number of controls, (2) examined the intergenerational transmission of the repeat, and (3) estimated the instability of repeat size in the sperm of one patient and two healthy controls. Normal SCA8 chromosomes showed an apparently trimodal distribution, with classes of small (15-21 CTGs), intermediate (22-37 CTGs), and large (40-91 CTGs) alleles; large alleles accounted for only0.7% of all normal-size alleles. No expanded alleles (>/=100 CTGs) were found in controls. Expansion of the CTG tract was found in five families with ataxia; expanded alleles (all paternally transmitted) were characterized mostly by repeat-size contraction. There was a high germinal instability of both expanded and normal alleles: in one patient, the expanded allele (152 CTGs) had mostly contraction in size (often into the normal range); in the sperm of two normal controls, contractions were also more frequent, but occasional expansions into the upper limit of the normal size range were also seen. In conclusion, our results show (1) no overlapping between control (15-91) and pathogenic (100-152) alleles and (2) a high instability in spermatogenesis (both for expanded and normal alleles), suggesting a high mutational rate at the SCA8 locus.
- Patient-physician discordance in assessment of adherence to inhaled controller medication: a cross-sectional analysis of two cohortsPublication . Jácome, C.; Pereira, A.; Almeida, R.; Ferreira-Magalhães, Manuel; Couto, M.; Araujo, L.; Pereira, M.; Correia, M.; Loureiro, C.; Catarata, M.; Maia Santos, L.; Pereira, J.; Ramos, B.; Lopes, C.; Mendes, A.; Cidrais Rodrigues, J.; Oliveira, G.; Aguiar, A.; Afonso, I.; Carvalho, J.; Arrobas, A.; Coutinho Costa, J.; Dias, J.; Todo Bom, A.; Azevedo, J.; Ribeiro, C.; Alves, M.; Leiria Pinto, P.; Neuparth, N.; Palhinha, A.; Gaspar Marques, J.; Pinto, N.; Martins, P.; Todo Bom, F.; Alvarenga Santos, M.; Gomes Costa, A.; Silva Neto, A.; Santalha, M.; Lozoya, C.; Santos, N.; Silva, D.; Vasconcelos, M.; Taborda-Barata, L.; Carvalhal, C.; Teixeira, M.; Alves, R.; Moreira, A.; Sofia Pinto, C.; Morais Silva, P.; Alves, C.; Câmara, R.; Coelho, D.; Bordalo, D.; Fernandes, R.; Ferreira, R.; Menezes, F.; Gomes, R.; Calix, M.; Marques, A.; Cardoso, J.; Emiliano, M.; Gerardo, R.; Nunes, C.; Câmara, R.; Ferreira, J.; Carvalho, A.; Freitas, P.; Correia, R.; Fonseca, J.Objective: We aimed to compare patient's and physician's ratings of inhaled medication adherence and to identify predictors of patient-physician discordance. Design: Baseline data from two prospective multicentre observational studies. Setting: 29 allergy, pulmonology and paediatric secondary care outpatient clinics in Portugal. Participants: 395 patients (≥13 years old) with persistent asthma. Measures: Data on demographics, patient-physician relationship, upper airway control, asthma control, asthma treatment, forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1) and healthcare use were collected. Patients and physicians independently assessed adherence to inhaled controller medication during the previous week using a 100 mm Visual Analogue Scale (VAS). Discordance was defined as classification in distinct VAS categories (low 0-50; medium 51-80; high 81-100) or as an absolute difference in VAS scores ≥10 mm. Correlation between patients' and physicians' VAS scores/categories was explored. A multinomial logistic regression identified the predictors of physician overestimation and underestimation. Results: High inhaler adherence was reported both by patients (median (percentile 25 to percentile 75) 85 (65-95) mm; 53% VAS>80) and by physicians (84 (68-95) mm; 53% VAS>80). Correlation between patient and physician VAS scores was moderate (rs=0.580; p<0.001). Discordance occurred in 56% of cases: in 28% physicians overestimated adherence and in 27% underestimated. Low adherence as assessed by the physician (OR=27.35 (9.85 to 75.95)), FEV1 ≥80% (OR=2.59 (1.08 to 6.20)) and a first appointment (OR=5.63 (1.24 to 25.56)) were predictors of underestimation. An uncontrolled asthma (OR=2.33 (1.25 to 4.34)), uncontrolled upper airway disease (OR=2.86 (1.35 to 6.04)) and prescription of short-acting beta-agonists alone (OR=3.05 (1.15 to 8.08)) were associated with overestimation. Medium adherence as assessed by the physician was significantly associated with higher risk of discordance, both for overestimation and underestimation of adherence (OR=14.50 (6.04 to 34.81); OR=2.21 (1.07 to 4.58)), while having a written action plan decreased the likelihood of discordance (OR=0.25 (0.12 to 0.52); OR=0.41 (0.22 to 0.78)) (R2=44%). Conclusion: Although both patients and physicians report high inhaler adherence, discordance occurred in half of cases. Implementation of objective adherence measures and effective communication are needed to improve patient-physician agreement.