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Featured researches published by T. S. Mir.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2008

The Spectrum of Syndromes and Manifestations in Individuals Screened for Suspected Marfan Syndrome

Meike Rybczynski; A. Bernhardt; Uwe Rehder; Bettina Fuisting; Ludwig Meiss; Ursula Voss; Christian R. Habermann; Christian Detter; Peter N. Robinson; Mine Arslan-Kirchner; Jörg Schmidtke; T. S. Mir; Jürgen Berger; Thomas Meinertz; Yskert von Kodolitsch

The diagnosis of Marfan syndrome (MFS) is based on evaluating a large number of clinical criteria. We have observed that many persons presenting in specialized centers for “Marfan‐like” features do not have MFS, but exhibit a large spectrum of other syndromes. The spectrum of these syndromes and the distribution of “Marfan‐like” features remain to be characterized. Thus, we prospectively evaluated 279 consecutive patients with suspected MFS (144 men and 135 women at a mean age of 34 ± 13 years) for presence of 27 clinical criteria considered characteristic of MFS. The most frequent reasons to refer individuals for suspected MFS were skeletal features (31%), a family history of MFS, or aortic complications (29%), aortic dissection or aneurysm (19%), and eye manifestations (9%). Using established criteria, we confirmed MFS in 138 individuals (group 1) and diagnosed other connective tissue diseases, both with vascular involvement in 30 (group 2) and without vascular involvement in 39 (group 3), and excluded any distinct disease in 72 individuals (group 4). Clinical manifestations of MFS were present in all four patient groups and there was no single clinical criterion that exhibited positive and negative likelihood ratios that were per se sufficient to confirm or rule out MFS. We conclude that “Marfan‐like” features are not exclusively indicative of MFS but also of numerous, alternative inherited diseases with many of them carrying a hitherto poorly defined cardiovascular risk. These alternative diseases require future study to characterize their responses to therapy and long‐term prognosis.


Clinical Genetics | 2012

Analysis of phenotype and genotype information for the diagnosis of Marfan syndrome.

Sara Sheikhzadeh; C. Kade; Britta Keyser; M. Stuhrmann; Mine Arslan-Kirchner; Meike Rybczynski; A. Bernhardt; Christian R. Habermann; Matthias Hillebrand; T. S. Mir; Peter N. Robinson; J. Berger; Christian Detter; Stefan Blankenberg; Joerg Schmidtke; Y von Kodolitsch

Sheikhzadeh S, Kade C, Keyser B, Stuhrmann M, Arslan‐Kirchner M, Rybczynski M, Bernhardt AM, Habermann CR, Hillebrand M, Mir T, Robinson PN, Berger J, Detter C, Blankenberg S, Schmidtke J, von Kodolitsch Y. Analysis of phenotype and genotype information for the diagnosis of Marfan syndrome.


American Journal of Hypertension | 2009

Augmentation index relates to progression of aortic disease in adults with Marfan syndrome

Kai Mortensen; Muhammet Ali Aydin; Meike Rybczynski; Johannes Baulmann; Nazila Abdul Schahidi; Georgina Kean; Kristine Kühne; A. Bernhardt; Olaf Franzen; T. S. Mir; Christian R. Habermann; Dietmar Koschyk; Rodolfo Ventura; Stephan Willems; Peter N. Robinson; Jürgen Berger; Hermann Reichenspurner; Thomas Meinertz; Yskert von Kodolitsch

