Maria Kinali
Hammersmith Hospital
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Featured researches published by Maria Kinali.
Lancet Neurology | 2009
Maria Kinali; Virginia Arechavala-Gomeza; L. Feng; Sebahattin Cirak; David Hunt; Carl F. Adkin; M. Guglieri; Emma J. Ashton; Stephen Abbs; Petros Nihoyannopoulos; Maria Elena Garralda; Mary A. Rutherford; Caroline McCulley; Linda Popplewell; Ian R. Graham; George Dickson; Matthew J.A. Wood; Dominic J. Wells; S.D. Wilton; Ryszard Kole; Volker Straub; Kate Bushby; C. Sewry; Jennifer E. Morgan; Francesco Muntoni
Summary Background Mutations that disrupt the open reading frame and prevent full translation of DMD, the gene that encodes dystrophin, underlie the fatal X-linked disease Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Oligonucleotides targeted to splicing elements (splice switching oligonucleotides) in DMD pre-mRNA can lead to exon skipping, restoration of the open reading frame, and the production of functional dystrophin in vitro and in vivo, which could benefit patients with this disorder. Methods We did a single-blind, placebo-controlled, dose-escalation study in patients with DMD recruited nationally, to assess the safety and biochemical efficacy of an intramuscular morpholino splice-switching oligonucleotide (AVI-4658) that skips exon 51 in dystrophin mRNA. Seven patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy with deletions in the open reading frame of DMD that are responsive to exon 51 skipping were selected on the basis of the preservation of their extensor digitorum brevis (EDB) muscle seen on MRI and the response of cultured fibroblasts from a skin biopsy to AVI-4658. AVI-4658 was injected into the EDB muscle; the contralateral muscle received saline. Muscles were biopsied between 3 and 4 weeks after injection. The primary endpoint was the safety of AVI-4658 and the secondary endpoint was its biochemical efficacy. This trial is registered, number NCT00159250. Findings Two patients received 0·09 mg AVI-4658 in 900 μL (0·9%) saline and five patients received 0·9 mg AVI-4658 in 900 μL saline. No adverse events related to AVI-4658 administration were reported. Intramuscular injection of the higher-dose of AVI-4658 resulted in increased dystrophin expression in all treated EDB muscles, although the results of the immunostaining of EDB-treated muscle for dystrophin were not uniform. In the areas of the immunostained sections that were adjacent to the needle track through which AVI-4658 was given, 44–79% of myofibres had increased expression of dystrophin. In randomly chosen sections of treated EDB muscles, the mean intensity of dystrophin staining ranged from 22% to 32% of the mean intensity of dystrophin in healthy control muscles (mean 26·4%), and the mean intensity was 17% (range 11–21%) greater than the intensity in the contralateral saline-treated muscle (one-sample paired t test p=0·002). In the dystrophin-positive fibres, the intensity of dystrophin staining was up to 42% of that in healthy muscle. We showed expression of dystrophin at the expected molecular weight in the AVI-4658-treated muscle by immunoblot. Interpretation Intramuscular AVI-4658 was safe and induced the expression of dystrophin locally within treated muscles. This proof-of-concept study has led to an ongoing systemic clinical trial of AVI-4658 in patients with DMD. Funding UK Department of Health.
Neurology | 2007
Eugenio Mercuri; Enrico Bertini; Sonia Messina; A. Solari; Adele D'Amico; Carla Angelozzi; Roberta Battini; Angela Berardinelli; P. Boffi; C. Bruno; C. Cini; Francesca Colitto; Maria Kinali; Carlo Minetti; Tiziana Mongini; Lucia Morandi; Giovanni Neri; S. Orcesi; Marika Pane; Marco Pelliccioni; Antonella Pini; Francesco Danilo Tiziano; Marcello Villanova; Giuseppe Vita; Cristina Beate Brahe
Objective: To assess the efficacy of phenylbutyrate (PB) in patients with spinal muscular atrophy in a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial involving 10 Italian centers. Methods: One hundred seven children were assigned to receive PB (500 mg/kg/day) or matching placebo on an intermittent regimen (7 days on/7 days off) for 13 weeks. The Hammersmith functional motor scale (primary outcome measure), myometry, and forced vital capacity were assessed at baseline and at weeks 5 and 13. Results: Between January and September 2004, 107 patients aged 30 to 154 months were enrolled. PB was well tolerated, with only one child withdrawing because of adverse events. Mean improvement in functional score was 0.60 in the PB arm and 0.73 in placebo arm (p = 0.70). Changes in the secondary endpoints were also similar in the two study arms. Conclusions: Phenylbutyrate was not effective at the regimen, schedule, and duration used in this study.
Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology | 2002
Denise G M McDonald; Maria Kinali; Andrew C Gallagher; Eugenio Mercuri; Francesco Muntoni; Helen Roper; Philip Jardine; David Hilton Jones; Mike Pike
The objective of this study was to determine the prevalence, circumstances, and outcome of fractures in males with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) attending neuromuscular clinics. Three hundred and seventy-eight males (median age 12 years, range 1 to 25 years) attending four neuromuscular centres were studied by case-note review supplemented by GP letter or by interview at the time of clinic attendance. Seventy-nine (20.9%) of these patients had experienced fractures. Forty-one percent of fractures were in patients aged 8 to 11 years and 48% in independently ambulant patients. Falling was the most common mechanism of fracture. Upper-limb fractures were most common in males using knee-ankle-foot orthoses (65%) while lower-limb fractures predominated in independently mobile and wheelchair dependent males (54% and 68% respectively). Twenty percent of ambulant males and 27% of those using orthoses lost mobility permanently as a result of the fracture. In a substantial proportion of males, the occurrence of a fracture had a significant impact on subsequent mobility.
Neuromuscular Disorders | 2004
Eugenio Mercuri; Enrico Bertini; Sonia Messina; Marco Pelliccioni; Adele D'Amico; Francesca Colitto; Massimiliano Mirabella; Francesco Danilo Tiziano; Tiziana Vitali; Carla Angelozzi; Maria Kinali; M. Main; Christina Brahe
The aim of this study was to evaluate tolerability and efficacy of phenylbutyrate (PB) in patients with spinal muscular atrophy (SMA). Ten patients with SMA type II confirmed by DNA studies (age range 2.6-12.7 years, mean age 6.01) were started on oral PB (triButyrate) in powder or tablets. The dosage was 500 mg/kg per day (maximum dose 19 g/d), divided in five doses (every 4 h, skipping one night-dose) using an intermittent schedule (7 days on and 7 days off). Measures of efficacy were the change in motor function from baseline to 3 and 9 weeks, by means of the Hammersmith functional motor scale. In children older than 5 years, muscle strength, assessed by myometry, and forced vital capacity were also measured. We found a significant increase in the scores of the Hammersmith functional scale between the baseline and both 3-weeks (P < 0.012) and 9-weeks assessments (P < 0.004). Our results indicate that PB might be beneficial to SMA patients without producing any major side effect. Larger prospective randomised, double-blind, placebo controlled trials are needed to confirm these preliminary findings.
