Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where V. Skalicka is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by V. Skalicka.


Human Mutation | 2009

Mutations in the Amiloride-Sensitive Epithelial Sodium Channel in Patients With Cystic Fibrosis-Like Disease

Abul Kalam Azad; Robert Rauh; F. Vermeulen; Frauke Stanke; Kris De Boeck; Marianne Schwartz; Lena Hjelte; Burkhard Tümmler; Christoph Korbmacher; Patrick Lebecque; Martine Jaspers; Lieven Dupont; Dragica Radojkovic; Jean-Jacques Cassiman; Harry Cuppens; Judit Korbmacher; Brigitte Boissier; Laurence Bassinet; Yann Fichou; Marie des Georges; Miroslava Balascakova; Carlo Castellani; Martin Schwarz; Manfred Stuhrmann; V. Skalicka; Isabelle de Monestrol; Emmanuelle Girodon; Claude Férec; Mireille Claustres

We investigated whether mutations in the genes that code for the different subunits of the amiloride‐sensitive epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) might result in cystic fibrosis (CF)‐like disease. In a small fraction of the patients, the disease could be potentially explained by an ENaC mutation by a Mendelian mechanism, such as p.V114I and p.F61L in SCNN1A. More importantly, a more than three‐fold significant increase in incidence of several rare ENaC polymorphisms was found in the patient group (30% vs. 9% in controls), indicating an involvement of ENaC in some patients by a polygenetic mechanism. Specifically, a significantly higher number of patients carried c.–55+5G>C or p.W493R in SCNN1A in the heterozygous state, with odds ratios (ORs) of 13.5 and 2.7, respectively.The p.W493R‐SCNN1A polymorphism was even found to result in a four‐fold more active ENaC channel when heterologously expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes. About 1 in 975 individuals in the general population will be heterozygous for the hyperactive p.W493R‐SCNN1A mutation and a cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene that results in very low amounts (0–10%) functional CFTR. These ENaC/CFTR genotypes may play a hitherto unrecognized role in lung diseases. Hum Mutat 30:1–11, 2009.


Thorax | 2009

Phenotypic characterisation of patients with intermediate sweat chloride values: towards validation of the European diagnostic algorithm for cystic fibrosis

C Goubau; Michael Wilschanski; V. Skalicka; Patrick Lebecque; K.W. Southern; Isabelle Sermet; Anne Munck; Nico Derichs; Peter G. Middleton; Lena Hjelte; R Padoan; M Vasar; K. De Boeck

Background: In patients with symptoms suggestive of cystic fibrosis (CF) and intermediate sweat chloride values (30–60 mmol/l), extensive CFTR gene mutation analysis and nasal potential difference (NPD) measurement are used as additional diagnostic tests and a positive result in either test provides evidence of CFTR dysfunction. To define the phenotype of such patients and confirm the validity of grouping them, patients with intermediate sweat chloride values in whom either additional CF diagnostic test was abnormal were compared with subjects in whom this was not the case and patients with classic CF. Methods: The phenotypic features of four groups were compared: 59 patients with CFTR dysfunction, 46 with an intermediate sweat chloride concentration but no evidence of CFTR dysfunction (CF unlikely), 103 patients with CF and pancreatic sufficiency (CF-PS) and 62 with CF and pancreatic insufficiency (CF-PI). Results: The CFTR dysfunction group had more lower respiratory tract infections (p = 0.01), more isolation of CF pathogens (p<0.001) and clubbing (p = 0.001) than the CF unlikely group, but less frequent respiratory tract infections with CF pathogens than the CF-PS group (p = 0.05). Patients in the CF-PS group had a milder phenotype than those with PI. Many features showed stepwise changes through the patient groups. Conclusion: Patients with intermediate sweat chloride values and two CFTR mutations or an abnormal NPD measurement have a CF-like phenotype compatible with CFTR dysfunction and, as a group, differ phenotypically from patients with intermediate sweat chloride values in whom further CF diagnostic tests are normal as well as from CF-PS and CF-PI patients.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2010

Clinical phenotype and genotype of children with borderline sweat test and abnormal nasal epithelial chloride transport.