BACKGROUND Noninvasive applanation tonometry (APT) is useful to assess aortic stiffness and pulse wave reflection. Moreover, APT can predict outcome in many conditions such as arterial hypertension. In this study, we test whether APT measurements relate to progression of aortic disease in Marfan syndrome (MFS). METHODS We performed APT in 50 consecutive, medically treated adults with MFS (19 men and 31 women aged 32 +/- 13 years), who had not undergone previous cardiovascular surgery. During 22 +/- 16 months of follow-up, 26 of these patients developed progression of aortic disease, which we defined as progression of aortic root diameters >or=5 mm/annum (18 individuals), aortic surgery >or=3 months after APT (seven individuals), or onset of acute aortic dissection any time after APT (one individual). RESULTS Univariate Cox regression analysis suggested an association of aortic disease progression with age (P = 0.001), total cholesterol levels (P = 0.04), aortic root diameter (P = 0.007), descending aorta diameter (P = 0.01), aortic root ratio (P = 0.02), and augmentation index (AIx@HR75; P < 0.006). Multivariate Cox regression analysis confirmed an independent impact on aortic disease progression exclusively for baseline aortic root diameters (hazard ratio = 1.347; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.104-1.643; P = 0.003) and AIx@HR75 (hazard ratio = 1.246; 95% CI 1.029-1.508; P = 0.02). In addition, Kaplan-Meier survival curve analysis illustrated significantly lower rates of aortic root disease progression both with lower AIx@HR75 (P = 0.025) and with lower pulse wave velocity (PWV) values (P = 0.027). CONCLUSIONS We provide evidence that APT parameters relate to aortic disease progression in medically treated patients with MFS. We believe that APT has a potential to improve risk stratification in the clinical management of MFS patients.


American Journal of Cardiology | 2010

Frequency and Age-Related Course of Mitral Valve Dysfunction in the Marfan Syndrome

Meike Rybczynski; T. S. Mir; Sara Sheikhzadeh; A. Bernhardt; Claudia Schad; Hendrik Treede; Simon Veldhoen; Eike F. Groene; Kristin Kühne; Dietmar Koschyk; Peter N. Robinson; Jürgen Berger; Hermann Reichenspurner; Thomas Meinertz; Yskert von Kodolitsch

Mitral valve (MV) prolapse (MVP) has a high prevalence of 2% to 3% in the general population and thus constitutes the most common cause of severe nonischemic MV regurgitation (MVR). MVP is also common in persons with the Marfan syndrome. However, to date, a large-scale population-based cohort study using modern echocardiographic techniques has not been performed, and the frequency of MVP and the relation of MV dysfunction and age have not been investigated. Therefore, we conducted a population-based cohort study of 204 patients (108 males and 96 females, aged 31.2 ± 16.4 years) with classic Marfan syndrome. We performed echocardiographic follow-up of 174 patients for a mean of 4.4 ± 4.3 years. On the initial or subsequent echocardiographic scan, MVP was present in 82 patients (40%), severe MVR in 25 (12%), and MV endocarditis in 5 patients (2.5%). At 30 years of age, the Weibull cumulative distribution was 42.6% (95% confidence interval [CI] 36% to 50%) for MVP, 56.5% (95% CI 49.3% to 64%) for MVR of any degree, 6.7% (95% CI 3.9% to 11.3%) for severe MVR, and 0.92% (95% CI 0.21% to 3.91%) for MV endocarditis. The cumulative hazard for severe MVR and MV endocarditis was estimated to increase with age. MVP was associated with dural ectasia (p = 0.01), ectopia lentis (p = 0.02), and skeletal involvement (p <0.001). Severe MVR was related to tricuspid valve prolapse (p = 0.002) and to the sporadic form of the Marfan syndrome (p = 0.006). In conclusion, MVP was comparatively frequent in patients with the Marfan syndrome and carries an increased risk of progression to severe MVR and endocarditis, especially in older adults.


Vasa-european Journal of Vascular Medicine | 2010

Marfan syndrome and the evolving spectrum of heritable thoracic aortic disease: Do we need genetics for clinical decisions?

Y von Kodolitsch; Meike Rybczynski; A. Bernhardt; T. S. Mir; Hendrik Treede; A. Dodge-Khatami; Peter N. Robinson; Sara Sheikhzadeh; H. Reichenspurner; Thomas Meinertz

Marfan syndrome (MFS) is a disorder of the connective tissue that is inherited in an autosomal dominant fashion and that is classically caused by mutations in the gene coding for fibrillin-1, FBN1. The high mortality of untreated MFS results almost exclusively from aortic complications such as aortic dissection and rupture. However, more than half of patients with Marfan-like features do not have MFS, but have other diseases including inherited aortic aneurysms and dissections (TAAD). We elucidate the increasing spectrum of syndromes associated with Marfan-like features and discuss the clinical implications of these diseases. We performed a systematic review to tabulate all known inherited diseases and syndromes carrying a risk for thoracic aortic disease. We discuss evidence that different syndromes with different causative genes and mutations have different prognoses and profiles of cardiovascular manifestations. We conclude that future decisions for optimized management of patients with inherited TAAD require a comprehensive clinical and genetic work-up.