Neuromuscular Disorders | 2005
Eugenio Mercuri; Kate Bushby; Enzo Ricci; Daniel Birchall; Marika Pane; Maria Kinali; Joanna M. Allsop; Vincenzo Nigro; Amets Sáenz; Annachiara Nascimbeni; Luigi Fulizio; Corrado Angelini; Francesco Muntoni
Limb girdle muscular dystrophy 2A is a common variant secondary to mutations in the calpain 3 gene. A proportion of patients has early and severe contractures, which can cause diagnostic difficulties with other conditions. We report clinical and muscle magnetic resonance imaging findings in seven limb girdle muscular dystrophy 2A patients (four sporadic and three familial) who had prominent and early contractures. All patients showed a striking involvement of the posterior thigh muscles. The involvement of the other thigh muscles was variable and was related to clinical severity. Young patients with minimal functional motor impairment showed a predominant involvement of the adductors and semimembranosus muscles while patients with restricted ambulation had a more diffuse involvement of the posterolateral muscles of the thigh and of the vastus intermedius with relative sparing of the vastus lateralis, sartorius and gracilis. At calf level all patients showed involvement of the soleus muscle and of the medial head of the gastrocnemius with relative sparing of the lateral head. MRI findings were correlated to those found in two patients with the phenotype of limb girdle muscular dystrophy 2A without early contractures and the pattern observed was quite similar. However, the pattern observed in limb girdle muscular dystrophy 2A is different from that reported in other muscle diseases such as Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy and Bethlem myopathy which have a significant clinical overlap with limb girdle muscular dystrophy 2A once early contractures are present. Our results suggest that muscle MRI may help in recognising patients with limb girdle muscular dystrophy 2A even when the clinical presentation overlaps with other conditions, and may therefore, be used as an additional investigation to target the appropriate biochemical and genetic tests.
Annals of Neurology | 2008
Emma Clement; Eugenio Mercuri; Caroline Godfrey; Janine Smith; S. Robb; Maria Kinali; Volker Straub; Kate Bushby; Adnan Y. Manzur; Beril Talim; Frances Cowan; R. Quinlivan; Andrea Klein; Cheryl Longman; Robert McWilliam; Haluk Topaloglu; Rachael Mein; Stephen Abbs; Kathryn N. North; A. James Barkovich; Mary A. Rutherford; Francesco Muntoni
To assess the range and severity of brain involvement, as assessed by magnetic resonance imaging, in 27 patients with mutations in POMT1 (4), POMT2 (9), POMGnT1 (7), Fukutin (4), or LARGE (3), responsible for muscular dystrophies with abnormal glycosylation of dystroglycan (dystroglycanopathies).
Archives of Disease in Childhood | 2008
Adnan Y. Manzur; Maria Kinali; Francesco Muntoni
Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is familiar to paediatricians as the most common childhood muscular dystrophy and leads to severe disability and early death in the late teenage years if untreated. Improvements in general care, glucocorticoid corticosteroid treatment, non-invasive ventilatory support, and cardiomyopathy and scoliosis management have significantly changed the course of DMD in treated individuals, so that survival into adulthood is now a realistic possibility for most patients. This has important implications for the medical and social sectors involved in the transition to adult medical services and the provision of suitable employment and social care. Multidisciplinary team working for optimal management of DMD-specific multisystem complications is essential, and collaboration in disease specific national clinical networks is recommended. Several curative therapeutic strategies including cell and gene therapy are being pursued but are still at an experimental stage.
Neurology | 2009
A. Nadeau; Maria Kinali; M. Main; Cecilia Jimenez-Mallebrera; Annie Aloysius; Emma Clement; B. North; A. Manzur; S. Robb; E. Mercuri; Francesco Muntoni
Objective: To describe the course, complications, and prognosis of Ullrich congenital muscular dystrophy (UCMD), with special reference to life-changing events, including loss of ambulation, respiratory insufficiency, and death. Methods: Review of the case notes of 13 patients with UCMD, aged 15 years or older at last visit, followed up at a tertiary neuromuscular centre, London, UK, from 1977 to 2007. Data collected were age at onset of symptoms, presenting symptoms, mobility, contractures, scoliosis, skin abnormalities, respiratory function, and feeding difficulties. Results: The mean age at onset of symptoms was 12 months (SD 14 months). Eight patients (61.5%) acquired independent ambulation at a mean age of 1.7 years (SD 0.8 years). Nine patients (69.2%) became constant wheelchair users at a mean age of 11.1 years (SD 4.8 years). Three patients continued to ambulate indoors with assistance. Forced vital capacity (FVC) values were abnormal in all patients from age 6 years. The mean FVC (% predicted) declined at a mean rate of 2.6% (SD 4.1%) yearly. Nine patients (69.2%) started noninvasive ventilation at a mean age of 14.3 years (SD 5.0 years). Two patients died of respiratory insufficiency. Conclusion: In Ullrich congenital muscular dystrophy (UCMD), the decline in motor and respiratory functions is more rapid in the first decade of life. The deterioration is invariable, but not always correlated with age or severity at presentation. This information should be of help to better anticipate the difficulties encountered by patients with UCMD and in planning future therapeutic trials in this condition.
