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Dive into the research topics where Anna Kostera-Pruszczyk is active.

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Featured researches published by Anna Kostera-Pruszczyk.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2016

Randomized Trial of Thymectomy in Myasthenia Gravis

Gil I. Wolfe; Henry J. Kaminski; Inmaculada Aban; Greg Minisman; Huichien Kuo; Alexander Marx; Philipp Ströbel; Claudio Mazia; Joel Oger; J. Gabriel Cea; Jeannine M. Heckmann; Amelia Evoli; Wilfred Nix; Emma Ciafaloni; Giovanni Antonini; Rawiphan Witoonpanich; John King; Said R. Beydoun; Colin Chalk; Alexandru Barboi; Anthony A. Amato; Aziz Shaibani; Bashar Katirji; Bryan Lecky; Camilla Buckley; Angela Vincent; Elza Dias-Tosta; Hiroaki Yoshikawa; Marcia Waddington-Cruz; Michael Pulley

BACKGROUND Thymectomy has been a mainstay in the treatment of myasthenia gravis, but there is no conclusive evidence of its benefit. We conducted a multicenter, randomized trial comparing thymectomy plus prednisone with prednisone alone. METHODS We compared extended transsternal thymectomy plus alternate-day prednisone with alternate-day prednisone alone. Patients 18 to 65 years of age who had generalized nonthymomatous myasthenia gravis with a disease duration of less than 5 years were included if they had Myasthenia Gravis Foundation of America clinical class II to IV disease (on a scale from I to V, with higher classes indicating more severe disease) and elevated circulating concentrations of acetylcholine-receptor antibody. The primary outcomes were the time-weighted average Quantitative Myasthenia Gravis score (on a scale from 0 to 39, with higher scores indicating more severe disease) over a 3-year period, as assessed by means of blinded rating, and the time-weighted average required dose of prednisone over a 3-year period. RESULTS A total of 126 patients underwent randomization between 2006 and 2012 at 36 sites. Patients who underwent thymectomy had a lower time-weighted average Quantitative Myasthenia Gravis score over a 3-year period than those who received prednisone alone (6.15 vs. 8.99, P<0.001); patients in the thymectomy group also had a lower average requirement for alternate-day prednisone (44 mg vs. 60 mg, P<0.001). Fewer patients in the thymectomy group than in the prednisone-only group required immunosuppression with azathioprine (17% vs. 48%, P<0.001) or were hospitalized for exacerbations (9% vs. 37%, P<0.001). The number of patients with treatment-associated complications did not differ significantly between groups (P=0.73), but patients in the thymectomy group had fewer treatment-associated symptoms related to immunosuppressive medications (P<0.001) and lower distress levels related to symptoms (P=0.003). CONCLUSIONS Thymectomy improved clinical outcomes over a 3-year period in patients with nonthymomatous myasthenia gravis. (Funded by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke and others; MGTX ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00294658.).


Journal of Autoimmunity | 2014

A comprehensive analysis of the epidemiology and clinical characteristics of anti-LRP4 in myasthenia gravis.

Paraskevi Zisimopoulou; P. Evangelakou; J. Tzartos; Konstantinos Lazaridis; V. Zouvelou; Renato Mantegazza; Carlo Antozzi; F. Andreetta; Amelia Evoli; F. Deymeer; Güher Saruhan-Direskeneli; H. Durmus; Talma Brenner; A. Vaknin; Sonia Berrih-Aknin; M. Frenkian Cuvelier; T. Stojkovic; M. DeBaets; Mario Losen; Pilar Martinez-Martinez; Kleopas A. Kleopa; Eleni Zamba-Papanicolaou; Theodoros Kyriakides; Anna Kostera-Pruszczyk; P. Szczudlik; B. Szyluk; Dragana Lavrnic; Ivana Basta; S. Peric; Chantal Tallaksen

