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Dive into the research topics where Janine F. Felix is active.

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Featured researches published by Janine F. Felix.


Nature Genetics | 2009

Multiple loci influence erythrocyte phenotypes in the CHARGE Consortium

Santhi K. Ganesh; Neil A. Zakai; Frank J. A. van Rooij; Nicole Soranzo; Albert V. Smith; Michael A. Nalls; Ming-Huei Chen; Anna Köttgen; Nicole L. Glazer; Abbas Dehghan; Brigitte Kühnel; Thor Aspelund; Qiong Yang; Toshiko Tanaka; Andrew E. Jaffe; Joshua C. Bis; Germaine C. Verwoert; Alexander Teumer; Caroline S. Fox; Jack M. Guralnik; Georg B. Ehret; Kenneth Rice; Janine F. Felix; Augusto Rendon; Gudny Eiriksdottir; Daniel Levy; Kushang V. Patel; Eric Boerwinkle; Jerome I. Rotter; Albert Hofman

Measurements of erythrocytes within the blood are important clinical traits and can indicate various hematological disorders. We report here genome-wide association studies (GWAS) for six erythrocyte traits, including hemoglobin concentration (Hb), hematocrit (Hct), mean corpuscular volume (MCV), mean corpuscular hemoglobin (MCH), mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (MCHC) and red blood cell count (RBC). We performed an initial GWAS in cohorts of the CHARGE Consortium totaling 24,167 individuals of European ancestry and replication in additional independent cohorts of the HaemGen Consortium totaling 9,456 individuals. We identified 23 loci significantly associated with these traits in a meta-analysis of the discovery and replication cohorts (combined P values ranging from 5 × 10−8 to 7 × 10−86). Our findings include loci previously associated with these traits (HBS1L-MYB, HFE, TMPRSS6, TFR2, SPTA1) as well as new associations (EPO, TFRC, SH2B3 and 15 other loci). This study has identified new determinants of erythrocyte traits, offering insight into common variants underlying variation in erythrocyte measures.


JAMA | 2009

Genetic variants associated with cardiac structure and function: A meta-analysis and replication of genome-wide association data

Nicole L. Glazer; Janine F. Felix; Wolfgang Lieb; Philipp S. Wild; Stephan B. Felix; Norbert Watzinger; Martin G. Larson; Nicholas L. Smith; Abbas Dehghan; Anika Großhennig; Arne Schillert; Alexander Teumer; Reinhold Schmidt; Sekar Kathiresan; Thomas Lumley; Yurii S. Aulchenko; Inke R. König; Tanja Zeller; Georg Homuth; Maksim Struchalin; Jayashri Aragam; Joshua C. Bis; Fernando Rivadeneira; Jeanette Erdmann; Renate B. Schnabel; Marcus Dörr; Robert Zweiker; Lars Lind; Richard J. Rodeheffer; Karin Halina Greiser

CONTEXT Echocardiographic measures of left ventricular (LV) structure and function are heritable phenotypes of cardiovascular disease. OBJECTIVE To identify common genetic variants associated with cardiac structure and function by conducting a meta-analysis of genome-wide association data in 5 population-based cohort studies (stage 1) with replication (stage 2) in 2 other community-based samples. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Within each of 5 community-based cohorts comprising the EchoGen consortium (stage 1; n = 12 612 individuals of European ancestry; 55% women, aged 26-95 years; examinations between 1978-2008), we estimated the association between approximately 2.5 million single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs; imputed to the HapMap CEU panel) and echocardiographic traits. In stage 2, SNPs significantly associated with traits in stage 1 were tested for association in 2 other cohorts (n = 4094 people of European ancestry). Using a prespecified P value threshold of 5 x 10(-7) to indicate genome-wide significance, we performed an inverse variance-weighted fixed-effects meta-analysis of genome-wide association data from each cohort. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Echocardiographic traits: LV mass, internal dimensions, wall thickness, systolic dysfunction, aortic root, and left atrial size. RESULTS In stage 1, 16 genetic loci were associated with 5 echocardiographic traits: 1 each with LV internal dimensions and systolic dysfunction, 3 each with LV mass and wall thickness, and 8 with aortic root size. In stage 2, 5 loci replicated (6q22 locus associated with LV diastolic dimensions, explaining <1% of trait variance; 5q23, 12p12, 12q14, and 17p13 associated with aortic root size, explaining 1%-3% of trait variance). CONCLUSIONS We identified 5 genetic loci harboring common variants that were associated with variation in LV diastolic dimensions and aortic root size, but such findings explained a very small proportion of variance. Further studies are required to replicate these findings, identify the causal variants at or near these loci, characterize their functional significance, and determine whether they are related to overt cardiovascular disease.


