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Dive into the research topics where Kelly A. King is active.

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Featured researches published by Kelly A. King.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2012

Sustained Response and Prevention of Damage Progression in Patients With Neonatal-Onset Multisystem Inflammatory Disease Treated With Anakinra: A Cohort Study to Determine Three- and Five-Year Outcomes

Cailin Sibley; Nikki Plass; Joseph Snow; Edythe Wiggs; Carmen C. Brewer; Kelly A. King; Christopher Zalewski; H. Jeffrey Kim; Rachel J. Bishop; Suvimol Hill; Scott M. Paul; Patrick Kicker; Zachary Phillips; Joseph G. Dolan; Brigitte C. Widemann; Nalini Jayaprakash; Frank Pucino; Deborah L. Stone; Dawn Chapelle; Christopher Snyder; Robert Wesley; Raphaela Goldbach-Mansky

OBJECTIVE Blocking interleukin-1 with anakinra in patients with the autoinflammatory syndrome neonatal-onset multisystem inflammatory disease (NOMID) reduces systemic and organ-specific inflammation. However, the impact of long-term treatment has not been established. This study was undertaken to evaluate the long-term effect of anakinra on clinical and laboratory outcomes and safety in patients with NOMID. METHODS We conducted a cohort study of 26 NOMID patients ages 0.80-42.17 years who were followed up at the NIH and treated with anakinra 1-5 mg/kg/day for at least 36 months. Disease activity was assessed using daily diaries, questionnaires, and C-reactive protein level. Central nervous system (CNS) inflammation, hearing, vision, and safety were evaluated. RESULTS Sustained improvements in diary scores, parents/patients and physicians global scores of disease activity, parents/patients pain scores, and inflammatory markers were observed (all P<0.001 at 36 and 60 months). At 36 and 60 months, CNS inflammation was suppressed, with decreased cerebrospinal fluid white blood cell counts (P=0.0026 and P=0.0076, respectively), albumin levels, and opening pressures (P=0.0012 and P<0.001, respectively). Most patients showed stable or improved hearing. Cochlear enhancement on magnetic resonance imaging correlated with continued hearing loss. Visual acuity and peripheral vision were stable. Low optic nerve size correlated with poor visual field. Bony lesions progressed. Adverse events other than viral infections were rare, and all patients continued to receive the medication. CONCLUSION These findings indicate that anakinra provides sustained efficacy in the treatment of NOMID for up to 5 years, with the requirement of dose escalation. Damage progression in the CNS, ear, and eye, but not bone, is preventable. Anakinra is well tolerated overall.


Human Mutation | 2009

Hypo-functional SLC26A4 variants associated with nonsyndromic hearing loss and enlargement of the vestibular aqueduct: genotype-phenotype correlation or coincidental polymorphisms?

Byung Yoon Choi; Andrew K. Stewart; Anne C. Madeo; Shannon P. Pryor; Suzanne Lenhard; Rick A. Kittles; David Eisenman; H. Jeffrey Kim; John K. Niparko; James Thomsen; Kathleen S. Arnos; Walter E. Nance; Kelly A. King; Christopher Zalewski; Carmen C. Brewer; Thomas H. Shawker; James C. Reynolds; Lawrence P. Karniski; Seth L. Alper; Andrew J. Griffith

Hearing loss with enlargement of the vestibular aqueduct (EVA) can be associated with mutations of the SLC26A4 gene encoding pendrin, a transmembrane Cl−/I−/HCO  3− exchanger. Pendrins critical transport substrates are thought to be I− in the thyroid gland and HCO  3− in the inner ear. We previously reported that bi‐allelic SLC26A4 mutations are associated with Pendred syndromic EVA whereas one or zero mutant alleles are associated with nonsyndromic EVA. One study proposed a correlation of nonsyndromic EVA with SLC26A4 alleles encoding pendrin with residual transport activity. Here we describe the phenotypes and SLC26A4 genotypes of 47 EVA patients ascertained since our first report of 39 patients. We sought to determine the pathogenic potential of each variant in our full cohort of 86 patients. We evaluated the trafficking of 11 missense pendrin products expressed in COS‐7 cells. Products that targeted to the plasma membrane were expressed in Xenopus oocytes for measurement of anion exchange activity. p.F335L, p.C565Y, p.L597S, p.M775T, and p.R776C had Cl−/I− and Cl−/HCO  3− exchange rate constants that ranged from 13 to 93% of wild type values. p.F335L, p.L597S, p.M775T and p.R776C are typically found as mono‐allelic variants in nonsyndromic EVA. The high normal control carrier rate for p.L597S indicates it is a coincidentally detected nonpathogenic variant in this context. We observed moderate differential effects of hypo‐functional variants upon exchange of HCO  3− versus I− but their magnitude does not support a causal association with nonsyndromic EVA. However, these alleles could be pathogenic in trans configuration with a mutant allele in Pendred syndrome. Hum Mutat 0, 1–10, 2009.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 2009