Double-seronegative myasthenia gravis (dSN-MG, without detectable AChR and MuSK antibodies) presents a serious gap in MG diagnosis and understanding. Recently, autoantibodies against the low-density lipoprotein receptor-related protein 4 (LRP4) have been identified in several dSN-MG sera, but with dramatic frequency variation (∼2-50%). We have developed a cell based assay (CBA) based on human LRP4 expressing HEK293 cells, for the reliable and efficient detection of LRP4 antibodies. We have screened about 800 MG patient sera from 10 countries for LRP4 antibodies. The overall frequency of LRP4-MG in the dSN-MG group (635 patients) was 18.7% but with variations among different populations (range 7-32.7%). Interestingly, we also identified double positive sera: 8/107 anti-AChR positive and 10/67 anti-MuSK positive sera also had detectable LRP4 antibodies, predominantly originating from only two of the participating groups. No LRP4 antibodies were identified in sera from 56 healthy controls tested, while 4/110 from patients with other neuroimmune diseases were positive. The clinical data, when available, for the LRP4-MG patients were then studied. At disease onset symptoms were mild (81% had MGFA grade I or II), with some identified thymic changes (32% hyperplasia, none with thymoma). On the other hand, double positive patients (AChR/LRP4-MG and MuSK/LRP4-MG) had more severe symptoms at onset compared with any single positive MG subgroup. Contrary to MuSK-MG, 27% of ocular dSN-MG patients were LRP4 antibody positive. Similarly, contrary to MuSK antibodies, which are predominantly of the IgG4 subtype, LRP4 antibodies were predominantly of the IgG1 and IgG2 subtypes. The prevalence was higher in women than in men (female/male ratio 2.5/1), with an average disease onset at ages 33.4 for females and 41.9 for males. Overall, the response of LRP4-MG patients to treatment was similar to published responses of AChR-MG rather than to MuSK-MG patients.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2008

Unaffected patients with a homozygous absence of the SMN1 gene

Maria Jędrzejowska; Janina Borkowska; Janusz Zimowski; Anna Kostera-Pruszczyk; Michał Milewski; Marta Jurek; Danuta Sielska; Ewa Kostyk; Walenty Nyka; Jacek Zaremba; Irena Hausmanowa-Petrusewicz

In this report, we present three families in which we identified asymptomatic carriers of a homozygous absence of the SMN1 gene. In the first family, the bialleleic deletion was found in three of four siblings: two affected brothers (SMA type 3a and 3b) and a 25-years-old asymptomatic sister. All of them have four SMN2 copies. In the second family, four of six siblings are affected (three suffer from SMA2 and one from SMA3a), each with three SMN2 copies. The clinically asymptomatic 47-year-old father has the biallelic deletion and four SMN2 copies. In the third family, the biallelic SMN1 absence was found in a girl affected with SMA1 and in her healthy 53-years-old father who had five SMN2 copies. Our findings as well as those of other authors show that an increased number of SMN2 copies in healthy carriers of the biallelic SMN1 deletion is an important SMA phenotype modifier, but probably not the only one.


Acta Neurologica Scandinavica | 2014

Antititin antibody in early- and late-onset myasthenia gravis

Piotr Szczudlik; Beata Szyluk; Marta Lipowska; B. Ryniewicz; Justyna Kubiszewska; Małgorzata Dutkiewicz; Nils Erik Gilhus; Anna Kostera-Pruszczyk

Myasthenia gravis (MG) is an autoimmune disease caused by antibodies against neuromuscular junction proteins, 85% of patients have antibodies against acetylcholine receptor (AChR‐MG). Antititin antibodies are present in a subset of patients with MG. We aimed to determine the value of antititin antibodies as severity markers and thymoma predictors in early‐ and late‐onset MG.


European Journal of Neurology | 2008

MuSK-positive myasthenia gravis is rare in the Polish population

Anna Kostera-Pruszczyk; A. Kamińska; M. Dutkiewicz; B. Emeryk-Szajewska; M. H. Strugalska-Cynowska; Angela Vincent; Hubert Kwiecinski

Background and purpose:  MuSK‐positive myasthenia gravis (MG) is diagnosed in 0–48% of cases with generalized seronegative MG in different populations. The presence of anti‐MuSK antibodies generally relates to a severe course and lack of response to thymectomy. We analyzed for the first time the serology and clinical characteristics of MuSK‐positive MG in the Polish population.