American Journal of Cardiology | 2011

Predictors of outcome of mitral valve prolapse in patients with the Marfan syndrome

Meike Rybczynski; Hendrik Treede; Sara Sheikhzadeh; Eike F. Groene; A. Bernhardt; Mathias Hillebrand; T. S. Mir; Kristine Kühne; Dietmar Koschyk; Peter N. Robinson; Jürgen Berger; Hermann Reichenspurner; Thomas Meinertz; Yskert von Kodolitsch

Mitral valve prolapse has a prevalence of 2% to 3% in the general population, with adverse outcomes such as mitral valve regurgitation (MVR), heart failure, and endocarditis. Predictors of outcomes are used in idiopathic mitral valve prolapse for the timing of surgery, but such predictors are unknown in Marfan syndrome. Therefore, a population-based cohort study of 112 patients (49 male, 63 female; mean age 34 ± 15 years) with classic Marfan syndrome and mitral valve prolapse with moderate or less MVR at baseline was conducted. During 4.6 ± 3.6 years of follow-up, progression of MVR was observed in 41 patients and valve-related events, which comprised mitral valve endocarditis (7 events), heart failure (5 events), and mitral valve surgery (25 events), were observed in 31 patients. Multivariate Cox proportional-hazards regression analysis identified a flail mitral leaflet (hazard ratio [HR] 3.262, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.406 to 7.566, p = 0.006) and increased indexed end-systolic left ventricular diameters (HR 1.113, 95% CI 1.043 to 1.188, p = 0.001) as independent predictors of progression of MVR. Similarly, mitral valve-related events were independently predicted by a flail mitral leaflet (HR 5.343, 95% CI 2.229 to 12.808, p <0.001), and mild (HR 14.336, 95% CI 1.873 to 109.755, p = 0.01) or moderate (HR 16.849, 95% CI 2.205 to 128.76, p = 0.006) degree of MVR. Conversely, aortic dilatation, dural ectasia, and sporadic mode of inheritance were not associated with outcome. In conclusion, the same clinical determinants that predict outcomes in idiopathic mitral valve prolapse also predict outcomes in mitral valve prolapse associated with Marfan syndrome.


Clinical Genetics | 2011

Dural ectasia in individuals with Marfan-like features but exclusion of mutations in the genes FBN1, TGFBR1 and TGFBR2

Sara Sheikhzadeh; Meike Rybczynski; Christian R. Habermann; A. Bernhardt; Mine Arslan-Kirchner; Britta Keyser; Harald Kaemmerer; T. S. Mir; A. Staebler; N Oezdal; Peter N. Robinson; J. Berger; Thomas Meinertz; Y von Kodolitsch

Sheikhzadeh S, Rybczynski M, Habermann CR, Bernhardt AMJ, Arslan‐Kirchner M, Keyser B, Kaemmerer H, Mir TS, Staebler A, Oezdal N, Robinson PN, Berger J, Meinertz T, von Kodolitsch Y. Dural ectasia in individuals with Marfan‐like features but exclusion of mutations in the genes FBN1, TGFBR1 and TGFBR2.


Clinical Genetics | 2014

Comprehensive analysis of dural ectasia in 150 patients with a causative FBN1 mutation.

