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Dive into the research topics where Alisha Wilkens is active.

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Featured researches published by Alisha Wilkens.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2012

Novel clinical manifestations in Pallister–Killian syndrome: Comprehensive evaluation of 59 affected individuals and review of previously reported cases

Alisha Wilkens; Hongbin Liu; Kristen Park; Lindsey Campbell; Marie Jackson; Anna Kostanecka; Mary Pipan; Kosuke Izumi; Phillip Pallister; Ian D. Krantz

Pallister–Killian syndrome is a rare, multi‐system developmental diagnosis typically caused by tetrasomy of chromosome 12p that exhibits tissue‐limited mosaicism. The spectrum of clinical manifestations in Pallister–Killian syndrome is wide and includes craniofacial anomalies, clefts, ophthalmologic, audiologic, cardiac, musculoskeletal, diaphragmatic, gastrointestinal, genitourinary, and cutaneous anomalies in association with intellectual disability and seizures. Growth parameters are often normal to elevated at birth with deceleration of growth postnatally. No formal estimate of the prevalence of Pallister–Killian syndrome has been made. Here, we report the clinical findings in 59 individuals with Pallister–Killian syndrome who were ascertained at Pallister–Killian syndrome Foundation family meetings held in the summers of 2006, 2008, 2009, and 2010. In addition, the clinical findings of 152 cases reported in the medical literature were reviewed and compared to the cohort examined here. Several novel clinical characteristics were identified through detailed dysmorphology examinations of this cohort and reassertion of a mild developmental variant is described. This report expands the clinical manifestations of Pallister–Killian syndrome and highlights the variable expressivity of this diagnosis with important implications for diagnosis and counseling.


Genetics in Medicine | 2016

Recommendations for the integration of genomics into clinical practice

Sarah Bowdin; Adel Gilbert; Emma C. Bedoukian; Christopher Carew; Adam Mp; John W. Belmont; Barbara A. Bernhardt; Leslie G. Biesecker; Hans T. Bjornsson; Miriam G. Blitzer; Lisa D'Alessandro; Matthew A. Deardorff; Laurie A. Demmer; Alison M. Elliott; Gerald L. Feldman; Ian A. Glass; Gail E. Herman; Lucia A. Hindorff; Fuki M. Hisama; Louanne Hudgins; A. Micheil Innes; Laird G. Jackson; Gail Jarvik; Raymond Kim; Bruce R. Korf; David H. Ledbetter; Mindy Li; Eriskay Liston; Christian R. Marshall; Livija Medne

The introduction of diagnostic clinical genome and exome sequencing (CGES) is changing the scope of practice for clinical geneticists. Many large institutions are making a significant investment in infrastructure and technology, allowing clinicians to access CGES, especially as health-care coverage begins to extend to clinically indicated genomic sequencing-based tests. Translating and realizing the comprehensive clinical benefits of genomic medicine remain a key challenge for the current and future care of patients. With the increasing application of CGES, it is necessary for geneticists and other health-care providers to understand its benefits and limitations in order to interpret the clinical relevance of genomic variants identified in the context of health and disease. New, collaborative working relationships with specialists across diverse disciplines (e.g., clinicians, laboratorians, bioinformaticians) will undoubtedly be key attributes of the future practice of clinical genetics and may serve as an example for other specialties in medicine. These new skills and relationships will also inform the development of the future model of clinical genetics training curricula. To address the evolving role of the clinical geneticist in the rapidly changing climate of genomic medicine, two Clinical Genetics Think Tank meetings were held that brought together physicians, laboratorians, scientists, genetic counselors, trainees, and patients with experience in clinical genetics, genetic diagnostics, and genetics education. This article provides recommendations that will guide the integration of genomics into clinical practice.Genet Med 18 11, 1075–1084.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2013

Clinical Features of Three Girls With Mosaic Genome-Wide Paternal Uniparental Isodisomy

Jennifer M. Kalish; Laura K. Conlin; Tricia R. Bhatti; Holly Dubbs; Mary Catherine Harris; Kosuke Izumi; Sogol Mostoufi-Moab; Surabhi Mulchandani; Sulagna C. Saitta; Lisa J. States; Daniel T. Swarr; Alisha Wilkens; Elaine H. Zackai; Kristin Zelley; Marisa S. Bartolomei; Kim E. Nichols; Andrew A. Palladino; Nancy B. Spinner; Matthew A. Deardorff

