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Dive into the research topics where Ilene Fennoy is active.

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Featured researches published by Ilene Fennoy.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2008

Prevention and Treatment of Pediatric Obesity: An Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline Based on Expert Opinion

Gilbert P. August; Sonia Caprio; Ilene Fennoy; Michael Freemark; Francine R. Kaufman; Robert H. Lustig; Janet H. Silverstein; Phyllis W. Speiser; Dennis M. Styne; Victor M. Montori

Objective: Our objective was to formulate practice guidelines for the treatment and prevention of pediatric obesity. Conclusions: We recommend defining overweight as body mass index (BMI) in at least the 85th percentile but < the 95th percentile and obesity as BMI in at least the 95th percentile against routine endocrine studies unless the height velocity is attenuated or inappropriate for the family background or stage of puberty; referring patients to a geneticist if there is evidence of a genetic syndrome; evaluating for obesity-associated comorbidities in children with BMI in at least the 85th percentile; and prescribing and supporting intensive lifestyle (dietary, physical activity, and behavioral) modification as the prerequisite for any treatment. We suggest that pharmacotherapy (in combination with lifestyle modification) be considered in: 1) obese children only after failure of a formal program of intensive lifestyle modification; and 2) overweight children only if severe comorbidities persist despite intensive lifestyle modification, particularly in children with a strong family history of type 2 diabetes or premature cardiovascular disease. Pharmacotherapy should be provided only by clinicians who are experienced in the use of antiobesity agents and aware of the potential for adverse reactions. We suggest bariatric surgery for adolescents with BMI above 50 kg/m2, or BMI above 40 kg/m2 with severe comorbidities in whom lifestyle modifications and/or pharmacotherapy have failed. Candidates for surgery and their families must be psychologically stable and capable of adhering to lifestyle modifications. Access to experienced surgeons and sophisticated multidisciplinary teams who assess the benefits and risks of surgery is obligatory. We emphasize the prevention of obesity by recommending breast-feeding of infants for at least 6 months and advocating that schools provide for 60 min of moderate to vigorous daily exercise in all grades. We suggest that clinicians educate children and parents through anticipatory guidance about healthy dietary and activity habits, and we advocate for restricting the availability of unhealthy food choices in schools, policies to ban advertising unhealthy food choices to children, and community redesign to maximize opportunities for safe walking and bike riding to school, athletic activities, and neighborhood shopping.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2011

Assessment of Leydig and Sertoli Cell Functions in Infants with Nonmosaic Klinefelter Syndrome: Insulin-Like Peptide 3 Levels Are Normal and Positively Correlated with LH Levels

S Cabrol; Judith L. Ross; Ilene Fennoy; Claire Bouvattier; Marc Roger; Najiba Lahlou

CONTEXT Klinefelter syndrome (KS) is the most common sex chromosome disorder and a major cause of male infertility. In adult patients, serum inhibin B and anti-Mullerian-hormone (AMH) are undetectable, testosterone secretion is often impaired, and the tubules are depleted of germ cells. Before puberty, inhibin B, AMH, and testosterone levels are within the normal range. OBJECTIVE Sertoli and Leydig cell secretions, including insulin-like peptide-3 (INSL3), were evaluated in infants with nonmosaic XXY karyotype to assess testicular function soon after birth. DESIGN The study was conducted in four University Pediatric Departments from the United States and France. SUBJECTS Sixty-eight prenatally diagnosed infants aged 2-750 d were enrolled. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Serum FSH, LH, inhibin B, AMH, and INSL3 were measured by immunoassay, and testosterone was measured by tandem mass-spectrometry. RESULTS In infants with KS, INSL3 levels transiently increased at 2-3 months of age and were significantly correlated with testosterone (Spearman r = 0.57) and LH (Spearman r = 0.73) levels. They did not differ from controls. Testosterone levels were within the normal range, but most of them were below the median of controls. Inhibin B and AMH levels were also within normal range. Inhibin B was correlated with FSH (Spearman r = 0.49). AMH was not correlated with FSH or testosterone. FSH levels were above normal in 25% of patients, despite normal inhibin B levels. CONCLUSIONS In infants with KS, Leydig cells are normally sensitive to the LH proliferative effect. In contrast, the Sertoli cell sensitivity to FSH is questionable, which may be prophetic of the postpubertal Sertoli cell resistance to FSH.