Circulation-cardiovascular Genetics | 2010

Association of genome-wide variation with the risk of incident heart failure in adults of European and African ancestry : A prospective meta-analysis from the cohorts for heart and aging research in genomic epidemiology (CHARGE) consortium

Nicholas L. Smith; Janine F. Felix; Alanna C. Morrison; Serkalem Demissie; Nicole L. Glazer; Laura R. Loehr; L. Adrienne Cupples; Abbas Dehghan; Thomas Lumley; Wayne D. Rosamond; Wolfgang Lieb; Fernando Rivadeneira; Joshua C. Bis; Aaron R. Folsom; Emelia J. Benjamin; Yurii S. Aulchenko; Talin Haritunians; David Couper; Joanne M. Murabito; Ying A. Wang; Bruno H. Stricker; John S. Gottdiener; Patricia P. Chang; Thomas J. Wang; Kenneth Rice; Albert Hofman; Susan R. Heckbert; Ervin R. Fox; Christopher J. O'Donnell; André G. Uitterlinden

Background—Although genetic factors contribute to the onset of heart failure (HF), no large-scale genome-wide investigation of HF risk has been published to date. We have investigated the association of 2 478 304 single-nucleotide polymorphisms with incident HF by meta-analyzing data from 4 community-based prospective cohorts: the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study, the Cardiovascular Health Study, the Framingham Heart Study, and the Rotterdam Study. Methods and Results—Eligible participants for these analyses were of European or African ancestry and free of clinical HF at baseline. Each study independently conducted genome-wide scans and imputed data to the ≈2.5 million single-nucleotide polymorphisms in HapMap. Within each study, Cox proportional hazards regression models provided age- and sex-adjusted estimates of the association between each variant and time to incident HF. Fixed-effect meta-analyses combined results for each single-nucleotide polymorphism from the 4 cohorts to produce an overall association estimate and P value. A genome-wide significance P value threshold was set a priori at 5.0×10−7. During a mean follow-up of 11.5 years, 2526 incident HF events (12%) occurred in 20 926 European-ancestry participants. The meta-analysis identified a genome-wide significant locus at chromosomal position 15q22 (1.4×10−8), which was 58.8 kb from USP3. Among 2895 African-ancestry participants, 466 incident HF events (16%) occurred during a mean follow-up of 13.7 years. One genome-wide significant locus was identified at 12q14 (6.7×10−8), which was 6.3 kb from LRIG3. Conclusions—We identified 2 loci that were associated with incident HF and exceeded genome-wide significance. The findings merit replication in other community-based settings of incident HF.Background— Although genetic factors contribute to the onset of heart failure (HF), no large-scale genome-wide investigation of HF risk has been published to date. We have investigated the association of 2 478 304 single-nucleotide polymorphisms with incident HF by meta-analyzing data from 4 community-based prospective cohorts: the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study, the Cardiovascular Health Study, the Framingham Heart Study, and the Rotterdam Study. Methods and Results— Eligible participants for these analyses were of European or African ancestry and free of clinical HF at baseline. Each study independently conducted genome-wide scans and imputed data to the ≈2.5 million single-nucleotide polymorphisms in HapMap. Within each study, Cox proportional hazards regression models provided age- and sex-adjusted estimates of the association between each variant and time to incident HF. Fixed-effect meta-analyses combined results for each single-nucleotide polymorphism from the 4 cohorts to produce an overall association estimate and P value. A genome-wide significance P value threshold was set a priori at 5.0×10−7. During a mean follow-up of 11.5 years, 2526 incident HF events (12%) occurred in 20 926 European-ancestry participants. The meta-analysis identified a genome-wide significant locus at chromosomal position 15q22 (1.4×10−8), which was 58.8 kb from USP3 . Among 2895 African-ancestry participants, 466 incident HF events (16%) occurred during a mean follow-up of 13.7 years. One genome-wide significant locus was identified at 12q14 (6.7×10−8), which was 6.3 kb from LRIG3 . Conclusions— We identified 2 loci that were associated with incident HF and exceeded genome-wide significance. The findings merit replication in other community-based settings of incident HF.


