C Carswell
University College London
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Featured researches published by C Carswell.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 2013
Simon Mead; Sonia Gandhi; Jon Beck; Diana Caine; Dilip Gajulapalli; C Carswell; Harpreet Hyare; Susan Joiner; Hilary Ayling; Tammaryn Lashley; Jacqueline M. Linehan; Huda Al-Doujaily; Bernadette Sharps; Tamas Revesz; Malin K. Sandberg; Mary M. Reilly; Martin Koltzenburg; Alastair Forbes; Peter Rudge; Sebastian Brandner; Jason D. Warren; Jonathan D. F. Wadsworth; Nicholas W. Wood; Janice L. Holton; John Collinge
BACKGROUND Human prion diseases, although variable in clinicopathological phenotype, generally present as neurologic or neuropsychiatric conditions associated with rapid multifocal central nervous system degeneration that is usually dominated by dementia and cerebellar ataxia. Approximately 15% of cases of recognized prion disease are inherited and associated with coding mutations in the gene encoding prion protein (PRNP). The availability of genetic diagnosis has led to a progressive broadening of the recognized spectrum of disease. METHODS We used longitudinal clinical assessments over a period of 20 years at one hospital combined with genealogical, neuropsychological, neurophysiological, neuroimaging, pathological, molecular genetic, and biochemical studies, as well as studies of animal transmission, to characterize a novel prion disease in a large British kindred. We studied 6 of 11 affected family members in detail, along with autopsy or biopsy samples obtained from 5 family members. RESULTS We identified a PRNP Y163X truncation mutation and describe a distinct and consistent phenotype of chronic diarrhea with autonomic failure and a length-dependent axonal, predominantly sensory, peripheral polyneuropathy with an onset in early adulthood. Cognitive decline and seizures occurred when the patients were in their 40s or 50s. The deposition of prion protein amyloid was seen throughout peripheral organs, including the bowel and peripheral nerves. Neuropathological examination during end-stage disease showed the deposition of prion protein in the form of frequent cortical amyloid plaques, cerebral amyloid angiopathy, and tauopathy. A unique pattern of abnormal prion protein fragments was seen in brain tissue. Transmission studies in laboratory mice were negative. CONCLUSIONS Abnormal forms of prion protein that were found in multiple peripheral tissues were associated with diarrhea, autonomic failure, and neuropathy. (Funded by the U.K. Medical Research Council and others.).
BMC Neurology | 2012
C Carswell; Andrew Thompson; Ana Lukic; John M. Stevens; Peter Rudge; Simon Mead; John Collinge; Harpreet Hyare
BackgroundEstablishing a confident clinical diagnosis before an advanced stage of illness can be difficult in Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) but unlike common causes of dementia, prion diseases can often be diagnosed by identifying characteristic MRI signal changes. However, it is not known how often CJD-associated MRI changes are identified at the initial imaging report, whether the most sensitive sequences are used, and what impact MRI-diagnosis has on prompt referral to clinical trial-like studies.MethodsWe reviewed the MRI scans of 103 patients with CJD referred to the National Prion Clinic since 2007 and reviewed the presence of CJD-associated changes, compared these findings with the formal report from the referring centre and reviewed the types of sequence performed.ResultsIn sCJD we found CJD-associated MRI changes in 83 of 91 cases (91% sensitivity). However, the referring centres documented CJD-associated MRI changes in 43 of the sCJD cases (47% sensitivity). The most common region not documented by referring centres was the cortex (23 of 68 sCJD cases), but there was a statistically significant discrepancy in all regions (p<0.0001). Patients in whom MRI abnormalities were missed by the referring hospital were more advanced at the time of recruitment to a clinical trial-like study (p=0.03).ConclusionsCJD-associated MRI changes are often not documented on the formal investigation report at the referring centre. This is important as delay makes enrolment to clinical trials futile because of highly advanced disease. If a diagnosis of CJD is suspected, even if the initial imaging is reported as normal, a specialist MRI review either by an experienced neuroradiologist or by a prion disease specialist unit could facilitate earlier diagnosis.
