Monika Hofer
John Radcliffe Hospital
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Publication
Featured researches published by Monika Hofer.
Brain Pathology | 2015
Gabriele C. DeLuca; Albert Joseph; Jithin George; Richard L. Yates; Marie Hamard; Monika Hofer; Margaret M. Esiri
Olfactory dysfunction is common in multiple sclerosis (MS). Olfactory bulb and tract pathology in MS and other demyelinating diseases remain unexplored. A human autopsy cohort of pathologically confirmed cases encompassing the spectrum of demyelinating disease (MS; n = 17), neuromyelitis optica [(NMO); n = 3] and acute disseminated encephalomyelitis [(ADEM); n = 7] was compared to neuroinflammatory [herpes simplex virus encephalitis (HSE); n = 3], neurodegenerative [Alzheimers disease (AD); n = 4] and non‐neurologic (n = 8) controls. For each case, olfactory bulbs and/or tracts were stained for myelin, axons and inflammation. Inferior frontal cortex and hippocampus were stained for myelin in a subset of MS and ADEM cases. Olfactory bulb/tract demyelination was frequent in all demyelinating diseases [MS 12/17 (70.6%); ADEM 3/7 (42.9%); NMO 2/3 (66.7%)] but was absent in HSE, AD and non‐neurologic controls. Inflammation was greater in the demyelinating diseases compared to non‐neurologic controls. Olfactory bulb/tract axonal loss was most severe in MS where it correlated significantly with the extent of demyelination (r = 0.610, P = 0.009) and parenchymal inflammation (r = 0.681, P = 0.003). The extent of olfactory bulb/tract demyelination correlated with that found in the adjacent inferior frontal cortex but not hippocampus. We provide unequivocal evidence that olfactory bulb/tract demyelination is frequent, can occur early and is highly inflammatory, and is specific to demyelinating disease.
British Journal of Neurosurgery | 2013
Ruichong Ma; N. De Pennington; Monika Hofer; C. Blesing; Richard Stacey
Abstract Gliomas are the most common primary central nervous system tumour seen in adults. There have been many advances over the last two decades as we widen our search for a molecular basis of gliomagenesis. Many biomarkers have been discovered to be important in the management of gliomas, including 1p19q co-deletion, MGMT promoter methylation, BRAF and IDH1 mutations. In this review, we attempt to summarise the available literature on these biomarkers and their use in the diagnosis and management of gliomas. We pay special attention to the recently discovered IDH1 mutation, which is already proving to be a valuable new marker for favourable prognosis and may also indicate a greater response to therapy. 1p19q co-deletions have been shown to delineate a clinically distinct tumour type and are now routinely tested for in certain situations and can help direct treatment. MGMT promoter methylation is one of the most commonly studied biomarkers in gliomas. It has been shown to be a strong positive prognostic marker in gliomas, with positive tumours being more sensitive to chemotherapy. However, a lack of alternatives means that it is not yet a routine mutation tested for clinically. BRAF mutations are new markers found in pilocytic astrocytomas. Although the prognostic value of such mutations is not yet known, they may play a significant role in the diagnosis and treatment of such tumours. IDH1 mutations are ‘the new kid on the block’ and seem to play a central role in the pathogenesis of gliomas. They represent an independent and favourable prognostic marker and are a new molecular marker for disease diagnosis. Its role in determining response to chemotherapy is still controversial but with further study, IDH1 mutations may prove to be an invaluable marker in the management of gliomas.
Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology | 2017
Gábor Kovács; Sharon X. Xie; Edward B. Lee; John L. Robinson; Carrie Caswell; David J. Irwin; Jon B. Toledo; Victoria E. Johnson; Douglas H. Smith; Irina Alafuzoff; Johannes Attems; János Bencze; Kevin F. Bieniek; Eileen H. Bigio; Istvan Bodi; Herbert Budka; Dennis W. Dickson; Brittany N. Dugger; Charles Duyckaerts; Isidro Ferrer; Shelley L. Forrest; Ellen Gelpi; Stephen M. Gentleman; Giorgio Giaccone; Lea T. Grinberg; Glenda M. Halliday; Kimmo J. Hatanpaa; Patrick R. Hof; Monika Hofer; Tibor Hortobágyi
Aging-related tau astrogliopathy (ARTAG) is a recently introduced terminology. To facilitate the consistent identification of ARTAG and to distinguish it from astroglial tau pathologies observed in the primary frontotemporal lobar degeneration tauopathies we evaluated how consistently neuropathologists recognize (1) different astroglial tau immunoreactivities, including those of ARTAG and those associated with primary tauopathies (Study 1); (2) ARTAG types (Study 2A); and (3) ARTAG severity (Study 2B). Microphotographs and scanned sections immunostained for phosphorylated tau (AT8) were made available for download and preview. Percentage of agreement and kappa values with 95% confidence interval (CI) were calculated for each evaluation. The overall agreement for Study 1 was >60% with a kappa value of 0.55 (95% CI 0.433-0.645). Moderate agreement (>90%, kappa 0.48, 95% CI 0.457-0.900) was reached in Study 2A for the identification of ARTAG pathology for each ARTAG subtype (kappa 0.37-0.72), whereas fair agreement (kappa 0.40, 95% CI 0.341-0.445) was reached for the evaluation of ARTAG severity. The overall assessment of ARTAG showed moderate agreement (kappa 0.60, 95% CI 0.534-0.653) among raters. Our study supports the application of the current harmonized evaluation strategy for ARTAG with a slight modification of the evaluation of its severity.
Neurology | 2014
Dirk Bäumer; Richard Butterworth; Ricarda A. Menke; Kevin Talbot; Monika Hofer; Martin Turner
The onset of motor symptoms in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is strikingly focal. In three-quarters of cases, weakness emerges unilaterally in one limb, typically spreading contiguously over months to become bilateral.1 An extremely rare clinical syndrome of upper motor neuron–predominant, progressive hemiparesis was first described by American neurologist Charles Karsner Mills (1845–1930).2 More typical ALS shares a common histopathologic signature with frontotemporal dementia (FTD), consisting of ubiquitinated neuronal and glial inclusions containing the DNA and RNA binding protein TDP-43. Cognitive impairment may be detected in at least one-third of ALS cases and involves mainly deficits in language, executive function, and fluency, with variable levels of behavioral impairments that all have overlap with the purer FTD syndromes. Frank FTD is seen in up to 15% of patients with ALS, in whom it typically occurs before or soon after the development of motor symptoms and is associated with a more rapid disease progression.3
Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery | 2013
Erlick A.C. Pereira; Puneet Plaha; Monika Hofer; Niki Karavitaki; Simon Cudlip
The authors report a 48-year-old woman with known sysemic Wegener’s granulomatosis and recent onset bitemporal uperior quadrantanopia in whom magnetic resonance imagng, transphenoidal adenohypophysectomy and histopathology onfirmed necrotising granulomatous hypophysitis causing optic hiasm compression. Pituitary gland involvement in Wegener’s ranulomatosis is rare, first manifesting most commonly with entral diabetes insipidus, sometimes with concomitant hypopiuitarism affecting other hormonal axes and extremely rarely ith visual symptoms. The previously unreported presentation f hypophyseal Wegener’s granulomatosis with bitemporal heminopia but neither diabetes insipidus nor hypopituitarism is iscussed.
Jrsm Short Reports | 2011
Sanjay Budhdeo; Ramez A Ibrahim; Monika Hofer; Martin J. Gillies
In this case report, we describe a primary osteoblastic intradiploic meningioma with a clinical and radiological appearance simulating osteoma or fibrous dysplasia.
Journal of Clinical Medicine | 2017
Alireza Morovat; Gayani Weerasinghe; Victoria Nesbitt; Monika Hofer; Thomas Agnew; Geralrine Quaghebeur; Kate Sergeant; Carl Fratter; Nishan Guha; Mehdi Mirzazadeh; Joanna Poulton
Recent work has suggested that fibroblast growth factor-21 (FGF-21) is a useful biomarker of mitochondrial disease (MD). We routinely measured FGF-21 levels on patients who were investigated at our centre for MD and evaluated its diagnostic performance based on detailed genetic and other laboratory findings. Patients’ FGF-21 results were assessed by the use of age-adjusted z-scores based on normalised FGF-21 values from a healthy population. One hundred and fifty five patients were investigated. One hundred and four of these patients had molecular evidence for MD, 27 were deemed to have disorders other than MD (non-MD), and 24 had possible MD. Patients with defects in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) maintenance (n = 32) and mtDNA rearrangements (n = 17) had the highest median FGF-21 among the MD group. Other MD patients harbouring mtDNA point mutations (n = 40) or mutations in other autosomal genes (n = 7) and those with partially characterised MD had lower FGF-21 levels. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve for distinguishing MD from non-MD patients was 0.69. No correlation between FGF-21 and creatinine, creatine kinase, or cardio-skeletal myopathy score was found. FGF-21 was significantly associated with plasma lactate and ocular myopathy. Although FGF-21 was found to have a low sensitivity for detecting MD, at a z-score of 2.8, its specificity was above 90%. We suggest that a high serum concentration of FGF-21 would be clinically useful in MD, especially in adult patients with chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia, and may enable bypassing muscle biopsy and directly opting for genetic analysis. Availability of its assay has thus modified our diagnostic pathway.