Here we describe three subjects with mosaic genome‐wide paternal uniparental isodisomy (GWpUPD) each of whom presented initially with overgrowth, hemihyperplasia (HH), and hyperinsulinism (HI). Due to the severity of findings and the presence of additional features, SNP array testing was performed, which demonstrated mosaic GWpUPD. Comparing these individuals to 10 other live‐born subjects reported in the literature, the predominant phenotype is that of pUPD11 and notable for a very high incidence of tumor development. Our subjects developed non‐metastatic tumors of the adrenal gland, kidney, and/or liver. All three subjects had pancreatic hyperplasia resulting in HI. Notably, our subjects to date display minimal features of other diseases associated with paternal UPD loci. Both children who survived the neonatal period have displayed near‐normal cognitive development, likely due to a favorable tissue distribution of the mosaicism. To understand the range of UPD mosaicism levels, we studied multiple tissues using SNP array analysis and detected levels of 5–95%, roughly correlating with the extent of tissue involvement. Given the rapidity of tumor growth and the difficulty distinguishing malignant and benign tumors in these GWpUPD subjects, we have utilized increased frequency of ultrasound (US) and alpha‐fetoprotein (AFP) screening in the first years of life. Because of a later age of onset of additional tumors, continued tumor surveillance into adolescence may need to be considered in these rare patients.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2012

Utility of SNP arrays in detecting, quantifying, and determining meiotic origin of tetrasomy 12p in blood from individuals with Pallister-Killian syndrome.

Laura K. Conlin; Maninder Kaur; Kosuke Izumi; Lindsey Campbell; Alisha Wilkens; Dinah Clark; Matthew A. Deardorff; Elaine H. Zackai; Phillip Pallister; Hakon Hakonarson; Nancy B. Spinner; Ian D. Krantz

Identification of the isochromosome 12p (i(12p)) associated with Pallister–Killian syndrome is complicated by the low frequency of this supernumerary chromosome in PHA stimulated peripheral blood lymphocytes, and frequently requires cytogenetic analysis of fibroblast cells. Recently, it has been shown that array CGH techniques are able to detect tetrasomy 12p in peripheral blood, even when not identified by traditional cytogenetic techniques. We studied 15 patients with a previous cytogenetic and clinical diagnosis of Pallister–Killian syndrome using genome‐wide SNP arrays to investigate the ability of this platform to identify the i(12p) in blood and tissue. Array analysis verified tetrasomy 12p in all samples from fibroblasts, but was only able to detect it in 46% of blood samples. The genotyping information available from the SNP arrays allowed for the detection of as low as 5% mosaicism, as well as suggesting a Meiosis II origin for the isochromosome in the majority of patients. Analysis of the percentage of abnormal cells with patient age at time of study suggests that the frequency of the i(12p) decreased with age in blood, but not in fibroblasts. These highlight the power of SNP arrays in detecting and characterizing the isochromosome 12p in Pallister–Killian syndrome as well as underscoring the important utility of traditional cytogenetic techniques.


BMC Bioinformatics | 2014

Clinical phenotype-based gene prioritization: an initial study using semantic similarity and the human phenotype ontology

Aaron J. Masino; Elizabeth T. DeChene; Matthew C. Dulik; Alisha Wilkens; Nancy B. Spinner; Ian D. Krantz; Jeffrey W. Pennington; Peter N. Robinson; Peter S. White

BackgroundExome sequencing is a promising method for diagnosing patients with a complex phenotype. However, variant interpretation relative to patient phenotype can be challenging in some scenarios, particularly clinical assessment of rare complex phenotypes. Each patient’s sequence reveals many possibly damaging variants that must be individually assessed to establish clear association with patient phenotype. To assist interpretation, we implemented an algorithm that ranks a given set of genes relative to patient phenotype. The algorithm orders genes by the semantic similarity computed between phenotypic descriptors associated with each gene and those describing the patient. Phenotypic descriptor terms are taken from the Human Phenotype Ontology (HPO) and semantic similarity is derived from each term’s information content.ResultsModel validation was performed via simulation and with clinical data. We simulated 33 Mendelian diseases with 100 patients per disease. We modeled clinical conditions by adding noise and imprecision, i.e. phenotypic terms unrelated to the disease and terms less specific than the actual disease terms. We ranked the causative gene against all 2488 HPO annotated genes. The median causative gene rank was 1 for the optimal and noise cases, 12 for the imprecision case, and 60 for the imprecision with noise case. Additionally, we examined a clinical cohort of subjects with hearing impairment. The disease gene median rank was 22. However, when also considering the patient’s exome data and filtering non-exomic and common variants, the median rank improved to 3.ConclusionsSemantic similarity can rank a causative gene highly within a gene list relative to patient phenotype characteristics, provided that imprecision is mitigated. The clinical case results suggest that phenotype rank combined with variant analysis provides significant improvement over the individual approaches. We expect that this combined prioritization approach may increase accuracy and decrease effort for clinical genetic diagnosis.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2012