Neuromuscular Disorders | 2006

Juvenile onset acid maltase deficiency presenting as a rigid spine syndrome

Anna Kostera-Pruszczyk; Andrzej Opuchlik; Agnieszka Ługowska; Aleksandra Nadaj; Jacek Bojakowski; Anna Tylki-Szymańska; Anna Kaminska

The rigid spine syndrome is a disorder characterized by proximal muscle weakness and limitation in flexion of the cervical and dorsolumbar spine. Such phenotype may be caused by a variety of hereditary myopathies. We present the case of a 15-years-old boy with rigid spine syndrome and severe restrictive respiratory changes. Muscle biopsy revealed vacuolar myopathy with excessive deposition of PAS-positive material. Lysosomal acid maltase activity in cultured skin fibroblasts was reduced to 6% of control values. DNA analysis demonstrated novel mutation E888X of acid alpha-glucosidase gene with compound heterozygosity IVS1/E888X, confirming diagnosis of Pompe disease. We conclude that acid maltase deficiency should be considered in the diagnosis of rigid spine syndrome.


Molecular Medicine | 2015

Genome-wide Association Study of Late-Onset Myasthenia Gravis: Confirmation of TNFRSF11A, and Identification of ZBTB10 and Three Distinct HLA Associations.

Michael F. Seldin; Omar K. Alkhairy; Annette Lee; Janine A. Lamb; Jon Sussman; Ritva Pirskanen-Matell; Fredrik Piehl; Jan J. Verschuuren; Anna Kostera-Pruszczyk; Piotr Szczudlik; David McKee; Angelina Maniaol; Hanne F. Harbo; Benedicte A. Lie; Arthur Melms; Henri Jean Garchon; Nicholas Willcox; Peter K. Gregersen; Lennart Hammarström

To investigate the genetics of late-onset myasthenia gravis (LOMG), we conducted a genome-wide association study imputation of >6 million single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 532 LOMG cases (anti-acetylcholine receptor [AChR] antibody positive; onset age ≥50 years) and 2,128 controls matched for sex and population substructure. The data confirm reported TNFRSF11A associations (rs4574025, P = 3.9 × 10−7, odds ratio [OR] 1.42) and identify a novel candidate gene, ZBTB10, achieving genome-wide significance (rs6998967, P = 8.9 × 10−10, OR 0.53). Several other SNPs showed suggestive significance including rs2476601 (P = 6.5 × 10−6, OR 1.62) encoding the PTPN22 R620W variant noted in early-onset myasthenia gravis (EOMG) and other autoimmune diseases. In contrast, EOMG-associated SNPs in TNIP1 showed no association in LOMG, nor did other loci suggested for EOMG. Many SNPs within the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) region showed strong associations in LOMG, but with smaller effect sizes than in EOMG (highest OR ∼2 versus ∼6 in EOMG). Moreover, the strongest associations were in opposite directions from EOMG, including an OR of 0.54 for DQA1*05:01 in LOMG (P = 5.9 × 10−12) versus 2.82 in EOMG (P = 3.86 × 10−45). Association and conditioning studies for the MHC region showed three distinct and largely independent association peaks for LOMG corresponding to (a) MHC class II (highest attenuation when conditioning on DQA1), (b) HLA-A and (c) MHC class III SNPs. Conditioning studies of human leukocyte antigen (HLA) amino acid residues also suggest potential functional correlates. Together, these findings emphasize the value of subgrouping myasthenia gravis patients for clinical and basic investigations and imply distinct predisposing mechanisms in LOMG.


Journal of neuromuscular diseases | 2016

European Cross-Sectional Survey of Current Care Practices for Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy Reveals Regional and Age-Dependent Differences

Julia Vry; Kathrin Gramsch; Sunil Rodger; Rachel Thompson; Birgit F. Steffensen; J. Rahbek; Sam Doerken; Adrian Tassoni; María de los Angeles Beytía; Velina Guergueltcheva; Teodora Chamova; Ivailo Tournev; Anna Kostera-Pruszczyk; Anna Kaminska; Anna Lusakowska; Lenka Mrázová; Lenka Pavlovská; Jana Strenková; Petr Vondráček; Marta Garami; Veronika Karcagi; Ágnes Herczegfalvi; Kate Bushby; Hanns Lochmüller; Janbernd Kirschner