Linear clinical progression, independent of age of onset, in Niemann–Pick disease, type C†

Nicole M. Yanjanin; Jorge I. Vélez; Andrea Gropman; Kelly A. King; Simona Bianconi; Sandra K. Conley; Carmen C. Brewer; Beth Solomon; William J. Pavan; Mauricio Arcos-Burgos; Marc C. Patterson; Forbes D. Porter

Niemann–Pick disease, type C is a neurodegenerative, lysosomal storage disorder with a broad clinical spectrum and a variable age of onset. The absence of a universally accepted clinical outcome measure is an impediment to the design of a therapeutic trial for NPC. Thus, we developed a clinical severity scale to characterize and quantify disease progression. Clinical signs and symptoms in nine major (ambulation, cognition, eye movement, fine motor, hearing, memory, seizures, speech, and swallowing) and eight minor (auditory brainstem response, behavior, gelastic cataplexy, hyperreflexia, incontinence, narcolepsy, psychiatric, and respiratory problems) domains were scored. Data were collected from 18 current NPC patients and were extracted from records of 19 patients. Both patient cohorts showed a linear increase in severity scores over time. Cross‐sectional evaluation of current patients showed a linear increase in the severity score. Longitudinal chart review of historical data demonstrated that although age of onset varied significantly, the rate of progression appeared linear, independent of age of onset, and similar in all patients. Combining the data from both cohorts, disease progression could be modeled by the following equation: Ŝt0+x = Ŝt0 + 1.87x; where Ŝt0 is the initial score and Ŝt0+x is the predicted future score after x years. Our observation that disease progression is similar across patients and independent of age of onset is consistent with a biphasic pathological model for NPC. This scale may prove useful in the characterization of potential biomarkers, and as an outcome measure to monitor disease progression in NPC patients.


Cellular Physiology and Biochemistry | 2011

SLC26A4 Genotypes and Phenotypes Associated with Enlargement of the Vestibular Aqueduct

Taku Ito; Byung Yoon Choi; Kelly A. King; Christopher Zalewski; Julie A. Muskett; Parna Chattaraj; Thomas H. Shawker; James C. Reynolds; Carmen C. Brewer; Philine Wangemann; Seth L. Alper; Andrew J. Griffith

Enlargement of the vestibular aqueduct (EVA) is the most common inner ear anomaly detected in ears of children with sensorineural hearing loss. Pendred syndrome (PS) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by bilateral sensorineural hearing loss with EVA and an iodine organification defect that can lead to thyroid goiter. Pendred syndrome is caused by mutations of the SLC26A4 gene. SLC26A4 mutations may also be identified in some patients with nonsyndromic EVA (NSEVA). The presence of two mutant alleles of SLC26A4 is correlated with bilateral EVA and Pendred syndrome, whereas unilateral EVA and NSEVA are correlated with one (M1) or zero (M0) mutant alleles of SLC26A4. Thyroid gland enlargement (goiter) appears to be primarily dependent on the presence of two mutant alleles of SLC26A4 in pediatric patients, but not in older patients. In M1 families, EVA may be associated with a second, undetected SLC26A4 mutation or epigenetic modifications. In M0 families, there is probably etiologic heterogeneity that includes causes other than, or in addition to, monogenic inheritance.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2011

Allelic hierarchy of CDH23 mutations causing non-syndromic deafness DFNB12 or Usher syndrome USH1D in compound heterozygotes

Julie M. Schultz; Bhatti R; Anne C. Madeo; Turriff A; Julie A. Muskett; Christopher Zalewski; Kelly A. King; Zubair M. Ahmed; Saima Riazuddin; Ahmad N; Hussain Z; Qasim M; Kahn Sn; M. Meltzer; Xue-Zhong Liu; Munisamy M; Manju Ghosh; Heidi L. Rehm; Ekaterini Tsilou; Andrew J. Griffith; Wadih M. Zein; Carmen C. Brewer; Thomas B. Friedman

