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Dive into the research topics where Natalia Ballardini is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Natalia Ballardini.


Allergy | 2012

Development and comorbidity of eczema, asthma and rhinitis to age 12 : data from the BAMSE birth cohort

Natalia Ballardini; Inger Kull; Tomas Lind; Eva Hallner; Catarina Almqvist; Eva Östblom; Erik Melén; Göran Pershagen; G. Lilja; Anna Bergström; Magnus Wickman

Allergy‐related diseases are a public health issue, but knowledge on development and comorbidity among children is scarce. The aim was to study the development of eczema, asthma and rhinitis in relation to sex and parental allergy, in a population‐based cohort, during childhood.


Allergy | 2016

Paving the way of systems biology and precision medicine in allergic diseases: the MeDALL success story: Mechanisms of the Development of ALLergy; EU FP7-CP-IP; Project No: 261357; 2010-2015.

Jean Bousquet; J. M. Anto; Mübeccel Akdis; Charles Auffray; Thomas Keil; Isabelle Momas; D. S. Postma; R. Valenta; Magnus Wickman; Anne Cambon-Thomsen; Tari Haahtela; Bart N. Lambrecht; K. C. Lødrup Carlsen; Gerard H. Koppelman; J Sunyer; Torsten Zuberbier; I. Annesi-Maesano; A. Arno; C. Bindslev-Jensen; G. De Carlo; F. Forastiere; Joachim Heinrich; M. L. Kowalski; Dieter Maier; Erik Melén; S. Palkonen; Henriette A. Smit; Marie Standl; John Wright; Anna Asarnoj

MeDALL (Mechanisms of the Development of ALLergy; EU FP7‐CP‐IP; Project No: 261357; 2010–2015) has proposed an innovative approach to develop early indicators for the prediction, diagnosis, prevention and targets for therapy. MeDALL has linked epidemiological, clinical and basic research using a stepwise, large‐scale and integrative approach: MeDALL data of precisely phenotyped children followed in 14 birth cohorts spread across Europe were combined with systems biology (omics, IgE measurement using microarrays) and environmental data. Multimorbidity in the same child is more common than expected by chance alone, suggesting that these diseases share causal mechanisms irrespective of IgE sensitization. IgE sensitization should be considered differently in monosensitized and polysensitized individuals. Allergic multimorbidities and IgE polysensitization are often associated with the persistence or severity of allergic diseases. Environmental exposures are relevant for the development of allergy‐related diseases. To complement the population‐based studies in children, MeDALL included mechanistic experimental animal studies and in vitro studies in humans. The integration of multimorbidities and polysensitization has resulted in a new classification framework of allergic diseases that could help to improve the understanding of genetic and epigenetic mechanisms of allergy as well as to better manage allergic diseases. Ethics and gender were considered. MeDALL has deployed translational activities within the EU agenda.


British Journal of Dermatology | 2013

Eczema severity in preadolescent children and its relation to sex, filaggrin mutations, asthma, rhinitis, aggravating factors and topical treatment: a report from the BAMSE birth cohort

Natalia Ballardini; Inger Kull; Cilla Söderhäll; G. Lilja; Magnus Wickman; Carl-Fredrik Wahlgren

Backgroundu2002 Filaggrin (FLG) mutations are major genetic determinants for eczema, but their role in eczema severity needs further investigation. Children with eczema are at higher risk of having asthma and rhinitis but it is not known if this risk is associated with the severity of eczema.


Archive | 2016

Paving the way of systems biology and precision medicine in allergic diseases

Jean Bousquet; Josep M. Antó; Mübeccel Akdis; Charles Auffray; Thomas Keil; Isabelle Momas; Dirkje S. Postma; Rudolf Valenta; Magnus Wickman; Anne Cambon-Thomsen; Tari Haahtela; Bart N. Lambrecht; K. C. Lødrup Carlsen; Gerard H. Koppelman; J. Sunyer; Torsten Zuberbier; I. Annesi-Maesano; A. Arno; Carsten Bindslev-Jensen; G. De Carlo; F. Forastiere; Joachim Heinrich; Marek L. Kowalski; Dieter Maier; Erik Melén; S. Palkonen; Henriette A. Smit; Marie Standl; John Wright; Anna Asarnoj

