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Dive into the research topics where Thomas Scholl is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas Scholl.


Cancer | 2009

BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations in women of different ethnicities undergoing testing for hereditary breast-ovarian cancer

Michael J. Hall; Julia Reid; Lynn Anne Burbidge; Dmitry Pruss; Amie M. Deffenbaugh; Cynthia Frye; Richard J. Wenstrup; Brian E. Ward; Thomas Scholl; Walter W. Noll

In women at increased risk for breast and ovarian cancer, the identification of a mutation in breast cancer gene 1 (BRCA1) and BRCA2 has important implications for screening and prevention counseling. Uncertainty regarding the role of BRCA1 and BRCA2 testing in high‐risk women from diverse ancestral backgrounds exists because of variability in prevalence estimates of deleterious (disease‐associated) mutations in non‐white populations. In this study, the authors examined the prevalence of BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations in an ethnically diverse group of women who were referred for genetic testing.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2009

Differences in SMN1 allele frequencies among ethnic groups within North America

Brant Hendrickson; Colin Donohoe; Viatcheslav R. Akmaev; Elaine A Sugarman; Paul Labrousse; Leonid Boguslavskiy; Kerry Flynn; Elizabeth M. Rohlfs; Andrew M. Walker; Bernice A Allitto; Christopher Sears; Thomas Scholl

Background: Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is the most common inherited lethal disease of children. Various genetic deletions involving the bi-allelic loss of SMN1 exon 7 are reported to account for 94% of affected individuals. Published literature places the carrier frequency for SMN1 mutations between 1 in 25 and 1 in 50 in the general population. Although SMA is considered to be a pan-ethnic disease, carrier frequencies for many ethnicities, including most ethnic groups in North America, are unknown. Objectives and methods: To provide an accurate assessment of SMN1 mutation carrier frequencies in African American, Ashkenazi Jewish, Asian, Caucasian, and Hispanic populations, more than 1000 specimens in each ethnic group were tested using a clinically validated, quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay that measures exon 7 copy number. Results: The observed one-copy genotype frequency was 1 in 37 (2.7%) in Caucasian, 1 in 46 (2.2%) in Ashkenazi Jew, 1 in 56 (1.8%) in Asian, 1 in 91 (1.1%) in African American, and 1 in 125 (0.8%) in Hispanic specimens. Additionally, an unusually high frequency of alleles with multiple copies of SMN1 was identified in the African American group (27% compared to 3.3–8.1%). This latter finding has clinical implications for providing accurate adjusted genetic risk assessments to the African American population. Conclusions: Differences in the frequency of SMA carriers were significant among several ethnic groups. This study provides an accurate assessment of allele frequencies and estimates of adjusted genetic risk that were previously unavailable to clinicians and patients considering testing.


Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2010

Genetic heterozygosity and pseudodeficiency in the Pompe disease newborn screening pilot program

Paul Labrousse; Yin-Hsiu Chien; Robert Pomponio; Joan Keutzer; Ni-Chung Lee; Viatcheslav R. Akmaev; Thomas Scholl; Wuh-Liang Hwu

Pompe disease is an autosomal recessive lysosomal storage disorder (LSD) caused by deficiency of lysosomal acid alpha-glucosidase (GAA) activity. This is the first LSD in which newborn screening has been shown to improve clinical outcomes. Newborn screening also identified multiple rare gene variants in this population. Among 132,538 newborns screened, 107 babies (1 in 1239) who had low dried blood spot GAA activity were genotyped. Sixty-nine (64.5%) babies had a total of 54 mutations and 35 novel predictably pathogenic mutations; 36 babies (33.6%) who had no mutation were homozygous for the c.[1726A; 2065A] pseudodeficiency allele. Because 81% of the chromosomes (14% in the controls) were in haplotype *03, we found a link between the pseudodeficiency allele and other mutated alleles. The newborns with Pompe disease detected by screening had lymphocyte GAA activities 0.45 to 1.65 nmol/mg/h (normal 66.7+/-33.8), while only 2 of the 100 false-positive cases had GAA activity less than 2.00 nmol/mg/h (or 3% of the normal mean). Therefore, newborn screening for Pompe disease could be successfully conducted by including genotyping and lymphocyte GAA assay, even in a population with mutation heterozygosity and pseudodeficiency.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2003