JAMA Neurology | 2016
Laura B. Eisenmenger; Marie-Claire Porter; C Carswell; Andrew Thompson; Simon Mead; Peter Rudge; John Collinge; Sebastian Brandner; Hans Rolf Jager; Harpreet Hyare
IMPORTANCE Prion diseases represent the archetype of brain diseases caused by protein misfolding, with the most common subtype being sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD), a rapidly progressive dementia. Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) has emerged as the most sensitive magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) sequence for the diagnosis of sCJD, but few studies have assessed the evolution of MRI signal as the disease progresses. OBJECTIVES To assess the natural history of the MRI signal abnormalities on DWI in sCJD to improve our understanding of the pathogenesis and to investigate the potential of DWI as a biomarker of disease progression, with histopathological correlation. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Gray matter involvement on DWI was assessed among 37 patients with sCJD in 26 cortical and 5 subcortical subdivisions per hemisphere using a semiquantitative scoring system of 0 to 2 at baseline and follow-up. A total brain score was calculated as the summed scores in the individual regions. In 7 patients, serial mean diffusivity measurements were obtained. Age at baseline MRI, disease duration, atrophy, codon 129 methionine valine polymorphism, Medical Research Council Rating Scale score, and histopathological findings were documented. The study setting was the National Prion Clinic, London, England. All participants had a probable or definite diagnosis of sCJD and had at least 2 MRI studies performed during the course of their illness. The study dates were October 1, 2008 to April 1, 2012. The dates of our analysis were January 19 to April 20, 2012. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Correlation of regional and total brain scores with disease duration. RESULTS Among the 37 patients with sCJD in this study there was a significant increase in the number of regions demonstrating signal abnormality during the study period, with 59 of 62 regions showing increased signal intensity (SI) at follow-up, most substantially in the caudate and putamen (P < .001 for both). The increase in the mean (SD) total brain score from 30.2 (17.3) at baseline to 40.5 (20.6) at follow-up (P = .001) correlated with disease duration (r = 0.47, P = .003 at baseline and r = 0.35, P = .03 at follow-up), and the left frontal SI correlated with the degree of spongiosis (r = 0.64, P = .047). Decreased mean diffusivity in the left caudate at follow-up was seen (P < .001). Eight patients demonstrated decreased SI in cortical regions, including the left inferior temporal gyrus and the right lingual gyrus. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Magnetic resonance images in sCJD show increased extent and degree of SI on DWI that correlates with disease duration and the degree of spongiosis. Although cortical SI may fluctuate, increased basal ganglia SI is a consistent finding and is due to restricted diffusion. Diffusion-weighted imaging in the basal ganglia may provide a noninvasive biomarker in future therapeutic trials.
JAMA Neurology | 2016
Simon Mead; M Burnell; Jessica Lowe; Alan J. Thompson; Ana Lukic; Marie-Claire Porter; C Carswell; Diego Kaski; Joanna Kenny; Th Mok; N Bjurstrom; Edit Frankó; M Gorham; Ron Druyeh; Jonathan D. F. Wadsworth; Zane Jaunmuktane; Sebastian Brandner; Harpreet Hyare; Peter Rudge; As Walker; John Collinge
IMPORTANCE A major challenge for drug development in neurodegenerative diseases is that adequately powered efficacy studies with meaningful end points typically require several hundred participants and long durations. Prion diseases represent the archetype of brain diseases caused by protein misfolding, the most common subtype being sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD), a rapidly progressive dementia. There is no well-established trial method in prion disease. OBJECTIVE To establish a more powerful and meaningful clinical trial method in sCJD. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS A stratified medicine and simulation approach based on a prospective interval-cohort study conducted from October 2008 to June 2014. This study involved 598 participants with probable or definite sCJD followed up over 470 patient-years at a specialist national referral service in the United Kingdom with domiciliary, care home, and hospital patient visits. We fitted linear mixed models to the outcome measurements, and simulated clinical trials involving 10 to 120 patients (no dropouts) with early to moderately advanced prion disease using model parameters to compare the power of various designs. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES A total of 2681 assessments were done using a functionally orientated composite end point (Medical Research Council Scale) and associated with clinical investigations (brain magnetic resonance imaging, electroencephalography, and cerebrospinal fluid analysis) and molecular data (prion protein [PrP] gene sequencing, PrPSc type). RESULTS Of the 598 participants, 273 were men. The PrP gene sequence was significantly associated with decline relative to any other demographic or investigation factors. Patients with sCJD and polymorphic codon 129 genotypes MM, VV, and MV lost 10% of their function in 5.3 (95% CI, 4.2-6.9), 13.2 (95% CI, 10.9-16.6), and 27.8 (95% CI, 21.9-37.8) days, respectively (P < .001). Simulations indicate that an adequately powered (80%; 2-sided α = .05) open-label randomized trial using 50% reduction in Medical Research Council Scale decline as the primary outcome could be conducted with only 120 participants assessed every 10 days and only 90 participants assessed daily, providing considerably more power than using survival as the primary outcome. Restricting to VV or MV codon 129 genotypes increased power even further. Alternatively, single-arm intervention studies (half the total sample size) could provide similar power in comparison to the natural history cohort. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Functional end points in neurodegeneration need not require long and very large clinical studies to be adequately powered for efficacy. Patients with sCJD may be an efficient and cost-effective group for testing disease-modifying therapeutics. Stratified medicine and natural history cohort approaches may transform the feasibility of clinical trials in orphan diseases.
Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2010
Simon Mead; J Linehan; J Beck; Diana Caine; S Gandhi; J D F Wadsworth; S Joiner; D Gallujipali; Harpreet Hyare; Aj Lees; Janice L. Holton; M Sandberg; Tamas Revesz; C Carswell; Jason D. Warren; John Collinge; Nicholas W. Wood
The inherited prion diseases (IPD) are a group of dominantly inherited neurodegenerative disorders caused by mutation of the prion protein gene (PRNP). Although clinically heterogeneous, IPDs are generally associated with progressive dementia, ataxia and with characteristic pathology. Here we describe a quite distinct and consistent phenotype in nine patients from a family with a novel Y163X PRNP truncation mutation. The major clinical features consist of chronic diarrhoea, profound autonomic failure and a predominantly axonal sensory peripheral neuropathy in early adulthood. Prior to genetic analyses, the clinical diagnosis was hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy (HSAN), which was followed by cognitive decline and seizures only much later, in the fifth to sixth decade. Neuropathological assessments reveal extensive central nervous system prion protein deposition including cerebral amyloid angiopathy and secondary tauopathy. Remarkably, abnormal prion protein deposition was also seen in the duodenum which may have contributed to presentation with diarrhoea. Molecular analysis of proteinase-resistant material from brain shows evidence of aggregation and covalent cross-linking of a misfolded and truncated prion protein entity. The association of autonomic failure, diarrhoea, and neuropathy should prompt PRNP testing and precautions for iatrogenic transmission. Abnormal anchorless PrP may deposit in peripheral tissues and be associated with nonneurological presentations.
Translational Psychiatry | 2015
Andrew Thompson; James Uphill; Jessica Lowe; M-C Porter; Ana Lukic; C Carswell; P Rudge; A. MacKay; John Collinge; Simon Mead
Prion diseases are rare neurodegenerative conditions causing highly variable clinical syndromes, which often include prominent neuropsychiatric symptoms. We have recently carried out a clinical study of behavioural and psychiatric symptoms in a large prospective cohort of patients with prion disease in the United Kingdom, allowing us to operationalise specific behavioural/psychiatric phenotypes as traits in human prion disease. Here, we report exploratory genome-wide association analysis on 170 of these patients and 5200 UK controls, looking for single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with three behavioural/psychiatric phenotypes in the context of prion disease. We also specifically examined a selection of candidate SNPs that have shown genome-wide association with psychiatric conditions in previously published studies, and the codon 129 polymorphism of the prion protein gene, which is known to modify various aspects of the phenotype of prion disease. No SNPs reached genome-wide significance, and there was no evidence of altered burden of known psychiatric risk alleles in relevant prion cases. SNPs showing suggestive evidence of association (P<10−5) included several lying near genes previously implicated in association studies of other psychiatric and neurodegenerative diseases. These include ANK3, SORL1 and a region of chromosome 6p containing several genes implicated in schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. We would encourage others to acquire phenotype data in independent cohorts of patients with prion disease as well as other neurodegenerative and neuropsychiatric conditions, to allow meta-analysis that may shed clearer light on the biological basis of these complex disease manifestations, and the diseases themselves.
