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Dive into the research topics where Christine M. Armour is active.

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Featured researches published by Christine M. Armour.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2007

Further delineation of cardio-facio-cutaneous syndrome: clinical features of 38 individuals with proven mutations

Christine M. Armour; Judith Allanson

Background: Cardio-facio-cutaneous syndrome (CFC) is a multiple congenital anomaly/mental retardation syndrome named because of a characteristic facies, cardiac anomalies, and ectodermal abnormalities. While considerable literature describes the main features, few studies have documented the frequencies of less common features allowing a greater appreciation of the full phenotype. Methods: We have analysed clinical data on 38 individuals with CFC and a confirmed mutation in one of the genes known to cause the condition. We provide data on well-established features, and those that are less often described. Results: Polyhydramnios (77%) and prematurity (49%) were common perinatal issues. 71% of individuals had a cardiac anomaly, the most common being pulmonary valve stenosis (42%), hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (39%), and atrial septal defect (28%). Hair anomalies were also typical: 92% had curly hair, 84% sparse hair, and 86% absent or sparse eyebrows. The most frequent cutaneous features were keratosis pilaris (73%), hyperkeratosis (61%) and nevi (76%). Significant and long lived gastrointestinal dysmotility (71%), seizures (49%), optic nerve hypoplasia (30%) and renal anomalies, chiefly hydronephrosis (20%), were among the less well known issues reported. Conclusion: This study reports a broad range of clinical issues in a large cohort of individuals with molecular confirmation of CFC.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2015

The clinical application of genome-wide sequencing for monogenic diseases in Canada: Position Statement of the Canadian College of Medical Geneticists

Kym M. Boycott; Taila Hartley; Shelin Adam; Francois P. Bernier; Karen Chong; Bridget A. Fernandez; Jan M. Friedman; Michael T. Geraghty; Stacey Hume; Bartha Maria Knoppers; Anne-Marie Laberge; Jacek Majewski; Roberto Mendoza-Londono; M. Stephen Meyn; Jacques L. Michaud; Tanya N. Nelson; Julie Richer; Bekim Sadikovic; David L. Skidmore; Tracy L. Stockley; Sherry Taylor; Clara van Karnebeek; Ma'n H. Zawati; Julie Lauzon; Christine M. Armour

Purpose and scope The aim of this Position Statement is to provide recommendations for Canadian medical geneticists, clinical laboratory geneticists, genetic counsellors and other physicians regarding the use of genome-wide sequencing of germline DNA in the context of clinical genetic diagnosis. This statement has been developed to facilitate the clinical translation and development of best practices for clinical genome-wide sequencing for genetic diagnosis of monogenic diseases in Canada; it does not address the clinical application of this technology in other fields such as molecular investigation of cancer or for population screening of healthy individuals. Methods of statement development Two multidisciplinary groups consisting of medical geneticists, clinical laboratory geneticists, genetic counsellors, ethicists, lawyers and genetic researchers were assembled to review existing literature and guidelines on genome-wide sequencing for clinical genetic diagnosis in the context of monogenic diseases, and to make recommendations relevant to the Canadian context. The statement was circulated for comment to the Canadian College of Medical Geneticists (CCMG) membership-at-large and, following incorporation of feedback, approved by the CCMG Board of Directors. The CCMG is a Canadian organisation responsible for certifying medical geneticists and clinical laboratory geneticists, and for establishing professional and ethical standards for clinical genetics services in Canada. Results and conclusions Recommendations include (1) clinical genome-wide sequencing is an appropriate approach in the diagnostic assessment of a patient for whom there is suspicion of a significant monogenic disease that is associated with a high degree of genetic heterogeneity, or where specific genetic tests have failed to provide a diagnosis; (2) until the benefits of reporting incidental findings are established, we do not endorse the intentional clinical analysis of disease-associated genes other than those linked to the primary indication; and (3) clinicians should provide genetic counselling and obtain informed consent prior to undertaking clinical genome-wide sequencing. Counselling should include discussion of the limitations of testing, likelihood and implications of diagnosis and incidental findings, and the potential need for further analysis to facilitate clinical interpretation, including studies performed in a research setting. These recommendations will be routinely re-evaluated as knowledge of diagnostic and clinical utility of clinical genome-wide sequencing improves. While the document was developed to direct practice in Canada, the applicability of the statement is broader and will be of interest to clinicians and health jurisdictions internationally.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part C-seminars in Medical Genetics | 2011

Cardio-facio-cutaneous syndrome: Does genotype predict phenotype?