Duplication 12p and Pallister–Killian syndrome: A case report and review of the literature toward defining a Pallister–Killian syndrome minimal critical region†

Kosuke Izumi; Laura K. Conlin; Donna Berrodin; Christopher T. Fincher; Alisha Wilkens; Chad R. Haldeman-Englert; Sulagna C. Saitta; Elaine H. Zackai; Nancy B. Spinner; Ian D. Krantz

Pallister–Killian syndrome (PKS) is a multisystem sporadic genetic condition characterized by facial anomalies, variable developmental delay and intellectual impairment, hypotonia, hearing loss, seizures, pigmentary skin differences, temporal alopecia, diaphragmatic hernia, congenital heart defects, and other systemic abnormalities. PKS is typically caused by the presence of a supernumerary isochromosome composed of the short arms of chromosome 12 resulting in tetrasomy 12p, which is often present in a tissue limited mosaic state. The PKS phenotype has also often been observed in individuals with complete or partial duplications of 12p (trisomy 12p rather than tetrasomy 12p) as the result of an interstitial duplication or unbalanced translocation. We have identified a proposita with PKS who has two small de novo interstitial duplications of 12p which, along with a review of previously reported cases, has allowed us to define a minimum critical region for PKS.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2013

Bilateral Pheochromocytomas, Hemihyperplasia, and Subtle Somatic Mosaicism: The Importance of Detecting Low-Level Uniparental Disomy

Jennifer M. Kalish; Laura K. Conlin; Sogol Mostoufi-Moab; Alisha Wilkens; Surabhi Mulchandani; Kristin Zelley; Megan Kowalski; Tricia R. Bhatti; Pierre Russo; Peter Mattei; William G. Mackenzie; Virginia A. LiVolsi; Kim E. Nichols; Jaclyn A. Biegel; Nancy B. Spinner; Matthew A. Deardorff

We report on a patient with early onset pediatric bilateral pheochromocytomas caused by mosaic chromosome 11p15 paternal uniparental isodisomy (UPD). Hemihyperplasia of the arm was diagnosed in a 4‐month‐old female and clinical methylation testing for 11p15 in the blood was normal, with a reported detection threshold for mosaicism of 20%. She was subsequently diagnosed at 18 months with bilateral pheochromocytomas. Single‐nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) array analysis of pheochromocytoma tissue demonstrated mosaic deletions of 8p12pter, 21q21.1qter, 22q11.23qter; commonly seen in pheochromocytomas. In addition, mosaic 11p15.3pter homozygosity was noted. Molecular testing for other causes of pheochromocytomas was normal, suggesting that 11p15 homozygosity was the primary event. Subsequent SNP array analysis of skin fibroblasts from the hyperplastic side demonstrated 5% mosaic paternal UPD for 11p15. We have subsequently used SNP array analysis to identify four patients with subtle hemihyperplasia with low‐level mosaic UPD that was not detected by methylation analysis. Given the increased sensitivity of SNP array analysis to detect UPD along with the increased incidence of tumorigenesis in these UPD patients, we suggest that it has high utility in the clinical work‐up of hemihyperplasia. The present case also suggests that 11p15 paternal UPD may be an under‐detected mechanism of sporadic pheochromocytoma in the pediatric population. Furthermore, a review of the literature suggests that patients with 11p15 paternal UPD may present after 8 years of age with pheochromocytoma and raises the possibility that ultrasound screening could be considered beyond 8 years of age in this subset of hemihyperplasia and Beckwith–Wiedemann syndrome patients.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2016

Outcomes of evaluation and testing of 660 individuals with hearing loss in a pediatric genetics of hearing loss clinic.

Devanshi Mehta; Sarah E. Noon; Schwartz E; Alisha Wilkens; Emma C. Bedoukian; Scarano I; Crenshaw Eb rd; Ian D. Krantz