Journal of Medical Internet Research | 2013

Using Information Technology and Social Networking for Recruitment of Research Participants: Experience From an Exploratory Study of Pediatric Klinefelter Syndrome

Sharron Close; Arlene Smaldone; Ilene Fennoy; Nancy Reame; Margaret Grey

Background Recruiting pediatric samples for research may be challenging due to parental mistrust of the research process, privacy concerns, and family time constraints. Recruitment of children with chronic and genetic conditions may further complicate the enrollment process. Objective In this paper, we describe the methodological challenges of recruiting children for research and provide an exemplar of how the use of information technology (IT) strategies with social networking may improve access to difficult-to-reach pediatric research participants. Methods We conducted a cross-sectional descriptive study of boys between the ages of 8 and 18 years with Klinefelter syndrome. This study presented unique challenges for recruitment of pediatric participants. These challenges are illustrated by the report of recruitment activities developed for the study. We reviewed the literature to explore the issues of recruiting children for research using conventional and IT approaches. Success rates of conventional recruitment approaches, such as brochures, flyers in medical offices, and physician referrals, are compared with IT-based outreach. The IT approaches included teleconferencing via a Klinefelter syndrome support group, services of a Web-based commercial recruitment-matching company, and the development of a university-affiliated research recruitment website with the use of paid advertising on a social networking website (Facebook). Results Over a 3-month period, dissemination of over 150 recruitment brochures and flyers placed in a large urban hospital and hospital-affiliated clinical offices, with 850 letters to physicians and patients were not successful. Within the same period, face-to-face recruitment in the clinical setting yielded 4 (9%) participants. Using Web-based and social networking approaches, 39 (91%) agreed to participate in the study. With these approaches, 5 (12%) were recruited from the national Klinefelter syndrome advocacy group, 8 (19%) from local and teleconference support groups, 10 (23%) from a Web-based research recruitment program, and 16 (37%) from the university-affiliated recruitment website. For the initial 6 months, the university website was viewed approximately 2 to 3 times per day on average. An advertisement placed on a social networking site for 1 week increased website viewing to approximately 63 visits per day. Out of 112 families approached using all of these methods, 43 (38%) agreed to participate. Families who declined cited either travel distance to the study site (15, 22%) or unwillingness to disclose the Klinefelter syndrome diagnosis to their sons (54, 78%) as the reasons for nonparticipation. Conclusions Use of Web-based technologies enhances the recruitment of difficult-to-reach populations. Of the many approaches employed in this study, the university-affiliated recruitment website supported by a Facebook advertisement appeared to be the most successful. Research grant budgets should include expenses for website registration and maintenance fees as well as online advertisements on social networking websites. Tracking of recruitment referral sources may be helpful in planning future recruitment campaigns.


Obesity | 2011

Bone age advancement in prepubertal children with obesity and premature adrenarche: possible potentiating factors.

Aviva B. Sopher; Amy M. Jean; Sarah K. Zwany; Diana M. Winston; Christy Pomeranz; Jennifer J. Bell; Donald J. McMahon; Abeer Hassoun; Ilene Fennoy; Sharon E. Oberfield

Obesity and premature adrenarche (PA) are both associated with bone age (BA) advancement of unclear etiology, which may lead to earlier puberty, suboptimal final height and obesity in adulthood. Our objective was to understand the hormonal and anthropometric characteristics of BA advancement in a spectrum of prepubertal children with and without obesity and PA. In this cross‐sectional study of 66 prepubertal children (35 PA, 31 control, 5–9 years), BMI z‐score, hormonal values and response to an oral glucose tolerance test were the main outcome measures. Subjects were divided into tertiles by BA divided by chronological age (BA/CA), an index of BA advancement. Subjects in the top tertile for BA/CA had the highest dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEAS), free testosterone (%), hemoglobin A1C, BMI z‐score, and weight (P < 0.05). BMI z‐score (r = 0.47), weight (r = 0.40), free testosterone (%) (r = 0.34), and DHEAS (r = 0.30) correlated with BA/CA (P < 0.02). Regression analysis showed greater BA/CA in PA compared to controls after controlling for weight (0.21 ± 0.56, P < 0.004). An exploratory stepwise regression model showed that weight, estradiol, and DHEAS were the strongest predictors of BA/CA accounting for 24% of its variance. Obesity was highly associated with BA advancement in this study of prepubertal children. In addition, children with PA had greater BA/CA at any given weight when compared to controls. These findings suggest a possible hormonal factor, which potentiates the effect of obesity on BA advancement in children with obesity and/or PA.


