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Dive into the research topics where Verena Limperger is active.

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Featured researches published by Verena Limperger.


Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2014

Clinical and laboratory characteristics of paediatric and adolescent index cases with venous thromboembolism and antithrombin deficiency. An observational multicentre cohort study.

Verena Limperger; A. Franke; Gili Kenet; Susanne Holzhauer; V. Picard; Ralf Junker; Christine Heller; C. Gille; Daniela Manner; Karin Kurnik; Ralf Knoefler; Rolf M. Mesters; Susan Halimeh; Ulrike Nowak-Göttl

Venous thromboembolism [TE] is a multifactorial disease and antithrombin deficiency [ATD] constitutes a major risk factor. In the present study the prevalence of ATD and the clinical presentation at TE onset in a cohort of paediatric index cases are reported. In 319 unselected paediatric patients (0.1-18 years) from 313 families, recruited between July 1996 and December 2013, a comprehensive thrombophilia screening was performed along with recording of anamnestic data. 21 of 319 paediatric patients (6.6%), corresponding to 16 of 313 families (5.1%), were AT-deficient with confirmed underlying AT gene mutations. Mean age at first TE onset was 14 years (range 0.1 to 17). Thrombotic locations were renal veins (n=2), cerebral veins (n=5), deep veins (DVT) of the leg (n=9), DVT & pulmonary embolism (n=4) and pelvic veins (n=1). ATD co-occurred with the factor-V-Leiden mutation in one and the prothrombin G20210A mutation in two children. In 57.2% of patients a concomitant risk factor for TE was identified, whereas 42.8% of patients developed TE spontaneously. A second TE event within primarily healthy siblings occurred in three of 313 families and a third event among siblings was observed in one family. In an unselected cohort of paediatric patients with symptomatic TE, the prevalence of ATD adjusted for family status was 5.1%. Given its clinical implication for patients and family members, thrombophilia testing should be performed and the benefit of medical or educational interventions should be evaluated in this high risk population.


Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2014

Role of protein S deficiency in children with venous thromboembolism. An observational international cohort study.

Ulrich C. Klostermeier; Verena Limperger; Gili Kenet; Karin Kurnik; M. Alhenc Gelas; Ulrich Finckh; Ralf Junker; Christine Heller; Barbara Zieger; Ralf Knöfler; Susanne Holzhauer; Rolf M. Mesters; A. Krümpel; Ulrike Nowak-Göttl

Venous thromboembolism [TE] is a multifactorial disease, and protein S deficiency [PSD] constitutes a major risk factor. In the present study the prevalence of PSD and the clinical presentation at TE onset in a cohort of children is reported. In 367 unselected paediatric patients with TE (age 0.1-18 years) recruited between July 1996 and December 2013, a comprehensive thrombophilia screening was performed along with recording of anamnestic data. Thirty of 367 paediatric patients (8.2 %) derived from 27 families had PSD. Mean age at first TE onset was 14.5 years (range 0.1 to 18). Thrombotic locations were cerebral veins (n=8), calf vein TE (n=3) deep veins (DVT) of the leg (n=12), DVT & pulmonary embolism (n=5) and intra-cardiac veins (n=1) or purpura fulminans (n=1). PSD co-occurred with the factor 5 mutation at rs6025 or the homozygous factor 2 susceptibility variant at rs1799963 in one case each. The Heerlen polymorphism detected in five children presented with milder PSD. In 18 patients (60 %) a concomitant risk factor for TE was identified. A second TE event within primarily healthy siblings occurred in three of 27 PSD families (11.0 %). In this cohort of children with symptomatic TE, the prevalence of PSD adjusted for family status was 7.4 %. Given its clinical implication for patients and family members, thrombophilia testing should be performed and the benefit of medical or educational interventions should be evaluated in this high-risk population.


British Journal of Haematology | 2014

Clinical and laboratory characteristics of children with venous thromboembolism and protein C-deficiency: an observational Israeli-German cohort study.