Journal of Medical Genetics | 2018
Caterina Garone; Robert W. Taylor; A. Nascimento; Joanna Poulton; Carl Fratter; Cristina Domínguez-González; Julie Evans; Mariana Loos; Pirjo Isohanni; Anu Suomalainen; D Ram; M Imelda Hughes; Robert McFarland; Emanuele Barca; Carlos Lopez Gomez; Sandeep Jayawant; Neil D Thomas; Adnan Y Manzur; Karin Kleinsteuber; Miguel A. Martín; Timothy Kerr; Grainne S. Gorman; Ewen W. Sommerville; Patrick F. Chinnery; Monika Hofer; Christoph Karch; Jeffrey W. Ralph; Yolanda Cámara; Marcos Madruga-Garrido; J. Domínguez-Carral
Background Thymine kinase 2 (TK2) is a mitochondrial matrix protein encoded in nuclear DNA and phosphorylates the pyrimidine nucleosides: thymidine and deoxycytidine. Autosomal recessive TK2 mutations cause a spectrum of disease from infantile onset to adult onset manifesting primarily as myopathy. Objective To perform a retrospective natural history study of a large cohort of patients with TK2 deficiency. Methods The study was conducted by 42 investigators across 31 academic medical centres. Results We identified 92 patients with genetically confirmed diagnoses of TK2 deficiency: 67 from literature review and 25 unreported cases. Based on clinical and molecular genetics findings, we recognised three phenotypes with divergent survival: (1) infantile-onset myopathy (42.4%) with severe mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) depletion, frequent neurological involvement and rapid progression to early mortality (median post-onset survival (POS) 1.00, CI 0.58 to 2.33 years); (2) childhood-onset myopathy (40.2%) with mtDNA depletion, moderate-to-severe progression of generalised weakness and median POS at least 13 years; and (3) late-onset myopathy (17.4%) with mild limb weakness at onset and slow progression to respiratory insufficiency with median POS of 23 years. Ophthalmoparesis and facial weakness are frequent in adults. Muscle biopsies show multiple mtDNA deletions often with mtDNA depletion. Conclusions In TK2 deficiency, age at onset, rate of weakness progression and POS are important variables that define three clinical subtypes. Nervous system involvement often complicates the clinical course of the infantile-onset form while extraocular muscle and facial involvement are characteristic of the late-onset form. Our observations provide essential information for planning future clinical trials in this disorder.
British Journal of Neurosurgery | 2017
Conrad Harrison; Sean C. Martin; Monika Hofer; Rufus Corkill; D. Sanjeeva Jeyaretna; Stewart Griffiths
Abstract Cerebral metastases from carcinoid tumours are rarely reported and confer a much poorer prognosis than carcinoid metastases elsewhere in the body. We describe a case of carcinoid brain metastasis closely resembling a meningioma on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and review current treatment options.
Pituitary | 2016
Matilde Calanchini; Simon Cudlip; Monika Hofer; James V. Byrne; Andrea Fabbri; Ashley B. Grossman
IntroductionChordoid glioma of the third ventricle is a rare and recently described tumor characterized by a unique histomorphology and exclusive association with the suprasellar/third ventricular compartment. Its clinical, radiological and histological features may vary. Despite the fact that chordoid glioma is a low-grade tumor, its prognosis has been relatively poor because of its insidious presentation and the difficulty in obtaining complete surgical resection.Materials and methodsHere, we report on a new case of chordoid glioma occurring in a 48-year-old woman, presented with hyponatremia, and on the initial work-up with a diagnosis of hyponatremia due at least in part to SIADH. We review the current literature on this rare pathology, discuss the radiological and histopathologic findings, and discuss the optimal management of chordoid glioma in general.ConclusionBased on this new case and the previous literature reports, we suggest that chordoid glioma should be included in the differential diagnosis of uncommon masses of the third ventricle, especially in middle-aged women, and we emphasize current management guidelines.