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American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A

Wiley

Preprints posted in the last 7 days, ranked by how well they match American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A's content profile, based on 17 papers previously published here. The average preprint has a 0.01% match score for this journal, so anything above that is already an above-average fit.

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Investigating Uptake and Impact of Genetic and Genomic Evaluation Following a Perinatal Demise

Mossler, K.; D'Orazio, E.; Hall, K.; Osann, K.; Kimonis, V.; Quintero-Rivera, F.

2026-04-23 genetic and genomic medicine 10.64898/2026.04.22.26347546 medRxiv
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Objective The decline of the perinatal demise rate is slowing and demises are often unexplained. Significant research has been done regarding diagnostic yield and genetic causes of demise, but little is known about how Geneticist involvement impacts outcomes. The goal of the study was to evaluate post-mortem genetic testing practices and effects of the geneticists involvement. Methods Retrospective data from 111 perinatal demise cases was examined, including rates of prenatal genetic counseling, post-delivery genetics consult, genetic testing, and autopsy investigation. Results In this cohort 54% received genetic testing and 25% received a genetics consult. When compared to those without, cases with genetic specialist involvement were associated with significant increases in testing uptake (p=0.007), diagnostic yield (p<0.001), and patient education (p<0.001). Second trimester stillbirths and those with fewer ultrasound (US) abnormalities were less likely to receive genetic testing (both p values <0.001) and consults (p<0.001, p=0.020). Conclusion Though it was not possible to avoid ascertainment bias, this data demonstrates that geneticist involvement correlates with a higher rate of testing, greater diagnostic yield, and more thorough counseling. These findings underscore the importance of integrating genetics providers into perinatal postmortem healthcare teams.

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Identifying disease-causing mechanisms and fundamental biology of neuromuscular disorder genes through genomic feature analysis

Martin, A.; Llanes-Cuesta, M. A.; Hartley, J. N.; Frosk, P.; Drogemoller, B. I.; Wright, G. E. B.

2026-04-22 genetics 10.64898/2026.04.21.719902 medRxiv
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IntroductionNeuromuscular disorders (NMDs) encompass a broad group of conditions that primarily affect the peripheral nervous system. They are often caused by genetic alterations that impair skeletal muscle function and result in debilitating symptoms. Obtaining an accurate molecular diagnosis remains a challenge, potentially because variants in genes that have yet to be identified as causal. We therefore used advanced computational methods to study the genetic architecture of NMDs and to identify key features that distinguish NMD genes from other genes in the broader genome. MethodsCurated genes implicated in NMDs (n = 639; GeneTable of NMDs) were obtained and merged with a comprehensive set of genomic features for human autosomal protein-coding genes. Machine-learning-based feature selection and ranking were performed using Boruta, along with complementary analytical approaches. These analyses were used to identify the most important genic features (n = 134, subcategories: gene complexity, genetic variation, expression patterns, and other general gene traits) for discriminating NMD genes from other genes in the genome ResultsNMD genes exhibit enriched expression in disease-relevant tissues, including skeletal muscle and heart. Additionally, compared with other protein-coding genes, these genes exhibit increased transcriptomic complexity (e.g., longer transcripts and more unique isoforms), contain more short tandem repeats, and show greater variation in conservation across model organisms. ConclusionsThis study identified several key genomic features that may distinguish NMD genes from the rest of the genome. This may enhance the identification of novel causal genes and could ultimately facilitate earlier diagnosis and medical management for affected individuals.

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Linguistic Validation of the Rett Syndrome Behavior Questionnaire Spanish Translation: a Two-Stage Caregiver Study Across Latin America

Polo Sanchez, M.; Lesmes, A. C.; Muni, N.; Vigneault, F.; Novak, R.

2026-04-23 neurology 10.64898/2026.04.16.26349544 medRxiv
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Background: Rett Syndrome (RTT) is a severe neurodevelopmental disorder affecting approximately 1 in 10,000 live female births worldwide. The Rett Syndrome Behaviour Questionnaire (RSBQ), remains one of the most widely used standardized behavioral assessment tools for RTT. However, the RSBQ was originally validated only in British English, limiting its applicability for Spanish-speaking caregivers and clinical centers across Latin America and Spain. Objective: The primary aim of this study was to develop and validate the comprehension of the Spanish translation of the RSBQ to ensure cultural and linguistic equivalence, enhance data reliability, and facilitate earlier, more accurate clinical assessments among Spanish-speaking RTT populations. Methods: Surveys were administered in two phases to Spanish-speaking caregivers between November 2023 and September 2025. Phase I consisted of 12 guided survey administrations with participants being able to ask clarifying questions and offer linguistic modifications of RSBQ questions. Phase II consisted of independent online administration of the refined Spanish RSBQ and a retest at least 7 days later. Participants were recruited through direct outreach and supported virtually during questionnaire completion. Results: Following data cleaning and quality control, a total of 51 caregivers successfully completed both surveys. The Spanish RSBQ demonstrated high caregiver comprehension and strong engagement across multiple Latin American countries, including Argentina, Mexico, and Peru. Responses were highly correlated between test and retest timepoints, and no question showed biased response distributions. A slight effect of response interval on test-retest correlation was observed, potentially indicating the impact of natural disease progression confounding retest evaluation for long (>80 day) intervals; however this effect did not impact the overall linguistic validation results as analysis of only <21 day test-retest responders confirmed the findings. Conclusions: This linguistic validation study represents the first formal step toward the clinical validation of the Spanish RSBQ, enabling broader inclusion of Spanish-speaking populations in RTT research. The collaborative, bilingual data collection strategy proved both feasible and effective, paving the way for multinational trials and expanding therapeutic accessibility through localized, patient-centered innovation.