PLOS Genetics | 2010

Genome-wide association studies of serum magnesium, potassium, and sodium concentrations identify six loci influencing serum magnesium levels

Tamra E. Meyer; Germaine C. Verwoert; Shih-Jen Hwang; Nicole L. Glazer; Albert V. Smith; Frank J. A. van Rooij; Georg B. Ehret; Eric Boerwinkle; Janine F. Felix; Tennille S. Leak; Tamara B. Harris; Qiong Yang; Abbas Dehghan; Thor Aspelund; Ronit Katz; Georg Homuth; Thomas Kocher; Rainer Rettig; Janina S. Ried; Christian Gieger; Hanna Prucha; Arne Pfeufer; Thomas Meitinger; Josef Coresh; Albert Hofman; Mark J. Sarnak; Yii-Der I. Chen; André G. Uitterlinden; Aravinda Chakravarti; Bruce M. Psaty

Magnesium, potassium, and sodium, cations commonly measured in serum, are involved in many physiological processes including energy metabolism, nerve and muscle function, signal transduction, and fluid and blood pressure regulation. To evaluate the contribution of common genetic variation to normal physiologic variation in serum concentrations of these cations, we conducted genome-wide association studies of serum magnesium, potassium, and sodium concentrations using ∼2.5 million genotyped and imputed common single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 15,366 participants of European descent from the international CHARGE Consortium. Study-specific results were combined using fixed-effects inverse-variance weighted meta-analysis. SNPs demonstrating genome-wide significant (p<5×10−8) or suggestive associations (p<4×10−7) were evaluated for replication in an additional 8,463 subjects of European descent. The association of common variants at six genomic regions (in or near MUC1, ATP2B1, DCDC5, TRPM6, SHROOM3, and MDS1) with serum magnesium levels was genome-wide significant when meta-analyzed with the replication dataset. All initially significant SNPs from the CHARGE Consortium showed nominal association with clinically defined hypomagnesemia, two showed association with kidney function, two with bone mineral density, and one of these also associated with fasting glucose levels. Common variants in CNNM2, a magnesium transporter studied only in model systems to date, as well as in CNNM3 and CNNM4, were also associated with magnesium concentrations in this study. We observed no associations with serum sodium or potassium levels exceeding p<4×10−7. Follow-up studies of newly implicated genomic loci may provide additional insights into the regulation and homeostasis of human serum magnesium levels.


Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology | 2005

Cerebral palsy following term newborn encephalopathy : a population-based study

Nadia Badawi; Janine F. Felix; Jennifer J. Kurinczuk; Glenys Dixon; Linda Watson; John Keogh; Jane Valentine; Fiona Stanley

Cerebral palsy (CP) can occur in term infants with or without preceding newborn encephalopathy. We compared the type and severity of CP and associated disability in these two groups. Participants from a population-based case-control study of term newborn encephalopathy were followed up for 6 years and linked to the Western Australian Cerebral Palsy Register. The remaining term infants with CP for the same period were also identified from the Cerebral Palsy Register. 13% of neonatal survivors of term newborn encephalopathy had CP, a rate of 116 per 1000 term live births. Overall, 24% of term infants with CP followed newborn encephalopathy. CP following newborn encephalopathy was more likely to: affect males (72% vs 56%); be severe (47% vs 25%); and be of spastic quadriplegia or dyskinetic types. Cognitive impairment was more common (75% vs 43%) and severe (41% vs 16%), as was epilepsy (53% vs 29%) in survivors of encephalopathy. These children were also more likely to: be non-verbal (47% vs 22%); have a severe composite disability score (47% vs 26%); and die between time of diagnosis of CP and age 6 years (5-year cumulative mortality 19% vs 5%). Children born at term who develop CP following newborn encephalopathy have a poorer prognosis than those with CP who were not encephalopathic in the first week of life.