Pediatrics | 2006

Hypocalcemic Seizures and Secondary Bilateral Femoral Fractures in an Adolescent With Primary Vitamin D Deficiency

David Schnadower; Chhavi Agarwal; Sharon E. Oberfield; Ilene Fennoy; Martin V. Pusic

Nutritional rickets and osteomalacia are reemerging in Western societies, particularly in young children and in adolescents of African or Asian descent. Hypocalcemic seizures resulting from vitamin D deficiency are rare in adolescents, whereas fractures caused by seizures without evidence of direct trauma have not yet been reported in this population. We present an unusual case of secondary bilateral femoral fractures caused by hypocalcemic seizures in a 17-year-old boy with primary vitamin D deficiency. We examine the epidemiology and the clinical presentation of rickets and osteomalacia in the adolescent population, the risk of secondary injuries in patients with seizures, and the evaluation and management of hypocalcemic seizures and primary vitamin D deficiency.


Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2012

Vitamin D, osteocalcin, and risk for adiposity as comorbidities in middle school children.

Claudia Boucher-Berry; Phyllis W. Speiser; Dennis E. Carey; Steven P. Shelov; Siham Accacha; Ilene Fennoy; Robert Rapaport; Yomery Espinal; Michael Rosenbaum

Nonclassic actions of vitamin D include potential regulation of immune function and glucose homeostasis. The bone‐metabolism loop has recently been expanded to include osteocalcin, which appears to play a more direct role in pancreatic beta cell function and energy metabolism. We hypothesized that both vitamin D and osteocalcin would correlate negatively with indices of adiposity‐related comorbidity risk in periadolescents, varying by ethnic group. We analyzed anthropometric, metabolic, and inflammatory markers from a multiethnic population of 106 school children 11 to 14 years of age studied as part of the Reduce Obesity and Diabetes (ROAD) consortium. As expected, 25‐hydroxyvitamin D (25‐OH vitamin D) was inversely correlated with intact parathyroid hormone (iPTH); total osteocalcin (OCN) and uncarboxylated osteocalcin (uOCN) were directly correlated with each other. OCN and uOCN concentrations correlated inversely with age. Vitamin D deficiency was most prevalent among East Asians (EA) and African Americans (AA). The highest lipid risk scores and homeostatic model for assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA‐IR) values were seen in the South Asian (SA) group. Overall, adiposity measures were inversely correlated with OCN and iPTH, whereas such relationships were not observed for vitamin D. Acute insulin response to glucose challenge correlated negatively with uOCN in all subjects; however, lipid risk score correlated negatively with uOCN only in whites. The relationships between markers of calcium metabolism and body composition, glucose homeostasis, lipids, and inflammation all showed racial and ethnic differences. No consistent relationship was found between vitamin D and adiposity or vitamin D and glucose metabolism; instead vitamin D levels varied by race and ethnicity in this school‐based group. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that markers of calcium and bone metabolism may reflect risk for adiposity‐related comorbidities in children.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2010

Clinical variability and novel neurodevelopmental findings in 49, XXXXY syndrome†

Andrea Gropman; Alan D. Rogol; Ilene Fennoy; Teresa Sadeghin; Stephanie Sinn; Robert Jameson; Francine Mitchell; Jaye Clabaugh; Margaret Lutz-Armstrong; Carole Samango-Sprouse

49, XXXXY is a rare chromosomal syndrome due to double nondisjunction of the replicating X chromosome. Considered a severe variant of XXY or Klinefelter syndrome, boys with this chromosome constitution are assumed to have severe mental retardation (MR) in addition to craniofacial, genital, endocrine, and heart abnormalities. Here, we present a multidisciplinary analysis including the clinical and neurobehavioral aspects of this condition in 20 boys with 49, XXXXY who share a common phenotype and neurobehavioral profile. The phenotypic presentation of the boys with 49, XXXXY shares some characteristics with 47, XXY, but there are also other unique and distinctive features. Previously unappreciated intact nonverbal skills are evident in conjunction with moderate to severe developmental dyspraxia. Variability in clinical and cognitive functioning may reflect skewed X inactivation, mosaicism, or other factors that warrant further investigation.