Isabelle Sermet-Gaudelus; Emanuelle Girodon; Dorota Sands; Nathalie Stremmler; Vera Vavrova; Eric Deneuville; S. Bui; Frédéric Huet; Muriel Lebourgeois; Anne Munck; Albert Iron; V. Skalicka; Thierry Bienvenu; Delphine Roussel; Gérard Lenoir; Gabriel Bellon; Jacques Sarles; Milan Macek; Michel Roussey; Isabelle Fajac; Aleksander Edelman

RATIONALE The diagnosis of cystic fibrosis (CF) is based on a characteristic clinical picture in association with a sweat chloride (Cl(-)) concentration greater than 60 mmol/L or the identification of two CF-causing mutations. A challenging problem is the significant number of children for whom no definitive diagnosis is possible because they present with symptoms suggestive of CF, a sweat chloride level in the intermediate range between 30 and 60 mmol/L, and only one or no identified CF-causing mutation. OBJECTIVES To investigate the function of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) protein in the airways of children with intermediate sweat tests and inconclusive genetic findings in correlation with clinical phenotype and genotype. METHODS We developed a composite nasal potential difference (NPD) diagnostic score to discriminate patients with CF from non-CF patients. We tested NPD in 50 children (age, 6 mo to 18 yr) with equivocal diagnoses and correlated the NPD diagnostic score with clinical phenotypes and genotypes. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS Fifteen of the 50 children had NPD scores in the CF range. Eight of the 15 carried two CFTR mutations compared with only 5 of the 35 children with normal NPD scores (P = 0.01). They were significantly younger at evaluation and had recurrent lower respiratory tract infections, chronic productive coughs, and chronic Staphylococcus aureus colonization significantly more often than the 35 children with normal NPD results. CONCLUSIONS Evaluation of CFTR function in the nasal epithelium of children with inconclusive CF diagnoses can be a useful diagnostic tool and help clinicians to individualize therapeutic strategy.


Journal of Cystic Fibrosis | 2014

Comparison of different IRT-PAP protocols to screen newborns for cystic fibrosis in three central European populations

Olaf Sommerburg; Veronika Krulisova; Jutta Hammermann; Martin Lindner; Mirjam Stahl; Martina U. Muckenthaler; Dirk Kohlmueller; Margit Happich; Andreas E. Kulozik; Felix Votava; Miroslava Balascakova; V. Skalicka; Marina Stopsack; Manfred Gahr; Milan Macek; Marcus A. Mall; Georg F. Hoffmann

BACKGROUND In recent years different IRT/PAP protocols have been evaluated, but the individual performance remains unclear. To optimize the IRT/PAP strategy we compared protocols from three regional CF newborn screening centers (Heidelberg, Dresden, and Prague). METHODS We evaluated the effect of elevating the IRT-cut-off from 50 to 65 μg/l (~97.5th to ~99.0th percentile), the need of a failsafe protocol (FS, IRT ≥ 99.9th percentile) and the relative performance using either two IRT-dependent PAP-cut-offs or one PAP-cut-off. FINDINGS Elevation of the IRT cut-off to 65 μg/l (~99.0th percentile) increased the PPV significantly (Dresden: 0.065 vs. 0.080, p < 0.0001, Prague: 0.052 vs. 0.074, p < 0.0001) without reducing sensitivity. All three IRT/PAP protocols showed a trend towards a higher sensitivity with FS than without and when using one PAP-cut-off instead of two IRT-dependent PAP-cut-offs. CONCLUSIONS For best performance we suggest an IRT/PAP protocol with an IRT-cut-off close to the 99.0th percentile, FS, and a single PAP-cut-off.


Journal of Pediatric Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2011

Low-dose insulin therapy in patients with cystic fibrosis and early-stage insulinopenia prevents deterioration of lung function: a 3-year prospective study.