Judith Allanson; Göran Annerén; Yoki Aoki; Christine M. Armour; Marie-Louise Bondeson; Hélène Cavé; Karen W. Gripp; Bronwyn Kerr; Anna-Maja Nyström; Katia Sol-Church; Alain Verloes; Martin Zenker

Cardio‐facio‐cutaneous (CFC) syndrome is a sporadic multiple congenital anomalies/mental retardation condition principally caused by mutations in BRAF, MEK1, and MEK2. Mutations in KRAS and SHOC2 lead to a phenotype with overlapping features. In approximately 10–30% of individuals with a clinical diagnosis of CFC, a mutation in one of these causative genes is not found. Cardinal features of CFC include congenital heart defects, a characteristic facial appearance, and ectodermal abnormalities. Additional features include failure to thrive with severe feeding problems, moderate to severe intellectual disability and short stature with relative macrocephaly. First described in 1986, more than 100 affected individuals are reported. Following the discovery of the causative genes, more information has emerged on the breadth of clinical features. Little, however, has been published on genotype–phenotype correlations. This clinical study of 186 children and young adults with mutation‐proven CFC syndrome is the largest reported to date. BRAF mutations are documented in 140 individuals (∼75%), while 46 (∼25%) have a mutation in MEK 1 or MEK 2. The age range is 6 months to 32 years, the oldest individual being a female from the original report [Reynolds et al. (1986); Am J Med Genet 25:413–427]. While some clinical data on 136 are in the literature, 50 are not previously published. We provide new details of the breadth of phenotype and discuss the frequency of particular features in each genotypic group. Pulmonary stenosis is the only anomaly that demonstrates a statistically significant genotype–phenotype correlation, being more common in individuals with a BRAF mutation.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2011

17p13.3 microduplications are associated with split-hand/foot malformation and long-bone deficiency (SHFLD)

Christine M. Armour; Dennis E. Bulman; Olga Jarinova; Richard Curtis Rogers; Kate B Clarkson; Barbara R. DuPont; Alka Dwivedi; Frank Bartel; Laura M McDonell; Charles E. Schwartz; Kym M. Boycott; David B. Everman; Gail E. Graham

Split-hand/foot malformation with long-bone deficiency (SHFLD) is a relatively rare autosomal-dominant skeletal disorder, characterized by variable expressivity and incomplete penetrance. Although several chromosomal loci for SHFLD have been identified, the molecular basis and pathogenesis of most SHFLD cases are unknown. In this study we describe three unrelated kindreds, in which SHFLD segregated with distinct but overlapping duplications in 17p13.3, a region previously linked to SHFLD. In a large three-generation family, the disorder was found to segregate with a 254 kb microduplication; a second microduplication of 527 kb was identified in an affected female and her unaffected mother, and a 430 kb microduplication versus microtriplication was identified in three affected members of a multi-generational family. These findings, along with previously published data, suggest that one locus responsible for this form of SHFLD is located within a 173 kb overlapping critical region, and that the copy gains are incompletely penetrant.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2016

Phenotype and genotype in 52 patients with Rubinstein–Taybi syndrome caused by EP300 mutations

Patricia Fergelot; Martine J. van Belzen; Julien Van Gils; Alexandra Afenjar; Christine M. Armour; Benoit Arveiler; Lex Beets; Lydie Burglen; Tiffany Busa; Marie Collet; Julie Deforges; Bert B.A. de Vries; Elena Dominguez Garrido; Nathalie Dorison; Juliette Dupont; Christine Francannet; Sixto García-Miñaúr; Elisabeth Gabau Vila; Samuel Gebre-Medhin; Blanca Gener Querol; David Geneviève; Marion Gerard; Cristina Gervasini; Alice Goldenberg; Dragana Josifova; Katherine Lachlan; Saskia M. Maas; Bruno Maranda; Jukka L. Moilanen; Ann Nordgren

Rubinstein–Taybi syndrome (RSTS) is a developmental disorder characterized by a typical face and distal limbs abnormalities, intellectual disability, and a vast number of other features. Two genes are known to cause RSTS, CREBBP in 60% and EP300 in 8–10% of clinically diagnosed cases. Both paralogs act in chromatin remodeling and encode for transcriptional co‐activators interacting with >400 proteins. Up to now 26 individuals with an EP300 mutation have been published. Here, we describe the phenotype and genotype of 42 unpublished RSTS patients carrying EP300 mutations and intragenic deletions and offer an update on another 10 patients. We compare the data to 308 individuals with CREBBP mutations. We demonstrate that EP300 mutations cause a phenotype that typically resembles the classical RSTS phenotype due to CREBBP mutations to a great extent, although most facial signs are less marked with the exception of a low‐hanging columella. The limb anomalies are more similar to those in CREBBP mutated individuals except for angulation of thumbs and halluces which is very uncommon in EP300 mutated individuals. The intellectual disability is variable but typically less marked whereas the microcephaly is more common. All types of mutations occur but truncating mutations and small rearrangements are most common (86%). Missense mutations in the HAT domain are associated with a classical RSTS phenotype but otherwise no genotype–phenotype correlation is detected. Pre‐eclampsia occurs in 12/52 mothers of EP300 mutated individuals versus in 2/59 mothers of CREBBP mutated individuals, making pregnancy with an EP300 mutated fetus the strongest known predictor for pre‐eclampsia.