Verena Limperger; Ulrich C. Klostermeier; Gili Kenet; Susanne Holzhauer; Martine Alhenc Gelas; Ulrich Finckh; Ralf Junker; Christine Heller; Barbara Zieger; Karin Kurnik; Ralf Knöfler; Rolf M. Mesters; Susan Halimeh; Ulrike Nowak-Göttl

Venous thromboembolism [TE] is a multifactorial disease and protein C deficiency [PCD] constitutes a major risk factor. In the present study the prevalence of PCD and the clinical presentation at TE onset, including neonatal purpura fulminans, in a cohort of children are reported. In 367 unselected children (0·1–19 years) recruited between July 1996 and December 2013, a comprehensive thrombophilia screening was performed along with recording of anamnestic data. Twenty‐five of 338 children (7·4%) had PCD. Mean age at first TE onset was 10 years (range 0·1–18). Leading thromboembolic manifestations were neonatal purpura fulminans (n = 5), TE of cerebral veins (n = 3), stroke (n = 2) deep veinthrombosis (DVT) of the leg (n = 10), DVT & pulmonary embolism (n = 2) and DVT & pelvic veins (n = 3). Concomitant risk factors for TE were identified in 12 patients, whereas 13 children spontaneously developed TE. A positive family history of DVT was found in 10 children. In this unselected cohort of paediatric patients with symptomatic TE the overall prevalence of PCD was 7·4%; 1·5% presented with neonatal purpura fulminans. Given its clinical implication for patients and family members, thrombophilia testing should be performed and the benefit of medical or educational interventions should be evaluated in this high‐risk population.


Hamostaseologie | 2015

End-stage renal disease and thrombophilia

Alexander Bauer; Verena Limperger; Ulrike Nowak-Göttl

Chronic kidney disease is an established risk factor for arterial and venous thromboembolism (TE). Whereas the overall risk of TE in moderately decreased kidney function is approximately 2.5-fold higher compared to patients with normal renal function, the risk increase is 5.5-fold in patients with severe renal dysfunction. In patients with renal dysfunction and arterial thrombosis (OR: 4.9), malignancy (OR: 5.8) surgery (OR: 14.0) or thrombophilia (OR: 4.3) the risk to suffer from venous TE is higher compared to the risk associated to the baseline renal dysfunction alone. The treatment options for end-stage renal diseases include hemodialysis, peritoneal dialysis and kidney transplantation. During all treatment modalities thrombotic complications have been described, namely catheter malfunction and shunt thrombosis in patients undergoing hemodialysis in up to 25% of patients, and TE, pulmonary embolism or graft vessel thrombosis in approximately 8% of patients. The reported incidence of reno-vascular thrombosis following renal transplantation leading to hemorrhagic infarction with organ rejection or organ loss varied between 2-12%. Keeping in mind the multifactorial etiology of TE in patients with kidney dysfunction a general screening for thrombophilia in this patient group is not indicated. Selected screening on an individual patient basis should be discussed if the family history for TE is positive or the patient itself had suffered one thrombosis before the onset of the renal disease or multiple TEs during hemodialysis or post kidney transplantation in patients waiting for living donor kidney transplantation.


British Journal of Haematology | 2016

Impact of high-risk thrombophilia status on recurrence among children with a first non-central-venous-catheter-associated VTE: an observational multicentre cohort study.

Verena Limperger; Gili Kenet; Neil A. Goldenberg; Christine Heller; Susanne Holzhauer; Ralf Junker; Ulrich C. Klostermeier; Ralf Knoefler; Karin Kurnik; Anne Krümpel; Rolf M. Mesters; Michael Stach; Guy Young; Ulrike Nowak-Göttl

Deficiency of antithrombin (AT), protein C (PC) or protein S (PS) constitutes a major risk factor for venous thromboembolism (VTE). Individuals at high risk for recurrence who benefit from screening need to be identified. The primary study objective was to determine the individual recurrence risk among children with a first non‐central‐venous‐catheter‐associated VTE with respect to their thrombophilia status and to evaluate if the clinical presentation at first VTE onset differs between children with AT, PC or PS deficiency versus no thrombophilia. We calculated the absolute risk of VTE recurrence and event‐free‐survival adjusted for thrombophilia, age, sex and positive family VTE history in 161 consecutively enrolled paediatric VTE patients. The presence of a deficiency relative to no thrombophilia was evaluated as a potential predictor of recurrence. Predictors for recurrence were AT deficiency (hazard ratio/95% CI: 6·5/2·46–17·2) and female gender (2·6/1·1–6·35). The annual recurrence rates (95% CIs) were 5·4% (2·6–10) in AT‐deficient children, 1·3% (0·3–3·8) in patients with PC deficiency, 0·7% (0·08–2·4) in the PS‐deficient cohort and 0·9% (0·4–1·8) in patients with no thrombophilia. Positive family VTE history or combined thrombophilias did not predict recurrence. Given the overall annual incidence rate of recurrence of 1·5% we suggest screening for AT deficiency in children with VTE.