PLOS Genetics | 2011

Multiple Loci Are Associated with White Blood Cell Phenotypes

Michael A. Nalls; David Couper; Toshiko Tanaka; Frank J. A. van Rooij; Ming-Huei Chen; Albert V. Smith; Daniela Toniolo; Neil A. Zakai; Qiong Yang; Andreas Greinacher; Andrew R. Wood; Melissa Garcia; Paolo Gasparini; Yongmei Liu; Thomas Lumley; Aaron R. Folsom; Alex P. Reiner; Christian Gieger; Vasiliki Lagou; Janine F. Felix; Henry Völzke; Natalia Gouskova; Alessandro Biffi; Angela Döring; Uwe Völker; Sean Chong; Kerri L. Wiggins; Augusto Rendon; Abbas Dehghan; Matt Moore

White blood cell (WBC) count is a common clinical measure from complete blood count assays, and it varies widely among healthy individuals. Total WBC count and its constituent subtypes have been shown to be moderately heritable, with the heritability estimates varying across cell types. We studied 19,509 subjects from seven cohorts in a discovery analysis, and 11,823 subjects from ten cohorts for replication analyses, to determine genetic factors influencing variability within the normal hematological range for total WBC count and five WBC subtype measures. Cohort specific data was supplied by the CHARGE, HeamGen, and INGI consortia, as well as independent collaborative studies. We identified and replicated ten associations with total WBC count and five WBC subtypes at seven different genomic loci (total WBC count—6p21 in the HLA region, 17q21 near ORMDL3, and CSF3; neutrophil count—17q21; basophil count- 3p21 near RPN1 and C3orf27; lymphocyte count—6p21, 19p13 at EPS15L1; monocyte count—2q31 at ITGA4, 3q21, 8q24 an intergenic region, 9q31 near EDG2), including three previously reported associations and seven novel associations. To investigate functional relationships among variants contributing to variability in the six WBC traits, we utilized gene expression- and pathways-based analyses. We implemented gene-clustering algorithms to evaluate functional connectivity among implicated loci and showed functional relationships across cell types. Gene expression data from whole blood was utilized to show that significant biological consequences can be extracted from our genome-wide analyses, with effect estimates for significant loci from the meta-analyses being highly corellated with the proximal gene expression. In addition, collaborative efforts between the groups contributing to this study and related studies conducted by the COGENT and RIKEN groups allowed for the examination of effect homogeneity for genome-wide significant associations across populations of diverse ancestral backgrounds.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2010

Common Genetic Variants Associate with Serum Phosphorus Concentration

Bryan Kestenbaum; Nicole L. Glazer; Anna Köttgen; Janine F. Felix; Shih Jen Hwang; Yongmei Liu; Kurt Lohman; Stephen B. Kritchevsky; Dorothy B. Hausman; Ann Kristin Petersen; Christian Gieger; Janina S. Ried; Thomas Meitinger; Tim M. Strom; H.-Erich Wichmann; Harry Campbell; Caroline Hayward; Igor Rudan; Ian H. de Boer; Bruce M. Psaty; Kenneth Rice; Yii-Der I. Chen; Man Li; Dan E. Arking; Eric Boerwinkle; Josef Coresh; Qiong Yang; Daniel Levy; Frank J. A. van Rooij; Abbas Dehghan