Background Recessive mutant alleles of MYO7A, USH1C, CDH23, and PCDH15 cause non-syndromic deafness or type 1 Usher syndrome (USH1) characterised by deafness, vestibular areflexia, and vision loss due to retinitis pigmentosa. For CDH23, encoding cadherin 23, non-syndromic DFNB12 deafness is associated primarily with missense mutations hypothesised to have residual function. In contrast, homozygous nonsense, frame shift, splice site, and some missense mutations of CDH23, all of which are presumably functional null alleles, cause USH1D. The phenotype of a CDH23 compound heterozygote for a DFNB12 allele in trans configuration to an USH1D allele is not known and cannot be predicted from current understanding of cadherin 23 function in the retina and vestibular labyrinth. Methods and results To address this issue, this study sought CDH23 compound heterozygotes by sequencing this gene in USH1 probands, and families segregating USH1D or DFNB12. Five non-syndromic deaf individuals were identified with normal retinal and vestibular phenotypes that segregate compound heterozygous mutations of CDH23, where one mutation is a known or predicted USH1 allele. Conclusions One DFNB12 allele in trans configuration to an USH1D allele of CDH23 preserves vision and balance in deaf individuals, indicating that the DFNB12 allele is phenotypically dominant to an USH1D allele. This finding has implications for genetic counselling and the development of therapies for retinitis pigmentosa in Usher syndrome. Accession numbers The cDNA and protein Genbank accession numbers for CDH23 and cadherin 23 used in this paper are AY010111.2 and AAG27034.2, respectively.


Laryngoscope | 2009

SLC26A4 genotype, but not cochlear radiologic structure, is correlated with hearing loss in ears with an enlarged vestibular aqueduct†

Kelly A. King; Byung Yoon Choi; Christopher Zalewski; Anne C. Madeo; Ani Manichaikul; Shannon P. Pryor; Anne Ferruggiaro; David J. Eisenman; H. Jeffrey Kim; John K. Niparko; James R. Thomsen; Andrew J. Griffith; Carmen C. Brewer

Identify correlations among SLC26A4 genotype, cochlear structural anomalies, and hearing loss associated with enlargement of the vestibular aqueduct (EVA).


The Lancet | 2017

Intrathecal 2-hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin decreases neurological disease progression in Niemann-Pick disease, type C1: a non-randomised, open-label, phase 1–2 trial

Daniel S. Ory; Elizabeth A. Ottinger; Nicole Y. Farhat; Kelly A. King; Xuntian Jiang; Lisa Weissfeld; Elizabeth Berry-Kravis; Cristin Davidson; Simona Bianconi; Lee Ann Keener; Ravichandran Rao; Ariane Soldatos; Rohini Sidhu; Kimberly A Walters; Xin Xu; Audrey Thurm; Beth Solomon; William J. Pavan; Bernardus N Machielse; Mark Kao; Steven A. Silber; John C. McKew; Carmen C. Brewer; Charles H. Vite; Steven U. Walkley; Christopher P. Austin; Forbes D. Porter