Sara Sheikhzadeh; C. Sondermann; Meike Rybczynski; Christian R. Habermann; L. Brockstaedt; Britta Keyser; Harald Kaemmerer; T. S. Mir; A. Staebler; Peter N. Robinson; Kerstin Kutsche; J. Berger; Stefan Blankenberg; Y von Kodolitsch

The purpose of this study was to perform a comprehensive study of dural ectasia (DE) related to FBN1 mutations. We performed a database analysis of two German metropolitan regions of 150 patients (68 men, 82 women; mean age 35 ± 16 years). All patients had a FBN1 mutation and underwent dural magnetic resonance imaging. Age was <16 years in 20, 16–25 in 27, 26–35 in 67, and >35 in 36 patients. Prevalence of dural ectasia was 89% with criteria of Oosterhof and Habermann, 83% with Fattori, 78% with Lundby, and 59% with Ahn. DE was less frequent in patients <16 years with Ahn and Fattori. DE related to skeletal manifestations with all criteria, to aortic Z‐scores and mitral valve prolapse with criteria of Habermann and Lundby, and to age with criteria of Fattori. The Fattori‐grade of DE increased with age, aortic Z‐scores, and skeletal score points. There was no consistent relationship of DE with any type of FBN1 mutation. DE is frequent in patients with FBN1 mutations irrespective of age and its severity increases during life. Criteria of Oosterhof and Habermann yielded most consistent diagnostic results. DE relates to skeletal involvement, aortic Z‐scores, and mitral valve prolapse.


Acta Paediatrica | 2013

The Kid-Short Marfan Score (Kid-SMS) - an easy executable risk score for suspected paediatric patients with Marfan syndrome

Goetz C. Mueller; Veronika Stark; Kristoffer Steiner; Jochen Weil; Yskert von Kodolitsch; T. S. Mir

Due to age‐dependent manifestations, diagnosis of Marfan syndrome (MFS) in children and adolescents is sophisticated. Although revised Ghent criteria is a major step forward, its utility in children is still restricted due to expensive and technically advanced diagnostics. As early diagnosis submits long‐term benefits concerning prognosis, the need of an appropriate diagnostic tool for risk stratification of suspected paediatric patients with Marfan is justified.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2013

FBN1 gene mutation characteristics and clinical features for the prediction of mitral valve disease progression

Kristin Kühne; Britta Keyser; Eike F. Groene; Sara Sheikhzadeh; Christian Detter; Viktoria Lorenzen; Mathias Hillebrand; A. Bernhardt; Boris A. Hoffmann; T. S. Mir; Peter N. Robinson; Jürgen Berger; Hermann Reichenspurner; Yskert von Kodolitsch; Meike Rybczynski

BACKGROUND Until today, FBN1 gene mutation characteristics were not compared with clinical features for the prediction of mitral valve disease progression. METHODS Therefore, we conducted a study of 116 patients (53 men, 63 women aged 33 ± 15 years) with a causative FBN1 gene mutation and ≤ moderate mitral valve regurgitation at baseline. RESULTS During 7.4 ± 6.8 years 30 patients developed progression of mitral valve regurgitation ≥ 1 grade (primary endpoint), and 26 patients required mitral valve surgery (secondary endpoint). Cox regression analysis identified an association of atrial fibrillation (hazard ratio (HR)=2.703; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.013-7.211; P=.047), left ventricular ejection fraction (HR=.970; 95%CI .944-.997; P=.032), indexed end-diastolic left ventricular diameter (HR=15.165; 95%CI 4.498-51.128; P<.001), indexed left atrial diameter (HR=1.107; 95%CI 1.045-1.173; P=.001), tricuspid valve prolapse (HR=2.599; 95%CI 1.243-5.437; P=.011), posterior leaflet prolapse (HR=1.075; 95%CI 1.023-1.130; P=.009), and posterior leaflet thickening (HR=3.368; 95%CI 1.265-8.968; P=.015) with progression of mitral valve disease, whereas none of the FBN1 gene mutation characteristics were associated with progression of mitral valve disease. However, Cox regression analysis identified a marginal relationship of FBN1 gene mutations located both in a transforming-growth-factor beta-binding protein-like (TGFb-BP) domain (HR=3.453; 95%CI .982-12.143; P=.053), and in the calcium-binding epidermal growth factor-like (cbEGF) domain (HR=2.909; 95%CI .957-8.848; P=.060) with mitral valve surgery, a finding that was corroborated by Kaplan-Meier analysis (P=.014; and P=.041, respectively). CONCLUSION Clinical features were better predictors of mitral valve disease progression than FBN1 gene mutation characteristics.

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