Phosphorus is an essential mineral that maintains cellular energy and mineralizes the skeleton. Because complex actions of ion transporters and regulatory hormones regulate serum phosphorus concentrations, genetic variation may determine interindividual variation in phosphorus metabolism. Here, we report a comprehensive genome-wide association study of serum phosphorus concentration. We evaluated 16,264 participants of European ancestry from the Cardiovascular Heath Study, Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study, Framingham Offspring Study, and the Rotterdam Study. We excluded participants with an estimated GFR <45 ml/min per 1.73 m(2) to focus on phosphorus metabolism under normal conditions. We imputed genotypes to approximately 2.5 million single-nucleotide polymorphisms in the HapMap and combined study-specific findings using meta-analysis. We tested top polymorphisms from discovery cohorts in a 5444-person replication sample. Polymorphisms in seven loci with minor allele frequencies 0.08 to 0.49 associate with serum phosphorus concentration (P = 3.5 x 10(-16) to 3.6 x 10(-7)). Three loci were near genes encoding the kidney-specific type IIa sodium phosphate co-transporter (SLC34A1), the calcium-sensing receptor (CASR), and fibroblast growth factor 23 (FGF23), proteins that contribute to phosphorus metabolism. We also identified genes encoding phosphatases, kinases, and phosphodiesterases that have yet-undetermined roles in phosphorus homeostasis. In the replication sample, five of seven top polymorphisms associate with serum phosphorous concentrations (P < 0.05 for each). In conclusion, common genetic variants associate with serum phosphorus in the general population. Further study of the loci identified in this study may help elucidate mechanisms of phosphorus regulation.


Nature Communications | 2016

Maternal plasma folate impacts differential DNA methylation in an epigenome-wide meta-analysis of newborns

Bonnie R. Joubert; Herman T. den Dekker; Janine F. Felix; Jon Bohlin; Symen Ligthart; Emma L. Beckett; Henning Tiemeier; Joyce B. J. van Meurs; André G. Uitterlinden; Albert Hofman; Siri E. Håberg; Sarah E. Reese; Marjolein J. Peters; Bettina Kulle Andreassen; Eric A.P. Steegers; Roy Miodini Nilsen; Stein Emil Vollset; Øivind Midttun; Per Magne Ueland; Oscar H. Franco; Abbas Dehghan; Johan C. de Jongste; Michael C. Wu; Tianyuan Wang; Shyamal D. Peddada; Vincent W. V. Jaddoe; Wenche Nystad; Liesbeth Duijts; Stephanie J. London

Folate is vital for fetal development. Periconceptional folic acid supplementation and food fortification are recommended to prevent neural tube defects. Mechanisms whereby periconceptional folate influences normal development and disease are poorly understood: epigenetics may be involved. We examine the association between maternal plasma folate during pregnancy and epigenome-wide DNA methylation using Illuminas HumanMethyl450 Beadchip in 1,988 newborns from two European cohorts. Here we report the combined covariate-adjusted results using meta-analysis and employ pathway and gene expression analyses. Four-hundred forty-three CpGs (320 genes) are significantly associated with maternal plasma folate levels during pregnancy (false discovery rate 5%); 48 are significant after Bonferroni correction. Most genes are not known for folate biology, including APC2, GRM8, SLC16A12, OPCML, PRPH, LHX1, KLK4 and PRSS21. Some relate to birth defects other than neural tube defects, neurological functions or varied aspects of embryonic development. These findings may inform how maternal folate impacts the developing epigenome and health outcomes in offspring.


International Journal of Epidemiology | 2015

DNA methylation mediates the effect of maternal smoking during pregnancy on birthweight of the offspring

Leanne K. Küpers; Xiaojing Xu; Soesma A. Jankipersadsing; Ahmad Vaez; Sacha la Bastide-van Gemert; Salome Scholtens; Ilja M. Nolte; Rebecca C Richmond; Caroline L Relton; Janine F. Felix; Liesbeth Duijts; Joyce B. J. van Meurs; Henning Tiemeier; Vincent W. V. Jaddoe; Xiaoling Wang; Eva Corpeleijn; Harold Snieder