MeDALL (Mechanisms of the Development of ALLergy; EU FP7‐CP‐IP; Project No: 261357; 2010–2015) has proposed an innovative approach to develop early indicators for the prediction, diagnosis, prevention and targets for therapy. MeDALL has linked epidemiological, clinical and basic research using a stepwise, large‐scale and integrative approach: MeDALL data of precisely phenotyped children followed in 14 birth cohorts spread across Europe were combined with systems biology (omics, IgE measurement using microarrays) and environmental data. Multimorbidity in the same child is more common than expected by chance alone, suggesting that these diseases share causal mechanisms irrespective of IgE sensitization. IgE sensitization should be considered differently in monosensitized and polysensitized individuals. Allergic multimorbidities and IgE polysensitization are often associated with the persistence or severity of allergic diseases. Environmental exposures are relevant for the development of allergy‐related diseases. To complement the population‐based studies in children, MeDALL included mechanistic experimental animal studies and in vitro studies in humans. The integration of multimorbidities and polysensitization has resulted in a new classification framework of allergic diseases that could help to improve the understanding of genetic and epigenetic mechanisms of allergy as well as to better manage allergic diseases. Ethics and gender were considered. MeDALL has deployed translational activities within the EU agenda.


Allergy | 2015

Are allergic multimorbidities and IgE polysensitization associated with the persistence or re-occurrence of foetal type 2 signalling? The MeDALL hypothesis

Jean Bousquet; Josep M. Antó; Magnus Wickman; Thomas Keil; Rudolf Valenta; T. Haahtela; K. C. Lødrup Carlsen; M. van Hage; Cezmi A. Akdis; Claus Bachert; Muebeccel Akdis; Charles Auffray; I. Annesi-Maesano; Carsten Bindslev-Jensen; Anne Cambon-Thomsen; Kai-Håkon Carlsen; Leda Chatzi; F. Forastiere; Judith Garcia-Aymerich; U. Gehrig; Stefano Guerra; Joachim Heinrich; Gerard H. Koppelman; M. L. Kowalski; Bart N. Lambrecht; Christian Lupinek; Dieter Maier; Erik Melén; Isabelle Momas; S. Palkonen

Allergic diseases [asthma, rhinitis and atopic dermatitis (AD)] are complex. They are associated with allergen‐specific IgE and nonallergic mechanisms that may coexist in the same patient. In addition, these diseases tend to cluster and patients present concomitant or consecutive diseases (multimorbidity). IgE sensitization should be considered as a quantitative trait. Important clinical and immunological differences exist between mono‐ and polysensitized subjects. Multimorbidities of allergic diseases share common causal mechanisms that are only partly IgE‐mediated. Persistence of allergic diseases over time is associated with multimorbidity and/or IgE polysensitization. The importance of the family history of allergy may decrease with age. This review puts forward the hypothesis that allergic multimorbidities and IgE polysensitization are associated and related to the persistence or re‐occurrence of foetal type 2 signalling. Asthma, rhinitis and AD are manifestations of a common systemic immune imbalance (mesodermal origin) with specific patterns of remodelling (ectodermal or endodermal origin). This study proposes a new classification of IgE‐mediated allergic diseases that allows the definition of novel phenotypes to (i) better understand genetic and epigenetic mechanisms, (ii) better stratify allergic preschool children for prognosis and (iii) propose novel strategies of treatment and prevention.


Allergy | 2016

IgE antibodies in relation to prevalence and multimorbidity of eczema, asthma, and rhinitis from birth to adolescence

Natalia Ballardini; Anna Bergström; C-F. Wahlgren; M. van Hage; Eva Hallner; Inger Kull; Erik Melén; J. M. Anto; Jean Bousquet; Magnus Wickman

Eczema, asthma, and rhinitis affect a large proportion of children, but their prevalence varies with age. IgE antibodies are also common in the pediatric population. However, the links between IgE, disease, and trajectories are unclear.