BACKGROUND Niemann-Pick disease, type C1 (NPC1) is a lysosomal storage disorder characterised by progressive neurodegeneration. In preclinical testing, 2-hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrins (HPβCD) significantly delayed cerebellar Purkinje cell loss, slowed progression of neurological manifestations, and increased lifespan in mouse and cat models of NPC1. The aim of this study was to assess the safety and efficacy of lumbar intrathecal HPβCD. METHODS In this open-label, dose-escalation phase 1-2a study, we gave monthly intrathecal HPβCD to participants with NPC1 with neurological manifestation at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), Bethesda, MD, USA. To explore the potential effect of 2-week dosing, three additional participants were enrolled in a parallel study at Rush University Medical Center (RUMC), Chicago, IL, USA. Participants from the NIH were non-randomly, sequentially assigned in cohorts of three to receive monthly initial intrathecal HPβCD at doses of 50, 200, 300, or 400 mg per month. A fifth cohort of two participants received initial doses of 900 mg. Participants from RUMC initially received 200 or 400 mg every 2 weeks. The dose was escalated based on tolerance or safety data from higher dose cohorts. Serum and CSF 24(S)-hydroxycholesterol (24[S]-HC), which serves as a biomarker of target engagement, and CSF protein biomarkers were evaluated. NPC Neurological Severity Scores (NNSS) were used to compare disease progression in HPβCD-treated participants relative to a historical comparison cohort of 21 NPC1 participants of similar age range. FINDINGS Between Sept 21, 2013, and Jan 19, 2015, 32 participants with NPC1 were assessed for eligibility at the National Institutes of Health. 18 patients were excluded due to inclusion criteria not met (six patients), declined to participate (three patients), pursued independent expanded access and obtained the drug outside of the study (three patients), enrolled in the RUMC cohort (one patient), or too late for the trial enrolment (five patients). 14 patients were enrolled and sequentially assigned to receive intrathecal HPβCD at a starting dose of 50 mg per month (three patients), 200 mg per month (three patients), 300 mg per month (three patients), 400 mg per month (three patients), or 900 mg per month (two patients). During the first year, two patients had treatment interrupted for one dose, based on grade 1 ototoxicity. All 14 patients were assessed at 12 months. Between 12 and 18 months, one participant had treatment interrupted at 17 months due to hepatocellular carcinoma, one patient had dose interruption for 2 doses based on caregiver hardship and one patient had treatment interrupted for 1 dose for mastoiditis. 11 patients were assessed at 18 months. Between Dec 11, 2013, and June 25, 2014, three participants were assessed for eligibility and enrolled at RUMC, and were assigned to receive intrathecal HPβCD at a starting dose of 200 mg every 2 weeks (two patients), or 400 mg every two weeks (one patient). There were no dropouts in this group and all 3 patients were assessed at 18 months. Biomarker studies were consistent with improved neuronal cholesterol homoeostasis and decreased neuronal pathology. Post-drug plasma 24(S)-HC area under the curve (AUC8-72) values, an indicator of neuronal cholesterol homoeostasis, were significantly higher than post-saline plasma 24(S)-HC AUC8-72 after doses of 900 mg (p=0·0063) and 1200 mg (p=0·0037). CSF 24(S)-HC concentrations in three participants given either 600 or 900 mg of HPβCD were increased about two fold (p=0·0032) after drug administration. No drug-related serious adverse events were observed. Mid-frequency to high-frequency hearing loss, an expected adverse event, was documented in all participants. When managed with hearing aids, this did not have an appreciable effect on daily communication. The NNSS for the 14 participants treated monthly increased at a rate of 1·22, SEM 0·34 points per year compared with 2·92, SEM 0·27 points per year (p=0·0002) for the 21 patient comparison group. Decreased progression was observed for NNSS domains of ambulation (p=0·0622), cognition (p=0·0040) and speech (p=0·0423). INTERPRETATION Patients with NPC1 treated with intrathecal HPβCD had slowed disease progression with an acceptable safety profile. These data support the initiation of a multinational, randomised, controlled trial of intrathecal HPβCD. FUNDING National Institutes of Health, Danas Angels Research Trust, Ara Parseghian Medical Research Foundation, Hope for Haley, Samanthas Search for the Cure Foundation, National Niemann-Pick Disease Foundation, Support of Accelerated Research for NPC Disease, Vtesse, Janssen Research and Development, a Johnson & Johnson company, and Johnson & Johnson.


Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery | 2011

Cryopyrin-Associated Periodic Syndromes Otolaryngologic and Audiologic Manifestations

Neda Ahmadi; Carmen C. Brewer; Christopher Zalewski; Kelly A. King; Nicole Plass; Cailin Henderson; Raphaela Goldbach-Mansky; H. Jeffrey Kim

Objective. Cryopyrin-associated periodic syndromes (CAPS) represent a spectrum of CIAS1 gene-mediated autoinflammatory diseases characterized by recurrent systemic inflammation. The clinical spectrum of CAPS varies from mild to severe and includes the syndromes historically described as familial cold autoinflammatory syndrome (FCAS), Muckle-Wells syndrome (MWS), and neonatal-onset multisystem inflammatory disease (NOMID). This article presents the largest cohort of patients with CAPS. The objective is to describe the pathogenesis, otolaryngologic, and audiologic manifestations of CAPS. Study Design. Prospective (2003-2009). Setting. National Institutes of Health. Subjects and Methods. Fifty-seven patients with a diagnosis of CAPS were identified (31 NOMID, 11 NOMID/MWS, 9 MWS, and 6 FCAS). Comprehensive data regarding clinical manifestations, audiologic phenotype, and fluid attenuation inversion recovery MRI (FLAIR-MRI) of the brain and inner ear were obtained. Results. Complete audiologic data obtained on 70% of ears revealed conductive hearing loss in 4 (11%) NOMID ears and mixed hearing loss in 5 (13%) NOMID and 2 (14%) NOMID/MWS ears. Sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL), worse in higher frequencies, was the most common type of hearing loss and was present in 23 (61%) NOMID, 10 (71%) NOMID/MWS, and 4 (33%) MWS ears. All of the patients with FCAS had normal hearing except 2, who had SNHL from 4 to 8 kHz. On FLAIR-MRI sequence, cochlear enhancement was noted in 26 of 29 (90%) NOMID, 6 of 11 (55%) NOMID/MWS, 3 of 9 (33%) MWS, and 1 of 6 (17%) FCAS patients and was significantly associated with the presence of hearing loss. Maxillary sinus hypoplasia and mucosal thickening were found in 39% and 86% of the cohort, respectively. Conclusion. CIAS1 pathway–mediated CAPS is associated with unregulated autoinflammation mediated by interleukin-1 in the cochlea and hearing loss. Timely diagnosis is crucial to initiate early treatment with interleukin-1 receptor antagonists.