Background: We examined whether the effect of maternal smoking during pregnancy on birthweight of the offspring was mediated by smoking-induced changes to DNA methylation in cord blood. Methods: First, we used cord blood of 129 Dutch children exposed to maternal smoking vs 126 unexposed to maternal and paternal smoking (53% male) participating in the GECKO Drenthe birth cohort. DNA methylation was measured using the Illumina HumanMethylation450 Beadchip. We performed an epigenome-wide association study for the association between maternal smoking and methylation followed by a mediation analysis of the top signals [false-discovery rate (FDR) < 0.05]. We adjusted both analyses for maternal age, education, pre-pregnancy BMI, offspring’s sex, gestational age and white blood cell composition. Secondly, in 175 exposed and 1248 unexposed newborns from two independent birth cohorts, we replicated and meta-analysed results of eight cytosine-phosphate-guanine (CpG) sites in the GFI1 gene, which showed the most robust mediation. Finally, we performed functional network and enrichment analysis. Results: We found 35 differentially methylated CpGs (FDR < 0.05) in newborns exposed vs unexposed to smoking, of which 23 survived Bonferroni correction (P < 1 × 10-7). These 23 CpGs mapped to eight genes: AHRR, GFI1, MYO1G, CYP1A1, NEUROG1, CNTNAP2, FRMD4A and LRP5. We observed partial confirmation as three of the eight CpGs in GFI1 replicated. These CpGs partly mediated the effect of maternal smoking on birthweight (Sobel P < 0.05) in meta-analysis of GECKO and the two replication cohorts. Differential methylation of these three GFI1 CpGs explained 12–19% of the 202 g lower birthweight in smoking mothers. Functional enrichment analysis pointed towards activation of cell-mediated immunity. Conclusions: Maternal smoking during pregnancy was associated with cord blood methylation differences. We observed a potentially mediating role of methylation in the association between maternal smoking during pregnancy and birthweight of the offspring. Functional network analysis suggested a role in activating the immune system.


Hypertension | 2014

Childhood Cardiometabolic Outcomes of Maternal Obesity During Pregnancy The Generation R Study

Romy Gaillard; Eric A.P. Steegers; Liesbeth Duijts; Janine F. Felix; Albert Hofman; Oscar H. Franco; Vincent W. V. Jaddoe

Maternal prepregnancy obesity is associated with impaired cardiometabolic health in offspring. Whether these associations reflect direct intrauterine causal mechanisms remains unclear. In a population-based prospective cohort study among 4871 mothers, fathers, and their children, we examined the associations of both maternal and paternal prepregnancy body mass index (BMI) with childhood body fat distribution and cardiometabolic outcomes and explored whether any association was explained by pregnancy, birth, and childhood factors. We measured childhood BMI, total body and abdominal fat distribution, blood pressure, and blood levels of lipids, insulin, and C-peptide at the age of 6 years. We observed that higher maternal and paternal prepregnancy BMI were associated with higher childhood BMI, total body and abdominal fat mass measures, systolic blood pressure, and insulin levels and lower high-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels (P<0.05). Stronger associations were present for maternal than paternal BMI, with statistical support for heterogeneity between these associations. The associations for childhood fat mass and cardiometabolic outcomes attenuated after adjustment for childhood current BMI. Compared with children from normal-weight mothers, those from obese mothers had increased risks of childhood overweight (odds ratio, 3.84 [95% confidence interval, 3.01–4.90]) and clustering of cardiometabolic risk factors (odds ratio, 3.00 [95% confidence interval, 2.09–4.34]). Smaller effect estimates for these outcomes were observed for paternal obesity. In conclusion, higher maternal and paternal prepregnancy BMI were associated with an adverse cardiometabolic profile in offspring, with stronger associations present for maternal prepregnancy BMI. These findings suggest that maternal prepregnancy BMI may influence the cardiometabolic health of offspring through direct intrauterine mechanisms.

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Vincent W. V. Jaddoe

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Albert Hofman

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Oscar H. Franco

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Liesbeth Duijts

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Romy Gaillard

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Bruno H. Stricker

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Abbas Dehghan

Erasmus University Medical Center

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Fernando Rivadeneira

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Henning Tiemeier

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Eric A.P. Steegers

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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