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Assessment of a Super Acuity Test Chart for Hyperopia Screening.

Hagen, L. A.; Svarverud, E.; Krastina, I.; MacKenzie, G.; Baraas, R. C.

2026-04-27 ophthalmology 10.64898/2026.04.24.26351668 medRxiv
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Purpose: To assess the repeatability of a prototype super acuity test chart for measuring visual acuity at 12.5 cm, and its ability to detect hyperopia in adolescents and young adults. Methods: Repeatability was estimated as within-subject standard deviation of three repeated super acuity measurements performed in 41 university students (19-26 years). Associations between super acuity and cycloplegic refractive errors, ocular biometry, distance visual acuity, accommodation, age, and sex were assessed in 119 high school students (16-18 years) using linear mixed-effects models. ROC curves and Youden index were used to estimate the best super acuity thresholds to detect rest hyperopia. Results: Mean super acuities in the university and high school cohorts were 0.14 {+/-} 0.13 and 0.12 {+/-} 0.11 logMAR, respectively. Repeatability was 0.031. Super acuity was poorer in those with uncorrected hyperopia [spherical equivalent refractive error (SER) [&ge;] 1.00 D] than the others [SER < 1.00 D; P = 0.039]. There were significant associations between poorer super acuity and more positive ametropia (SER; P = 0.026), poorer accommodation amplitude (P < 0.001), shorter axial length (P = 0.013), male sex (P < 0.001), and age (P = 0.037). Sensitivity and specificity for detecting hyperopia (SER [&ge;] 1.00 D) were 63.2% and 64.2%, respectively, at a super acuity threshold of 0.09 logMAR. Discussion: The super acuity prototype shows promise as a screening indicator for hyperopia. Further studies are needed to optimize the test and testing protocol, and to assess its ability to detect uncorrected hyperopia in children.

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The burden of neurogenic orthostatic hypotension in patients with multiple system atrophy: a real-world study

Kmiecik, M. J.; O'Brien, L.; Szpyhulsky, M.; Iodice, V.; Freeman, R.; Jordan, J.; Biaggioni, I.; Kaufmann, H.; Vickery, R.; Miller, A.; Saunders, E.; Rushton, E.; Valle, L.; Norcliffe-Kaufmann, L.

2026-04-22 neurology 10.64898/2026.04.20.26351214 medRxiv
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BackgroundAlthough neurogenic orthostatic hypotension (nOH) is a common and debilitating feature of multiple system atrophy (MSA), little is known about the burden of symptoms in the real world. ObjectivesTo design and conduct a cross-sectional community-based research survey targeting patients with MSA, with and without nOH. MethodsWe recruited patients with MSA to complete an anonymous online survey covering three core themes: 1) timely diagnosis, 2) nOH pharmacotherapy and refractory symptoms, and 3) confidence in physician knowledge. Responses were grouped by pre-specified diagnostic certainty levels. Relationships between symptoms, function, and pharmacotherapy were assessed using univariate and multivariate methods. ResultsWe analyzed 259 respondents with a self-reported diagnosis of MSA (age: M=64.38, SD=8.09 years; 44% female). In total, 42% also had a diagnosis nOH; 40% had symptoms highly suspicious of nOH, but no diagnosis; and 21% reported having never had their blood pressure measured in the standing position at a clinical visit. Treatment with a pressor agent was independently associated with the presence of other symptoms of autonomic failure. Each additional nOH symptom reported increased the odds of requiring pharmacotherapy by 18%. Yet, despite anti-hypotensive medication use, 97% of patients reported limitations in their ability to bathe, cook, or arise from a chair/bed with 76% needing caregiver support for refractory nOH symptoms. ConclusionsThis cross-sectional representative sample shows nOH is underrecognized and undertreated in MSA patients, leading to substantial functional limitations. It is our hope that these findings are leveraged for planning future trials and advocating for better treatments.