Stanislava Kolouskova; Daniela Zemkova; Jana Bartošová; V. Skalicka; Z. Sumnik; V. Vavrova; Jan Lebl

Abstract Cystic fibrosis related diabetes (CFRD) is an insulinopenic condition. We aimed to detect insulinopenia early and to evaluate the impact of low dose insulin on nutritional status and forced expiratory volume in first second (FEV1). Out of 142 cystic fibrosis patients (CFpts) older than 10 years, 28 with abnormal oral glucose tolerance test in spite of normal fasting glycemia were found to have decreased first phase insulin release and started low dose insulin therapy (median age 15.4 years). Sex and age matched CFpts with normal glucose tolerance (NGT) were observed for comparison. Whereas nutritional status improved following 3 years of insulin administration, FEV1 stabilized in insulin-treated insulinopenic subjects (73.8±4.3% vs. 73.5±4.4%), but decreased in the parallel group with NGT who remained without insulin treatment (71.1±3.8% vs. 61.0±4.0%; p=0.001). We conclude that low dose insulin improves nutritional status and stabilizes pulmonary functions. Regular estimation of stimulated insulin secretion in CFpts may allow optimizing treatment.


European Respiratory Journal | 2016

Multicentre chest computed tomography standardisation in children and adolescents with cystic fibrosis: The way forward

Wieying Kuo; Mariëtte van de Corput; Adria Perez-Rovira; Marleen de Bruijne; Isabelle Fajac; Harm A.W.M. Tiddens; Marcel van Straten; Laureline Berteloot; Kris De Boeck; C. Braggion; Torkel B. Brismar; R. Casciaro; Desmond W. Cox; Jane C. Davies; C. Kors Van Der Ent; Pilar Garcia Peña; Silvia Gartner; Nanko De Graaf; David M. Hansell; Lena Hjelte; Herma C. Holscher; Annmarie Jeanes; Pim A. de Jong; Ahmed Kheniche; Tim Wr Lee; Lucigrai G; Marco Di Maurizio; Anne Mehl; Anne Munck; Marianne Nuijsink

Progressive cystic fibrosis (CF) lung disease is the main cause of mortality in CF patients. CF lung disease starts in early childhood. With current standards of care, respiratory function remains largely normal in children and more sensitive outcome measures are needed to monitor early CF lung disease. Chest CT is currently the most sensitive imaging modality to monitor pulmonary structural changes in children and adolescents with CF. To quantify structural lung disease reliably among multiple centres, standardisation of chest CT protocols is needed. SCIFI CF (Standardised Chest Imaging Framework for Interventions and Personalised Medicine in CF) was founded to characterise chest CT image quality and radiation doses among 16 participating European CF centres in 10 different countries. We aimed to optimise CT protocols in children and adolescents among several CF centres. A large variety was found in CT protocols, image quality and radiation dose usage among the centres. However, the performance of all CT scanners was found to be very similar, when taking spatial resolution and radiation dose into account. We conclude that multicentre standardisation of chest CT in children and adolescents with CF can be achieved for future clinical trials. Multicentre chest CT standardisation is necessary and feasible to maximise image quality and reduce radiationhttp://ow.ly/ZfsaE


Journal of Cystic Fibrosis | 2009

Pilot newborn screening project for cystic fibrosis in the Czech Republic: defining role of the delay in its symptomatic diagnosis and influence of ultrasound-based prenatal diagnosis on the incidence of the disease.

Miroslava Balascakova; A. Holubová; V. Skalicka; D. Zemkova; P. Kracmar; Lucie Gonsorčíková; J. Camajova; T. Piskackova; Jan Lebl; Pavel Dřevínek; Vladimír Gregor; V. Vavrova; Felix Votava; Milan Macek

The objective need for cystic fibrosis (CF) newborn screening (NBS) in the Czech Republic has recently been substantiated by a significant delay of its symptomatic diagnosis. This trend most likely resulted from the process of decentralisation of health care which led to the deterioration of care for patients who need specialised approaches. Applied newborn screening model (IRT/DNA/IRT) was efficacious enough to detect CF cases with median age at diagnosis of 37 days. The incidence of CF (1 in 6946 live births) ascertained in this project was lower than that established previously by epidemiological studies (1 in 2700-1 in 3300). However, adjustment for broadly applied ultrasound-based prenatal diagnosis (PND) in the 2nd trimester of pregnancy, that was performed within the period of the project (1/2/2005-2/11/2006), rendered an incidence estimate of 1 in 4023. This value is closer to that observed in other CF NBS programmes and reflects influence of PND on the incidence of CF.


Journal of Cystic Fibrosis | 2016

A product of immunoreactive trypsinogen and pancreatitis-associated protein as second-tier strategy in cystic fibrosis newborn screening.