Application of haplotype pair analysis for the identification of hemizygous loci

Brant Hendrickson; Dmitry Pruss; E Lyon; Thomas Scholl

An expectation maximisation based prediction algorithm was created to identify unusual haplotypes in patient samples that may be caused by small intragenic deletions. In this approach, unphased SNP genotypes are compared to pairs of canonical haplotypes to identify potentially hemizygous regions. This method was successfully applied to identify five deletions in the 3′ region of BRCA1.


Biotechnic & Histochemistry | 2012

Clinical significance of MUC1, MUC2 and CK17 expression patterns for diagnosis of pancreatobiliary arcinoma.

Hai-Su Yang; Rosalba Tamayo; M Almonte; Bruce Horten; M DaSilva; Maryann Gangi; E Vazquez; Daisy Joseph; Patricia Okamoto; Thomas Scholl

Pancreatic cancer is characterized by aggressive growth and resistance to treatment. Identification of unique biomarkers for diagnosis and prognosis is important for treatment of this disease. We investigated the expression patterns of mucin 1 (MUC1), mucin 2 (MUC2) and cytokeratin 17 (CK17) in both normal tissues and metastatic adenocarcinomas using immunohistochemistry (IHC). We have shown that MUC1 (pan-epithelial membrane mucin), MUC2 (intestinal-type secretory mucin) and CK17 can be used as a panel of markers to distinguish collectively pancreatobiliary carcinoma from other primary site carcinomas. Tumors originating in the pancreatobiliary system showed an expression pattern of MUC1 (+), MUC2 (−) and CK17 (+). By contrast, tumors arising from the colorectal region were MUC1 (−), MUC2 (+) and CK17 (−), while tumors originating from non-pancreatobiliary system tissue expressed a MUC1 (+), MUC2 (−) and CK17 (−) profile. More importantly, the MUC1 (+), MUC2 (−) and CK17 (+) result showed greater sensitivity than CA19-9 by IHC, which is the currently accepted and widely used pancreatic tumor marker for diagnosing pancreatic cancer. Thirteen of 51 cases (25%) of pancreatobiliary adenocarcinomas with the pattern MUC1 (+), MUC2 (−) and CK17 (+) showed no immunoreactivity for CA19-9, while 34/51 (67%) cases having MUC1 (+), MUC2 (−) and CK17 (+) were correlated with positive CA19-9 staining. Our data support using an antibody panel of MUC1, MUC2 and CK17 to enhance current methods for pancreatic cancer diagnosis by identifying specifically the primary tissue of origin.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2005

The potential for increased clinical sensitivity in genetic testing for polyposis colorectal cancer through the analysis of MYH mutations in North American patients

K Eliason; Brant Hendrickson; Thaddeus Judkins; M Norton; B Leclair; E Lyon; Brian E. Ward; W Noll; Thomas Scholl


Archive | 2012

Methods for enriching microparticles or nucleic acids in a complex mixture using size exclusion filtration

Patricia Okamoto; Jan Godoski; Thomas Scholl


Archive | 2012

Methods for Enriching Microparticles or Nucleic Acids Using Binding Molecules

Patricia Okamoto; Jan Godoski; Thomas Scholl


Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2011

Development of a Pompe disease CRIM assay for blood samples

Joan Keutzer; Zhaohui Wang; Patricia Okamoto; Thomas Scholl


Archive | 2012

Enrichment of Low Molecular Weight DNA

Patricia Okamoto; Jan Godoski; Thomas Scholl

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