British Journal of Dermatology | 2015

Hand eczema and atopic dermatitis in adolescents: a prospective cohort study from the BAMSE project

C.M. Grönhagen; Carola Lidén; Carl-Fredrik Wahlgren; Natalia Ballardini; Anna Bergström; Inger Kull; Birgitta Meding

There is a well‐known association between atopic dermatitis (AD) and hand eczema but less is known about how age at onset, persistence and severity of AD influence the risk of developing hand eczema.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2017

Mechanisms of the Development of Allergy (MeDALL): Introducing novel concepts in allergy phenotypes

Josep M. Antó; Jean Bousquet; Mübeccel Akdis; Charles Auffray; Thomas Keil; Isabelle Momas; Dirkje S. Postma; Rudolf Valenta; Magnus Wickman; Anne Cambon-Thomsen; Tari Haahtela; Bart N. Lambrecht; Karin C. Lødrup Carlsen; Gerard H. Koppelman; J. Sunyer; Torsten Zuberbier; I. Annesi-Maesano; Albert Arno; Carsten Bindslev-Jensen; Giuseppe De Carlo; Francesco Forastiere; Joachim Heinrich; Marek L. Kowalski; Dieter Maier; Erik Melén; Henriette A. Smit; Marie Standl; John Wright; Anna Asarnoj; Marta Benet

&NA; Asthma, rhinitis, and eczema are complex diseases with multiple genetic and environmental factors interlinked through IgE‐associated and non–IgE‐associated mechanisms. Mechanisms of the Development of ALLergy (MeDALL; EU FP7‐CP‐IP; project no: 261357; 2010‐2015) studied the complex links of allergic diseases at the clinical and mechanistic levels by linking epidemiologic, clinical, and mechanistic research, including in vivo and in vitro models. MeDALL integrated 14 European birth cohorts, including 44,010 participants and 160 cohort follow‐ups between pregnancy and age 20 years. Thirteen thousand children were prospectively followed after puberty by using a newly standardized MeDALL Core Questionnaire. A microarray developed for allergen molecules with increased IgE sensitivity was obtained for 3,292 children. Estimates of air pollution exposure from previous studies were available for 10,000 children. Omics data included those from historical genome‐wide association studies (23,000 children) and DNA methylation (2,173), targeted multiplex biomarker (1,427), and transcriptomic (723) studies. Using classical epidemiology and machine‐learning methods in 16,147 children aged 4 years and 11,080 children aged 8 years, MeDALL showed the multimorbidity of eczema, rhinitis, and asthma and estimated that only 38% of multimorbidity was attributable to IgE sensitization. MeDALL has proposed a new vision of multimorbidity independent of IgE sensitization, and has shown that monosensitization and polysensitization represent 2 distinct phenotypes. The translational component of MeDALL is shown by the identification of a novel allergic phenotype characterized by polysensitization and multimorbidity, which is associated with the frequency, persistence, and severity of allergic symptoms. The results of MeDALL will help integrate personalized, predictive, preventative, and participatory approaches in allergic diseases.


Allergy | 2016

Cross-reactivity to fish and chicken meat – a new clinical syndrome

Annette Kuehn; F. Codreanu-Morel; C Lehners-Weber; Virginie Doyen; S-A Gomez-André; F Bienvenu; Natalia Ballardini; M. van Hage; J.-M. Perotin; S Silcret-Grieu; H Chabane; François Hentges; Markus Ollert; Christiane Hilger; M. Morisset

Fish is one of the most allergenic foods. While clinical cross‐reactivity among different fishes is a widely accepted feature of fish allergy, associations with other food allergies are not well understood. This study aims at analyzing the relevance of clinical cross‐reactivity between fish and chicken meat in patients with allergy to chicken meat without sensitization to hens eggs.


Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2014

Allergy‐related diseases and recurrent abdominal pain during childhood – a birth cohort study

Ola Olén; Åsa Neuman; B. Koopmann; Jonas F. Ludvigsson; Natalia Ballardini; Marit Westman; Erik Melén; Inger Kull; Magnus Simren; Anna Bergström

Allergy and immune dysregulation may have a role in the pathophysiology of recurrent abdominal pain of functional origin, but previous studies of allergy‐related diseases and abdominal pain have contradictory results.

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Carl-Fredrik Wahlgren

Karolinska University Hospital

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Marianne van Hage

Karolinska University Hospital

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G. Lilja

Karolinska Institutet

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