Ear and Hearing | 2007

Analysis of auditory phenotype and karyotype in 200 females with Turner syndrome.

Kelly A. King; Tomoko Makishima; Christopher Zalewski; Vladimir K. Bakalov; Andrew J. Griffith; Carolyn A. Bondy; Carmen C. Brewer

Objectives: Turner syndrome is the most common sex chromosome disorder in females, and is caused by a total or partial deletion of one X chromosome. The purpose of this study was to describe the auditory phenotype in a large group of individuals with Turner Syndrome, with analysis focusing on hearing loss and age, as well as the phenotypic relationship to karyotype variation. Design: Our analysis of auditory function was part of a large-scale, natural history study in which clinical and genetic factors related to Turner syndrome were examined. This ascertainment avoids the bias inherent in studies of patients referred to audiology or otolaryngology specialty clinics. Analysis included data from 200 females with Turner syndrome ranging in age from 7 to 61 yr (mean = 27.9 yr). Results: We observed hearing loss in approximately one-half of females with Turner syndrome, and report on a common, previously unlabeled audiometric configuration found in 24% of ears tested. Our cross-sectional design revealed an observable deterioration in hearing loss above the averaged rate of age-related hearing loss seen in an otologically screened, standardized population. Karyotype analysis revealed air conduction thresholds that were significantly poorer in the 46, XdelXp and 46, XiXq groups than in the 46, XdelXq group. Conclusions: This natural history study provides a more representative description of the auditory phenotype associated with Turner syndrome than previous studies that may have been biased by the method of ascertainment. Correlative analysis of Turner syndrome-specific hearing loss features with karyotype revealed that air conduction threshold elevations are associated with loss of the p arm of chromosome X. Our cross-sectional data indicate a loss of hearing sensitivity at an accelerated rate beyond a normal age-related decline, which warrants continued audiologic monitoring in all females with Turner syndrome regardless of a history of normal hearing.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2009

Segregation of enlarged vestibular aqueducts in families with non-diagnostic SLC26A4 genotypes

Byung Yoon Choi; Anne C. Madeo; Kelly A. King; Christopher Zalewski; Shannon P. Pryor; Julie A. Muskett; Walter E. Nance; Carmen C. Brewer; Andrew J. Griffith

Background: Hearing loss with enlarged vestibular aqueduct (EVA) can be inherited as an autosomal recessive trait caused by bi-allelic mutations of SLC26A4. However, many EVA patients have non-diagnostic SLC26A4 genotypes with only one or no detectable mutant alleles. Methods and results: In this study, the authors were unable to detect occult SLC26A4 mutations in EVA patients with non-diagnostic genotypes by custom comparative genomic hybridisation (CGH) microarray analysis or by sequence analysis of conserved non-coding regions. The authors sought to compare the segregation of EVA among 71 families with two (M2), one (M1) or no (M0) detectable mutant alleles of SLC26A4. The segregation ratios of EVA in the M1 and M2 groups were similar, but the segregation ratio for M1 was significantly higher than in the M0 group. Haplotype analyses of SLC26A4-linked STR markers in M0 and M1 families revealed discordant segregation of EVA with these markers in eight of 24 M0 families. Conclusion: The results support the hypothesis of a second, undetected SLC26A4 mutation that accounts for EVA in the M1 patients, in contrast to non-genetic factors, complex inheritance, or aetiologic heterogeneity in the M0 group of patients. These results will be helpful for counselling EVA families with non-diagnostic SLC26A4 genotypes.

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Carmen C. Brewer

National Institutes of Health

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Christopher Zalewski

National Institutes of Health

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Andrew J. Griffith

National Institutes of Health

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Julie A. Muskett

National Institutes of Health

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Byung Yoon Choi

Seoul National University Bundang Hospital

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Forbes D. Porter

National Institutes of Health

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Seth L. Alper

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Thomas H. Shawker

National Institutes of Health

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Anne C. Madeo

National Institutes of Health

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