Background: Publication of comprehensive clinical care guidelines for Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) in 2010 was a milestone for DMD patient management. Our CARE-NMD survey investigates the neuromuscular, medical, and psychosocial care of DMD patients in Europe, and compares it to the guidelines. Methods: A cross-sectional survey of 1677 patients contacted via the TREAT-NMD patient registries was conducted using self-report questionnaires in seven European countries. Results: Survey respondents were 861 children and 201 adults. Data describe a European DMD population with mean age of 13.0 years (range 0.8–46.2) of whom 53% had lost ambulation (at 10.3 years of age, median). Corticosteroid medication raised the median age for ambulatory loss from 10.1 years in patients never medicated to 11.4 years in patients who received steroids (p < 0.0001). The majority of patients reported receiving care in line with guidelines, although we identified significant differences between countries and important shortcomings in prevention and treatment. Summarised, 35% of patients aged≥ nine years received no corticosteroid medication, 24% of all patients received no regular physiotherapy, echocardiograms were not performed regularly in 22% of patients, pulmonary function was not regularly assessed in 71% of non-ambulatory patients. Patients with regular follow-up by neuromuscular specialists were more likely to receive care according to guidelines, were better satisfied, and experienced shorter unplanned hospitalization periods.


Journal of Neuroimmunology | 2016

Titin antibodies in “seronegative” myasthenia gravis — A new role for an old antigen

C. Stergiou; Konstantinos Lazaridis; V. Zouvelou; John Tzartos; Renato Mantegazza; Carlo Antozzi; F. Andreetta; Amelia Evoli; Feza Deymeer; Güher Saruhan-Direskeneli; Hacer Durmus; Talma Brenner; A. Vaknin; Sonia Berrih-Aknin; A. Behin; Tarek Sharshar; M. De Baets; Mario Losen; Pilar Martinez-Martinez; Kleopas A. Kleopa; Eleni Zamba-Papanicolaou; Theodoros Kyriakides; Anna Kostera-Pruszczyk; Piotr Szczudlik; Beata Szyluk; Dragana Lavrnic; Ivana Basta; S. Peric; Chantal Tallaksen; Angelina Maniaol

Myasthenia gravis (MG) is an autoimmune disease caused by antibodies targeting the neuromuscular junction of skeletal muscles. Triple-seronegative MG (tSN-MG, without detectable AChR, MuSK and LRP4 antibodies), which accounts for ~10% of MG patients, presents a serious gap in MG diagnosis and complicates differential diagnosis of similar disorders. Several AChR antibody positive patients (AChR-MG) also have antibodies against titin, usually detected by ELISA. We have developed a very sensitive radioimmunoprecipitation assay (RIPA) for titin antibodies, by which many previously negative samples were found positive, including several from tSN-MG patients. The validity of the RIPA results was confirmed by western blots. Using this RIPA we screened 667 MG sera from 13 countries; as expected, AChR-MG patients had the highest frequency of titin antibodies (40.9%), while MuSK-MG and LRP4-MG patients were positive in 14.6% and 16.4% respectively. Most importantly, 13.4% (50/372) of the tSN-MG patients were also titin antibody positive. None of the 121 healthy controls or the 90 myopathy patients, and only 3.6% (7/193) of other neurological disease patients were positive. We thus propose that the present titin antibody RIPA is a useful tool for serological MG diagnosis of tSN patients.


Annals of clinical and translational neurology | 2014

VAV1 and BAFF, via NFκB pathway, are genetic risk factors for myasthenia gravis.

Nili Avidan; Rozen Le Panse; Hanne F. Harbo; Pia Bernasconi; Konstantinos Poulas; Elizabeta Ginzburg; Paola Cavalcante; Lara Colleoni; Fulvio Baggi; Carlo Antozzi; Frédérique Truffault; Shirley Horn-Saban; Simone Pöschel; Zoi Zagoriti; Angelina Maniaol; Benedicte A. Lie; Isabelle Bernard; Abdelhadi Saoudi; Zsolt Illes; Carlos Casasnovas Pons; Arthur Melms; Socrates J. Tzartos; Nicholas Willcox; Anna Kostera-Pruszczyk; Chantal Tallaksen; Renato Mantegazza; Sonia Berrih-Aknin; Ariel Miller

To identify novel genetic loci that predispose to early‐onset myasthenia gravis (EOMG) applying a two‐stage association study, exploration, and replication strategy.

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Anna Kaminska

Medical University of Warsaw

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Barbara Ryniewicz

Medical University of Warsaw

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Anna Lusakowska

Medical University of Warsaw

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Marta Lipowska

Medical University of Warsaw

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Piotr Pruszczyk

Medical University of Warsaw

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