Dementia and geriatric cognitive disorders extra | 2012
C Carswell; Michael Rañopa; Suvankar Pal; Rebecca Macfarlane; Durre Siddique; Dafydd Thomas; Tom R. Webb; S Wroe; Sarah Walker; Janet Darbyshire; John Collinge; Simon Mead; Peter Rudge
Background/Aims: Large clinical trials including patients with uncommon diseases involve assessors in different geographical locations, resulting in considerable inter-rater variability in assessment scores. As video recordings of examinations, which can be individually rated, may eliminate such variability, we measured the agreement between a single video rater and multiple examining physicians in the context of PRION-1, a clinical trial of the antimalarial drug quinacrine in human prion diseases. Methods: We analysed a 43-component neurocognitive assessment battery, on 101 patients with Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, focusing on the correlation and agreement between examining physicians and a single video rater. Results: In total, 335 videos of examinations of 101 patients who were video-recorded over the 4-year trial period were assessed. For neurocognitive examination, inter-observer concordance was generally excellent. Highly visual neurological examination domains (e.g. finger-nose-finger assessment of ataxia) had good inter-rater correlation, whereas those dependent on non-visual clues (e.g. power or reflexes) correlated poorly. Some non-visual neurological domains were surprisingly concordant, such as limb muscle tone. Conclusion: Cognitive assessments and selected neurological domains can be practically and accurately recorded in a clinical trial using video rating. Video recording of examinations is a valuable addition to any trial provided appropriate selection of assessment instruments is used and rigorous training of assessors is undertaken.
Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2010
C Carswell; A. Khalili-Shirazi; Sebastian Brandner; S Martins; R Drynda; John Collinge; Simon Mead; Anthony R. Clarke
There has been intense interest in treating neurodegenerative conditions by passive immunotherapy. Here we describe the treatment of mice infected intraperitoneally (ip) with 104.6 infectious units of Rocky Mountain Laboratory (RML) prions, with bi-weekly injections of ip anti-prion monoclonal antibodies (mAbs). Mab ICSM18 (prion protein (PrP) epitope 143–153) raised to recombinant PrP, and ICSM35 (prion protein epitope 93–105) raised to an alternatively folded form of PrP, were both used at doses of 1 mg/week, or 0.25 mg/week. Treatment was given when prion infection was well established, 30 days after inoculation. Treatment resulted in a reduction in disease-related PrP (PrPSc) in the spleen and a significant extension in survival with both mAbs. ICSM18 showed a dose response and was more potent than ICSM35 with a 40% survival at 300 days postinfection using a dose of 1 mg/week. mAb treatment did not disrupt the normal function of the immune system. We have successfully demonstrated that the course of RML prion infection in mice can be safely attenuated by the early treatment with anti-PrP mAbs, at lower doses than previously reported. Humanised versions of these two mAbs will undergo safety-testing prior to manufacture for first-in-man study.
PRION , 8 p. 10. (2014) | 2014
Simon Mead; M Burnell; Jessica Lowe; Ana Lukic; M-C Porter; Andrew Thompson; C Carswell; D Kaski; J Kenny; N Bjurgsrom; M Gorham; R Druyeh; J Wadsworth; S Brandner; Harpreet Hyare; As Walker; P Rudge; John Collinge
The New England Journal of Medicine | 2013
Simon Mead; S Gandhi; J Beck; Diana Caine; D Gallujipali; C Carswell; Harpreet Hyare; Susan Joiner; H Ayling; Tammaryn Lashley; Jacqueline M. Linehan; Huda Al-Doujaily; Bernadette Sharps; Tamas Revesz; Malin K. Sandberg; Mary M. Reilly; Martin Koltzenburg; A Forbes; P Rudge; Sebastian Brandner; Jason D. Warren; Jdf Wadsworth; Nicholas W. Wood; Janice L. Holton; John Collinge
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University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
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