Thrombosis Research | 2015

Bleeding issues in neonates and infants – update 2015

Ulrike Nowak-Göttl; Verena Limperger; Alexander Bauer; Dorothee Kowalski; Gili Kenet

The presentation of a neonate with clinical bleeding symptoms commonly causes considerable anxiety to parents and treating physicians. Since inherited coagulation disorders are rare many children with persistently abnormal coagulation screens will have an underlying bleeding disorder. Apart from emergency cases a family history including a bleeding questionnaire is mandatory asking for the onset and/or severity symptoms of hemorrhage prior to laboratory assessment. The absolute values of reference ranges for coagulation assays in neonates and children vary with analyzer and reagent systems, but confirm the concept of developmental hemostasis, showing that physiologic concentrations of coagulation proteins gradually increase and are lower in premature infants as compared to full-term babies or healthy children. The evaluation should include global screening tests and a full blood cell count to rule out thrombocytopenia. As in adults a prolonged PT in neonates reflects decreased plasma concentrations of vitamin-K-dependent factors, whereas the prolonged PTT stems from decreased plasma levels of contact factors. When initial laboratory test results reveal abnormalities, as compared to age-related values, a stepwise diagnostic approach should be followed. In the bleeding neonate or infant that has no laboratory abnormality, FXIII and alpha2-antiplasmin activity should be assessed, and when primary hemostatic defects are suspected, platelet function should be further evaluated. Treatment options of a bleeding neonate vary according to the underlying medical condition.


Blood | 2017

Rare genetic variants in SMAP1, B3GAT2, and RIMS1 contribute to pediatric venous thromboembolism

Frank Ruehle; Anika Witten; Andrei Barysenka; Andreas Huge; Astrid Arning; Christine Heller; Anne Kruempel; Rolf M. Mesters; Andre Franke; Wolfgang Lieb; Mona Riemenschneider; Milan Hiersche; Verena Limperger; Ulrike Nowak-Goettl; Monika Stoll

Recent genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have confirmed known risk mutations for venous thromboembolism (VTE) and identified a number of novel susceptibility loci in adults. Here we present a GWAS in 212 nuclear families with pediatric VTE followed by targeted next-generation sequencing (NGS) to identify causative mutations contributing to the association. Three single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) exceeded the threshold for genome-wide significance as determined by permutation testing using 100 000 bootstrap permutations (P < 10-5). These SNPs reside in a region on chromosome 6q13 comprising the genes small ARF GAP1 (SMAP1), an ARF6 guanosine triphosphatase-activating protein that functions in clathrin-dependent endocytosis, and β-1,3-glucoronyltransferase 2 (B3GAT2), a member of the human natural killer 1 carbohydrate pathway. Rs1304029 and rs2748331 are associated with pediatric VTE with unpermuted/permuted values of P = 1.42 × 10-6/2.0 × 10-6 and P = 6.11 × 10-6/1.8 × 10-5, respectively. Rs2748331 was replicated (P = .00719) in an independent study sample coming from our GWAS on pediatric thromboembolic stroke (combined P = 7.88 × 10-7). Subsequent targeted NGS in 24 discordant sibling pairs identified 17 nonsynonymous coding variants, of which 1 located in SMAP1 and 3 in RIMS1, a member of the RIM family of active zone proteins, are predicted as damaging by Protein Variation Effect Analyzer and/or sorting intolerant from tolerant scores. Three SNPs curtly missed statistical significance in the transmission-disequilibrium test in the full cohort (rs112439957: P = .08326, SMAP1; rs767118962: P = .08326, RIMS1; and rs41265501: P = .05778, RIMS1). In conjunction, our data provide compelling evidence for SMAP1, B3GAT2, and RIMS1 as novel susceptibility loci for pediatric VTE and warrant future functional studies to unravel the underlying molecular mechanisms leading to VTE.


Blood Cells Molecules and Diseases | 2017

Risk factors for symptomatic venous and arterial thromboembolism in newborns, children and adolescents – What did we learn within the last 20 years?