Neuromuscular Disorders | 2005
Eugenio Mercuri; Ak Lampe; Joanna M. Allsop; Ravi Knight; Marika Pane; Maria Kinali; Carsten G. Bönnemann; Kevin M. Flanigan; Ilaria Lapini; Kate Bushby; Guglielmina Pepe; Francesco Muntoni
The aim of this study was to evaluate the spectrum of muscle involvement on Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) in patients with collagen VI related disorders. Nineteen patients with genetically confirmed collagen VI related disorders, 10 with Bethlem myopathy and 9 with Ullrich congenital muscular dystrophy (CMD), had muscle MRI of their legs using T1 sequences through calves and thighs. In patients with Bethlem myopathy the vasti muscles appeared to be the most frequently and most strikingly affected thigh muscles, with a rim of abnormal signal at the periphery of each muscle and relative sparing of the central part. Another frequent finding was the presence of a peculiar involvement of the rectus femoris with a central area of abnormal signal within the muscle. Patients with Ullrich CMD had a more diffuse involvement of the thigh muscles with relative sparing of sartorius, gracilis and adductor longus. In 8 of the 9 patients with Ullrich CMD, we also observed the peripheral rim of the vastus lateralis and the central area in the rectus femoris observed in patients with Bethlem myopathy. At calf level the results were more variable but a significant proportion of patients with both Bethlem myopathy (8/10) and Ullrich CMD (6/9) showed a rim of abnormal signal at the periphery of soleus and gastrocnemii. Bethlem myopathy and Ullrich CMD patients have distinct patterns of muscle involvement on MRI with some overlap between the two forms. Our results suggest that muscle MR may be used, as an additional tool, to identify patients with collagen VI related disorders. This information is even more important in the patients with a typical Ullrich CMD clinical phenotype but with normal collagen expression of VI in muscle and/or skin.
Brain Pathology | 2009
Cecilia Jimenez-Mallebrera; Silvia Torelli; L. Feng; Jihee Kim; Caroline Godfrey; Emma Clement; Rachael Mein; Stephen Abbs; Susan C. Brown; Kevin P. Campbell; Stephan Kröger; Beril Talim; Haluk Topaloglu; R. Quinlivan; Helen Roper; Anne Marie Childs; Maria Kinali; C. Sewry; Francesco Muntoni
Hypoglycosylation of α‐dystroglycan underpins a subgroup of muscular dystrophies ranging from congenital onset of weakness, severe brain malformations and death in the perinatal period to mild weakness in adulthood without brain involvement. Mutations in six genes have been identified in a proportion of patients. POMT1, POMT2 and POMGnT1 encode for glycosyltransferases involved in the mannosylation of α‐dystroglycan but the function of fukutin, FKRP and LARGE is less clear. The pathological hallmark is reduced immunolabeling of skeletal muscle with antibodies recognizing glycosylated epitopes on α‐dystroglycan. If the common pathway of these conditions is the hypoglycosyation of α‐dystroglycan, one would expect a correlation between clinical severity and the extent of hypoglycosylation. By studying 24 patients with mutations in these genes, we found a good correlation between reduced α‐dystroglycan staining and clinical course in patients with mutations in POMT1, POMT2 and POMGnT1. However, this was not always the case in patients with defects in fukutin and FKRP, as we identified patients with mild limb–girdle phenotypes without brain involvement with profound depletion of α‐dystroglycan. These data indicate that it is not always possible to correlate clinical course and α‐dystroglycan labeling and suggest that there might be differences in α‐dystroglycan processing in these disorders.