Obesity | 2014

Fat cell size and adipokine expression in relation to gender, depot, and metabolic risk factors in morbidly obese adolescents

Yiying Zhang; Jeffrey L. Zitsman; Jue Hou; Ilene Fennoy; Kaiying Guo; Joshua Feinberg; Rudolph L. Leibel

To understand the regulation of adipocyte size and adipokine expression in relation to gender, anatomic location, adiposity, and metabolic risk factors in adolescents with morbid obesity.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2017

Deficiency in prohormone convertase PC1 impairs prohormone processing in Prader-Willi syndrome

Lisa Cole Burnett; Charles A. LeDuc; Carlos R. Sulsona; Daniel Paull; Richard Rausch; Jayne F. Martin Carli; Michael V. Morabito; Alicja A. Skowronski; Gabriela Hubner; Matthew Zimmer; Liheng Wang; Robert Day; Brynn Levy; Ilene Fennoy; B. Dubern; Christine Poitou; Karine Clément; Merlin G. Butler; Michael Rosenbaum; Jean Pierre Salles; Maithé Tauber; Daniel J. Driscoll; Dieter Egli; Rudolph L. Leibel

Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) is caused by a loss of paternally expressed genes in an imprinted region of chromosome 15q. Among the canonical PWS phenotypes are hyperphagic obesity, central hypogonadism, and low growth hormone (GH). Rare microdeletions in PWS patients define a 91-kb minimum critical deletion region encompassing 3 genes, including the noncoding RNA gene SNORD116. Here, we found that protein and transcript levels of nescient helix loop helix 2 (NHLH2) and the prohormone convertase PC1 (encoded by PCSK1) were reduced in PWS patient induced pluripotent stem cell–derived (iPSC-derived) neurons. Moreover, Nhlh2 and Pcsk1 expression were reduced in hypothalami of fasted Snord116 paternal knockout (Snord116p–/m+) mice. Hypothalamic Agrp and Npy remained elevated following refeeding in association with relative hyperphagia in Snord116p–/m+ mice. Nhlh2-deficient mice display growth deficiencies as adolescents and hypogonadism, hyperphagia, and obesity as adults. Nhlh2 has also been shown to promote Pcsk1 expression. Humans and mice deficient in PC1 display hyperphagic obesity, hypogonadism, decreased GH, and hypoinsulinemic diabetes due to impaired prohormone processing. Here, we found that Snord116p–/m+ mice displayed in vivo functional defects in prohormone processing of proinsulin, pro-GH–releasing hormone, and proghrelin in association with reductions in islet, hypothalamic, and stomach PC1 content. Our findings suggest that the major neuroendocrine features of PWS are due to PC1 deficiency.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 2011

Laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding in adolescents: short-term results

Jeffrey L. Zitsman; Ilene Fennoy; Mary Ann Witt; Janet Schauben; Michael J. Devlin; Marc Bessler

PURPOSE Children and adolescents who fail to lose weight through diet and exercise programs have been offered weight loss surgery for several years. We report our early results on laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding (LAGB) in 100 teenagers. METHODS Candidates for surgery underwent rigorous assessment for medical eligibility, compliance, and psychological well-being. Patients who met criteria and were approved by our team were offered LAGB. Postoperatively, patients were followed monthly until steady weight loss was achieved, then every 3 months thereafter. RESULTS One hundred patients aged 14 to 19 years underwent LAGB. Preoperative average weight was 136.7 kg, and median body mass index was 48.7. Comorbid medical conditions were common. Five reoperations were performed for port site bleeding, hiatal hernia repair, possible intestinal obstruction, and port slippage. Eighty-seven patients were followed for a minimum of 6 months. Average weight loss at 6 months was 12.4 (range, 33.2 to 16.2) kg, and average change in body mass index was 4.4 (range, 11.8 to -5.6). CONCLUSION Laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding may be performed safely in adolescents, and short-term results suggest that LAGB may serve as an important tool to help them lose weight.

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Sharon E. Oberfield

Columbia University Medical Center

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Abeer Hassoun

Columbia University Medical Center

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Dennis E. Carey

Boston Children's Hospital

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Robert Rapaport

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Siham Accacha

Winthrop-University Hospital

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Steven P. Shelov

Boston Children's Hospital

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