Gili Kenet; Verena Limperger; Maria Shneyder; Ulrike Nowak-Göttl

Venous thrombosis (VTE) in children is increasingly diagnosed, as advanced medical care has increased treatment intensity of hospitalized pediatric patients. The aim of this review was to summarize the data available and to discuss the controversial issue of thrombophilia screening in the light of the pediatric data available. Follow-up data for VTE recurrence in children suggest a recurrence rate between 3% (neonates) and 21% in individuals with unprovoked VTE. Apart from underlying medical conditions, recently reported systematic reviews on pediatric VTE (70% provoked) have shown significant associations between thrombosis and presence of protein C-, protein S- and antithrombin deficiency, factor 5 (F5: rs6025), factor 2 (F2: rs1799963), even more pronounced when combined inherited thrombophilias [IT] were involved. The F2 mutation, protein C-, protein S-, and antithrombin deficiency did also play a significant role at VTE recurrence. Although we have learned more about the pathophysiology of VTE with the increased discovery of IT evidence is still lacking as to whether IT influence the clinical outcome in pediatric VTE. It still remains controversial as to whether children with VTE or offspring from thrombosis-prone families benefit from IT screening. Thus, IT testing in children should be individualized.


Blood Cells Molecules and Diseases | 2016

Impact of high risk thrombophilia status on recurrence among children and adults with VTE: An observational multicenter cohort study.

Gloria Brüwer; Verena Limperger; Gili Kenet; Ulrich C. Klostermeier; Maria Shneyder; Frauke Degenhardt; Ulrich Finckh; Christine Heller; Susanne Holzhauer; Ralf Trappe; Karim Kentouche; Ralf Knoefler; Karin Kurnik; Anne Krümpel; Melchior Lauten; Daniela Manner; Rolf M. Mesters; Ralf Junker; Ulrike Nowak-Göttl

BACKGROUND Antithrombin [AT]-, protein C [PC]- or protein S [PS]-deficiency [D] constitutes a major risk factor for venous thromboembolism [VTE]. Primary study objective was to evaluate if the clinical presentation at first VTE onset differs between children and adults and to compare the individual recurrence risk among patients with respect to age at onset and their thrombophilia status ATD, PCD or PSD. METHODS/PATIENTS/RESULTS In 137 of 688 consecutively enrolled pediatric and adult VTE patients we calculated the absolute risk of VTE recurrence and event-free-survival adjusted for thrombophilia and positive family VTE history. At first VTE children manifested i) with a lower rate of pulmonary embolism, ii) a higher rate of cerebral vascular events or multiple VTEs, and iii) showed a higher proportion of unprovoked VTE compared to adolescents and adults. Adult patients reported more often a positive VTE history compared to younger study participants. The adjusted odds of recurrence in adults was 2.05 compared to children. CONCLUSION At disease manifestation children and adults differ with respect to i) thrombotic locations, ii) percentage of unprovoked versus provoked VTE, and iii) different rates of positive VTE family histories. Furthermore, adults showed a two-fold increase risk of VTE recurrence compared to children.


Thrombosis Research | 2014

Influence of factor 5 rs6025 and factor 2 rs1799963 mutation on inhibitor development in patients with hemophilia A - An Israeli-German multicenter database study

Gili Kenet; Christoph Bidlingmaier; Nadja Bogdanova; Carmen Escuriola Ettingshausen; Neil A. Goldenberg; Sven Gutsche; Susan Halimeh; Susanne Holzhauer; Karin Kurnik; Verena Limperger; Ralf Junker; Ulrike Nowak-Göttl

OBJECTIVE The present cohort study was performed to investigate the impact of the factor 5 rs6025 [F5] and the factor 2 rs1799963 [F2] mutations on high-titer inhibitor development [HRI] in patients with severe/moderate-severe hemophilia A [HA]. PATIENTS AND METHODS 216 patients with F8<2% born between 1980 and 2011 were followed after initial HA diagnosis over the first 200 exposure days. The first HA patient per family who presented for diagnosis was included in the present study. RESULTS 32 of 216 children [14.8%] tested for F5/F2 carried either the F5 or the F2 variant. HRI occurred in 14 out of 32F5/F2-carriers compared with 40 of 184 without F5/F2. Multivariate analysis adjusted for F8 genotype, treatment intensity, first-line use of plasma derived FVIII versus recombinant FVIII concentrates revealed that the presence of F5/F2 independently increases the risk of HRI development to odds [OR] of 3.4. Large deletions in the F8 gene [OR: 5.10], patients from Israel [OR: 4.0], the increase of FVIII per one IU/kgbw [OR: 1.05] and birth year [OR: 1.12] were significantly associated with the risk to develop HRI. CONCLUSION Data presented here suggest that HRI development is of multifactorial origin and that F5 and F2 mutations may contribute to this risk.

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Christine Heller

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Ralf Junker

University of Münster

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Manuela Krause

Goethe University Frankfurt

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