Hearing loss is a relatively common condition in children, occurring in approximately 2 out of every 1,000 births with approximately 50% of reported diagnoses having a primary genetic etiology. Given the prevalence and genetic component of hearing loss, coupled with a trend toward early diagnosis with the institution of universal newborn hearing screening, The Genetics of Hearing Loss Clinic was established at The Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia to manage the diagnosis, testing, and genetic counseling for individuals and families. This paper described a cohort of 660 individuals with a diagnosis of hearing loss evaluated between July 2008 and July 2015 in the Genetics of Hearing Loss Clinic. To elucidate the cause of hearing loss in this cohort for better management and prognostication, testing included single nucleotide polymorphism chromosomal microarray, hearing loss next generation sequencing panel, and additional clinical tests inclusive of thyroid and renal function studies, temporal bone magnetic resonance imaging, and electrocardiogram. Of those evaluated, most had bilateral sensorineural hearing loss, occurring in 489/660 (74%). Additionally, 612/660 (93%) of patients presented with a nonsyndromic form of hearing loss (no other observed clinical findings at the time of exam), of which pathogenic mutations in GJB2 were most prevalent. Of the individuals with syndromic manifestations (48/660), Usher and Waardenburg syndrome were most commonly observed. A family history of hearing loss (first degree relative) was present in 12.6% of families with available information. Through molecular analyses, clinical examination, and laboratory testing, a definitive etiologic diagnosis was established in 157/660 (23.8%) of individuals.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2013

Homozygosity for the V37I GJB2 mutation in fifteen probands with mild to moderate sensorineural hearing impairment: Further confirmation of pathogenicity and haplotype analysis in Asian populations

Emily Gallant; Lauren J. Francey; Ellen A. Tsai; Micah Berman; Yaru Zhao; Heather Fetting; Maninder Kaur; Matthew A. Deardorff; Alisha Wilkens; Dinah Clark; Hakon Hakonarson; Heidi L. Rehm; Ian D. Krantz

Hearing impairment affects 1 in 650 newborns, making it the most common congenital sensory impairment. Autosomal recessive nonsyndromic sensorineural hearing impairment (ARNSHI) comprises 80% of familial hearing impairment cases. Mutations in GJB2 account for a significant number of ARNSHI (and up to 50% of documented recessive (e.g., more than 1 affected sibling) hearing impairment in some populations). Mutations in the GJB2 gene are amongst the most common causes of hearing impairment in populations of various ethnic backgrounds. Two mutations of this gene, 35delG and 167delT, account for the majority of reported mutations in Caucasian populations, especially those of Mediterranean and Ashkenazi Jewish background. The 235delC mutation is most prevalent in East Asian populations. Some mutations are of less well‐characterized significance. The V37I missense mutation, common in Asian populations, was initially described as a polymorphism and later as a potentially pathogenic mutation. We report here on 15 unrelated individuals with ARNSHI and homozygosity for the V37I GJB2 missense mutation. Nine individuals are of Chinese ancestry, two are of unspecified Asian descent, one is of Japanese descent, one individual is of Vietnamese ancestry, one of Philippine background and one of Italian and Cuban/Caucasian background. Homozygosity for the V37I GJB2 mutation may be a more common pathogenic missense mutation in Asian populations, resulting in mild to moderate sensorineural hearing impairment. We report a presumed haplotype block specific to East Asian individuals with the V37I mutation encompassing the GJB2 gene that may account for the high prevalence in East Asian populations.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Genome-Wide Expression Analysis in Fibroblast Cell Lines from Probands with Pallister Killian Syndrome

Maninder Kaur; Kosuke Izumi; Alisha Wilkens; Kathryn C. Chatfield; Nancy B. Spinner; Laura K. Conlin; Zhe Zhang; Ian D. Krantz

Pallister Killian syndrome (OMIM: # 601803) is a rare multisystem disorder typically caused by tissue limited mosaic tetrasomy of chromosome 12p (isochromosome 12p). The clinical manifestations of Pallister Killian syndrome are variable with the most common findings including craniofacial dysmorphia, hypotonia, cognitive impairment, hearing loss, skin pigmentary differences and epilepsy. Isochromosome 12p is identified primarily in skin fibroblast cultures and in chorionic villus and amniotic fluid cell samples and may be identified in blood lymphocytes during the neonatal and early childhood period. We performed genomic expression profiling correlated with interphase fluorescent in situ hybridization and single nucleotide polymorphism array quantification of degree of mosaicism in fibroblasts from 17 Caucasian probands with Pallister Killian syndrome and 9 healthy age, gender and ethnicity matched controls. We identified a characteristic profile of 354 (180 up- and 174 down-regulated) differentially expressed genes in Pallister Killian syndrome probands and supportive evidence for a Pallister Killian syndrome critical region on 12p13.31. The differentially expressed genes were enriched for developmentally important genes such as homeobox genes. Among the differentially expressed genes, we identified several genes whose misexpression may be associated with the clinical phenotype of Pallister Killian syndrome such as downregulation of ZFPM2, GATA6 and SOX9, and overexpression of IGFBP2.

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Ian D. Krantz

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Kosuke Izumi

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Laura K. Conlin

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Nancy B. Spinner

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Matthew A. Deardorff

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Elaine H. Zackai

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Sarah E. Noon

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Maninder Kaur

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Avni Santani

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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