Canadian Medical Association Journal | 2016

Next-generation sequencing for diagnosis of rare diseases in the neonatal intensive care unit.

Hussein Daoud; Stephanie M. Luco; Rui Li; Eric Bareke; Chandree Beaulieu; Olga Jarinova; Nancy Carson; Sarah M. Nikkel; Gail E. Graham; Julie Richer; Christine M. Armour; Dennis E. Bulman; Pranesh Chakraborty; Michael T. Geraghty; Thierry Lacaze-Masmonteil; Jacek Majewski; Kym M. Boycott; David A. Dyment

Background: Rare diseases often present in the first days and weeks of life and may require complex management in the setting of a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). Exhaustive consultations and traditional genetic or metabolic investigations are costly and often fail to arrive at a final diagnosis when no recognizable syndrome is suspected. For this pilot project, we assessed the feasibility of next-generation sequencing as a tool to improve the diagnosis of rare diseases in newborns in the NICU. Methods: We retrospectively identified and prospectively recruited newborns and infants admitted to the NICU of the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario and the Ottawa Hospital, General Campus, who had been referred to the medical genetics or metabolics inpatient consult service and had features suggesting an underlying genetic or metabolic condition. DNA from the newborns and parents was enriched for a panel of clinically relevant genes and sequenced on a MiSeq sequencing platform (Illumina Inc.). The data were interpreted with a standard informatics pipeline and reported to care providers, who assessed the importance of genotype–phenotype correlations. Results: Of 20 newborns studied, 8 received a diagnosis on the basis of next-generation sequencing (diagnostic rate 40%). The diagnoses were renal tubular dysgenesis, SCN1A-related encephalopathy syndrome, myotubular myopathy, FTO deficiency syndrome, cranioectodermal dysplasia, congenital myasthenic syndrome, autosomal dominant intellectual disability syndrome type 7 and Denys–Drash syndrome. Interpretation: This pilot study highlighted the potential of next-generation sequencing to deliver molecular diagnoses rapidly with a high success rate. With broader use, this approach has the potential to alter health care delivery in the NICU.


Genetics in Medicine | 2017

Molecular characterization of NRXN1 deletions from 19,263 clinical microarray cases identifies exons important for neurodevelopmental disease expression

Chelsea Lowther; Marsha Speevak; Christine M. Armour; Elaine S. Goh; Gail E. Graham; Chumei Li; Susan Zeesman; Małgorzata J.M. Nowaczyk; Lee-Anne Schultz; Antonella Morra; Rob Nicolson; Peter Bikangaga; Dawa Samdup; Mostafa Zaazou; Kerry Boyd; Jack H. Jung; Victoria M. Siu; Manjulata Rajguru; Sharan Goobie; Mark A. Tarnopolsky; Chitra Prasad; Paul T. Dick; Asmaa S. Hussain; Margreet Walinga; Renske G. Reijenga; Matthew J. Gazzellone; Anath C. Lionel; Christian R. Marshall; Stephen W. Scherer; Dimitri J. Stavropoulos

Purpose:The purpose of the current study was to assess the penetrance of NRXN1 deletions.Methods:We compared the prevalence and genomic extent of NRXN1 deletions identified among 19,263 clinically referred cases to that of 15,264 controls. The burden of additional clinically relevant copy-number variations (CNVs) was used as a proxy to estimate the relative penetrance of NRXN1 deletions.Results:We identified 41 (0.21%) previously unreported exonic NRXN1 deletions ascertained for developmental delay/intellectual disability that were significantly greater than in controls (odds ratio (OR) = 8.14; 95% confidence interval (CI): 2.91–22.72; P < 0.0001). Ten (22.7%) of these had a second clinically relevant CNV. Subjects with a deletion near the 3ʹ end of NRXN1 were significantly more likely to have a second rare CNV than subjects with a 5ʹ NRXN1 deletion (OR = 7.47; 95% CI: 2.36–23.61; P = 0.0006). The prevalence of intronic NRXN1 deletions was not statistically different between cases and controls (P = 0.618). The majority (63.2%) of intronic NRXN1 deletion cases had a second rare CNV at a prevalence twice as high as that for exonic NRXN1 deletion cases (P = 0.0035).Conclusions:The results support the importance of exons near the 5ʹ end of NRXN1 in the expression of neurodevelopmental disorders. Intronic NRXN1 deletions do not appear to substantially increase the risk for clinical phenotypes.Genet Med 19 1, 53–61.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2016

Identification of a pathogenic FTO mutation by next-generation sequencing in a newborn with growth retardation and developmental delay

Hussein Daoud; Dong Zhang; Fiona McMurray; Andrea Yu; Stephanie M. Luco; Jason R. Vanstone; Olga Jarinova; Nancy Carson; James Wickens; Shifali Shishodia; Hwanho Choi; Michael A. McDonough; Christopher J. Schofield; Mary-Ellen Harper; David A. Dyment; Christine M. Armour

Background A homozygous loss-of-function mutation p.(Arg316Gln) in the fat mass and obesity-associated (FTO) gene, which encodes for an iron and 2-oxoglutarate-dependent oxygenase, was previously identified in a large family in which nine affected individuals present with a lethal syndrome characterised by growth retardation and multiple malformations. To date, no other pathogenic mutation in FTO has been identified as a cause of multiple congenital malformations. Methods We investigated a 21-month-old girl who presented distinctive facial features, failure to thrive, global developmental delay, left ventricular cardiac hypertrophy, reduced vision and bilateral hearing loss. We performed targeted next-generation sequencing of 4813 clinically relevant genes in the patient and her parents. Results We identified a novel FTO homozygous missense mutation (c.956C>T; p.(Ser319Phe)) in the affected individual. This mutation affects a highly conserved residue located in the same functional domain as the previously characterised mutation p.(Arg316Gln). Biochemical studies reveal that p.(Ser319Phe) FTO has reduced 2-oxoglutarate turnover and N-methyl-nucleoside demethylase activity. Conclusion Our findings are consistent with previous reports that homozygous mutations in FTO can lead to rare growth retardation and developmental delay syndrome, and further support the proposal that FTO plays an important role in early development of human central nervous and cardiovascular systems.


Clinical Genetics | 2017

Debunking Occam's razor: Diagnosing multiple genetic diseases in families by whole exome sequencing

T.B. Balci; Taila Hartley; Yanwei Xi; David A. Dyment; Chandree L. Beaulieu; Francois P. Bernier; L. Dupuis; Gabriella A. Horvath; Roberto Mendoza-Londono; Chitra Prasad; Julie Richer; X.‐R. Yang; Christine M. Armour; Eric Bareke; Bridget A. Fernandez; H.J. McMillan; Ryan E. Lamont; Jacek Majewski; Jillian S. Parboosingh; A.N. Prasad; C.A. Rupar; Jeremy Schwartzentruber; Amanda Smith; Martine Tétreault; A.M. Innes; Kym M. Boycott

Recent clinical whole exome sequencing (WES) cohorts have identified unanticipated multiple genetic diagnoses in single patients. However, the frequency of multiple genetic diagnoses in families is largely unknown.


Pediatrics | 2013

A Patient With an Inborn Error of Vitamin B12 Metabolism (cblF) Detected by Newborn Screening

Christine M. Armour; Alison Brebner; David Watkins; Michael T. Geraghty; Alicia Chan; David S. Rosenblatt

A neonate, who was found to have an elevated C3/C2 ratio and minimally elevated propionylcarnitine on newborn screening, was subsequently identified as having the rare cblF inborn error of vitamin B12 (cobalamin) metabolism. This disorder is characterized by the retention of unmetabolized cobalamin in lysosomes such that it is not readily available for cellular metabolism. Although cultured fibroblasts from the patient did not show the expected functional abnormalities of the cobalamin-dependent enzymes, methylmalonyl-CoA mutase and methionine synthase, they did show reduced synthesis of the active cobalamin cofactors adenosylcobalamin and methylcobalamin. Mutation analysis of LMBRD1 established that the patient had the cblF disorder. Treatment was initiated promptly, and the patient showed a robust response to regular injections of cyanocobalamin, and she was later switched to hydroxocobalamin. Currently, at 3 years of age, the child is clinically well, with appropriate development. Adjusted newborn screening cutoffs in Ontario allowed detection of a deficiency that might not have otherwise been identified, allowing early treatment and perhaps preventing the adverse sequelae seen in some untreated patients.

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Kym M. Boycott

Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario

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Julie Richer

Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario

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David A. Dyment

Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario

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Sarah M. Nikkel

Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario

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Gail E. Graham

Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario

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Olga Jarinova

Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario

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R. Douglas Wilson

University of British Columbia

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Taila Hartley

Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario

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Tanya N. Nelson

University of British Columbia

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