Sophia Weidler; Konrad H. Stopsack; Jutta Hammermann; Olaf Sommerburg; Marcus A. Mall; Georg F. Hoffmann; Dirk Kohlmüller; Jürgen G. Okun; Milan Macek; Felix Votava; Veronika Krulisova; Miroslava Balascakova; V. Skalicka; Min Ae Lee-Kirsch; Marina Stopsack

BACKGROUND In cystic fibrosis newborn screening (CFNBS), immunoreactive trypsinogen (IRT) and pancreatitis-associated protein (PAP) can be used as screening parameters. We evaluated the IRT×PAP product as second-tier parameter in CFNBS in newborns with elevated IRT. METHODS Data on 410,111 screened newborns including 78 patients with classical cystic fibrosis (CF) from two European centers were retrospectively analyzed by discrimination analysis to identify a screening protocol with optimal cutoffs. We also studied differences in PAP measurement methods and the association of IRT and PAP with age. RESULTS PAP values differed systematically between fluorometric and photometric assays. The IRT×PAP product showed better discrimination for classical CF than PAP only as second-tier screening parameter (p<0.001). In CF patients, IRT decreased while PAP values remained high over years. In newborns without CF, IRT decreased after birth over weeks while PAP increased within days. CONCLUSIONS The IRT×PAP product performs well as second-tier cutoff parameter for CFNBS. Screening quality parameters depend on the analytic method and on age at blood collection.


European Respiratory Journal | 2018

Nitrogen multiple breath washout test for infants with cystic fibrosis

Václav Koucký; V. Skalicka; Petr Pohunek

Multiple breath washout test (MBW) with lung clearance index (LCI) as a main outcome parameter has proven to be a valuable research tool in patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) [1, 2]. Moreover, there is growing evidence of its relevance in routine clinical practice [3]. Nevertheless, some technical limitations remain that hamper its widespread use. While most of the MBW data in infants have been acquired via sulfur hexafluoride washout (SF6–MBW), the nitrogen variant (N2–MBW) is recommended by the European Cystic Fibrosis Society Clinical Trial Network (ECFS–CTN) for older children. However, this methodological discrepancy may limit long-term follow-up of cystic fibrosis patients because N2– and SF6–MBW cannot be used interchangeably. In infants, the N2–MBW has not been fully investigated to date. Nitrogen multiple breath washout test is a safe, feasible and repeatable method for infants with cystic fibrosis. It may outperform sulfur hexafluoride variant with respect to its better suitability for long time follow up and lower technical demands. http://ow.ly/hqnB30k9REW


Journal of Cystic Fibrosis | 2014

WS5.5 Economic burden of cystic fibrosis (CF): prevalence based cost of illness analysis related to the lung disease severity in Czech CF patients

J. Klimes; T. Dolezal; V. Vavrova; Marek Turnovec; V. Skalicka; T. Mlcoch; J. Jircikova; P. Drevinek; Milan Macek

WS5.5 Economic burden of cystic fibrosis (CF): prevalence based cost of illness analysis related to the lung disease severity in Czech CF patients J. Klimes1, T. Dolezal1, V. Vavrova2, M. Turnovec3, V. Skalicka2, T. Mlcoch1, J. Jircikova1, P. Drevinek4, M. Macek5. 1Institute of Health Economics and Technological Assessment (iHETA), Prague, Czech Republic; 2Department of Pediatrics, Charles University − 2nd Faculty of Medicine and Faculty Hospital Motol, Prague, Czech Republic; 3Department of Biology and Medical Genetics, Charles University − 2nd Faculty of Medicine and Faculty Hospital Motol, Prague, Czech Republic; 4Department of Medical Microbiology, Charles University − 2nd Faculty of Medicine and Faculty Hospital Motol, Prague, Czech Republic; 5Charles University Prague-2 Faculty of Medicine, Department of Biology and Medical Genetics, Prague, Czech Republic

Collaboration


Dive into the V. Skalicka's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Milan Macek

Charles University in Prague

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

V. Vavrova

Charles University in Prague

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

D. Zemkova

Charles University in Prague

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Felix Votava

Charles University in Prague

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. Holubová

Charles University in Prague

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

T. Piskackova

Charles University in Prague

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. Bartošová

Charles University in Prague

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Veronika Krulisova

Charles University in Prague

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. Camajova

Charles University in Prague

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge