๐Ÿ‘ค Jennifer Brondon

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2
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Also published as: Jennifer E Brondon
articles
Andrea Bauchat, Veronika Polishchuk, Vanessa A Fabrizio +7 more ยท 2025 ยท Stem cells translational medicine ยท Oxford University Press ยท added 2026-04-24
Ceroid lipofuscinosis neuronal (CLN) encompasses rare inherited neurodegenerative disorders that present in childhood with clinical features including epilepsy, psychomotor delay, progressive vision l Show more
Ceroid lipofuscinosis neuronal (CLN) encompasses rare inherited neurodegenerative disorders that present in childhood with clinical features including epilepsy, psychomotor delay, progressive vision loss, and premature death. Published experience utilizing umbilical cord blood transplant (UCBT) for these disorders is limited. This retrospective analysis includes patients with CLN (2, 3, and 5) who underwent UCBT from 2012 to 2020. All subjects (nโ€…=โ€…8) received standard-of-care myeloablative conditioning. Four also enrolled in clinical trial NCT02254863 and received intrathecal DUOC-01 cells posttransplant. Median age at UCBT was 5.9 years. All subjects achieved neutrophil engraftment with >95% donor chimerism at a median of 28.5 days. Sinusoidal obstructive syndrome was not observed. Severe acute graft-versus-host disease occurred in 12.5%. Other complications included autoimmune hemolytic anemia (25%) and viral reactivation/infection (62.5%). No transplant-related mortality was observed. Two CLN2 patients died, 1 from progressive disease and 1 from unknown cause at days +362 and +937, respectively. With median follow-up of 8 years, overall survival at 100 days and 24 months was 100% and 88%, respectively. Three of 4 CLN3 subjects stabilized Hamburg motor and language scores. While UCBT appears safe and feasible in these patients, given the variable expression and natural history, extended follow-up and further studies are needed to elucidate the potential impact of UCBT on clinical outcomes. Show less
๐Ÿ“„ PDF DOI: 10.1093/stcltm/szae080
CLN3
Lindsey J Gaghan, Isaac T Sluder, Ashwath Sampath +5 more ยท 2024 ยท Pediatric dermatology ยท Blackwell Publishing ยท added 2026-04-24
Cutaneous pyogenic granulomas (PGs) are common, benign vascular tumors of uncertain pathogenesis; however, a growing body of literature suggests that the formation of PGs may be secondary to genetic a Show more
Cutaneous pyogenic granulomas (PGs) are common, benign vascular tumors of uncertain pathogenesis; however, a growing body of literature suggests that the formation of PGs may be secondary to genetic alterations in both the Ras/Raf/MAPK and PI3K/Akt/mTOR pathways. We present three cases of spontaneous multifocal PGs that first presented in infancy, were not associated with other vascular anomalies or discernable etiology, harbored somatic genetic variants in the Ras/Raf/MAPK pathway (NRAS nโ€‰=โ€‰2, FGFR1 nโ€‰=โ€‰1), were refractory to treatment with beta-blockers and mTOR inhibitors, and responded best to pulsed dye laser. We propose the term "spontaneous multifocal PGs" to describe this entity. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1111/pde.15672
FGFR1