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THRB splice site variants lead to exon 4 skipping and TRβ1 gain-of-function syndrome

Hones, G. S.; Liao, X.-H.; Mahler, E. A.; Herrmann, P.; Eckstein, A.; Fuhrer, D.; Castillo, J. M.; Chiang, J.; Vincent, A. L.; Weiss, R. E.; Dumitrescu, A. M.; Refetoff, S.; Moeller, L. C.

2026-04-22 endocrinology 10.64898/2026.04.15.26349265 medRxiv
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BackgroundHeterozygous c.283+1G>A and c.283G>A variants in the THRB gene, encoding for thyroid hormone receptor (TR){beta}1 and {beta}2, lead to autosomal dominant macular dystrophy (ADMD). We report the detailed clinical characterization of two first-degree relatives with ADMD, heterozygous for THRB c.283+1G>A, and an unrelated ADMD patient with a novel variant, c.283G>C. The genomic and molecular consequences of both variants were studied. MethodsgDNA and mRNA were obtained from leukocytes. Clinical characterization included biochemistry, bone density and body composition, ECG, echocardiography, ultrasound, audiometry and color-vision. In vitro assays investigated TR function and DNA binding. ResultsThe patients manifested no resistance to thyroid hormone beta (RTH{beta}) and had normal FT4 and TSH. Detailed studies in two patients showed no goiter, tachycardia, hypercholesterinemia or hepatic steatosis. Hearing was not impaired. Both had impaired color vision and reduced bone density. RT-PCR from all three patients revealed skipping of exon 4 exclusive to TR{beta}1, producing a deletion of 87 amino acids in the N-terminal domain (TR{beta}1{Delta}NTD). In vitro, DNA-binding affinity of TR{beta}1{Delta}NTD to DR4-TRE with or without RXR was comparable to TR{beta}1WT. Surprisingly, TR{beta}1{Delta}NTD was transcriptionally twice more active than TR{beta}1WT with a similar EC50 for T3, demonstrating gain-of-function of TR{beta}1{Delta}NTD. THRA expression in leukocytes was increased by 3-fold compared to unrelated controls and different from RTH{beta} patients. ConclusionThese THRB splice site variants produce TR{beta}1 exon 4 skipping, resulting in a gain-of-function mutant, TR{beta}1{Delta}NTD. This explains the dominant ADMD phenotype devoid of RTH{beta} and suggests a TR{beta}1 gain-of-function syndrome.

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Comprehensive Exome Sequencing in Swedish Patients with Spontaneous Coronary Artery Dissection

Gunnarsson, C.; Ellegard, R.; Ahsberg, J.; huda, s.; Andersson, J.; Dworeck, C. F.; Glaser, N.; Erlinge, D.; Loghman, H.; Johnston, N.; Mannila, M.; Pagonis, C.; Ravn-Fischer, A.; Rydberg, E.; Welen Schef, K.; Tornvall, P.; Sederholm Lawesson, S.; Swahn, E. E.

2026-04-24 genetic and genomic medicine 10.64898/2026.04.22.26351535 medRxiv
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Abstract Background Spontaneous coronary artery dissection (SCAD) is a well-recognised cause of acute coronary syndrome particularly among women without conventional cardiovascular risk factors. Increasing evidence indicates a genetic contribution; however, the underlying genetic architecture of SCAD remains insufficiently understood. Objective The aim of this study was to assess the prevalence of rare variants in previously reported SCAD associated genes and to explore the potential presence of novel genetic alterations in well-characterised Swedish patients with SCAD. Methods The study comprised 201 patients enrolled in SweSCAD, a national project examining the clinical characteristics, aetiology, and outcomes of SCAD. All individuals had a confirmed diagnosis based on invasive coronary angiography. Comprehensive exome sequencing was performed to identify rare variants contributing to disease susceptibility. Results Genetic variants that have been associated with SCAD according to current clinical genetics practice for variant reporting were identified in approximately 4 % of patients. In addition, rare potentially relevant variants were detected in almost 60 % of patients in genes associated with vascular integrity and vascular remodelling. Conclusion This study supports SCAD as a genetically complex arteriopathy, driven by rare high?impact variants together with broader polygenic susceptibility. Variants in collagen, vascular extracellular matrix, and oestrogen?responsive pathways provide biologically plausible links to female?predominant disease. Although the diagnostic yield of clearly actionable variants is modest, these findings support broader genomic evaluation beyond overt syndromic presentations and highlight the need for larger integrative genomic and functional studies to refine risk stratification and management.

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Beyond Seizure Burden: Seizure Semiology, but not Frequency, Is Associated With Caregiver-Reported Autistic Behaviors in SYNGAP1-DEE

Kiwull, L.; Schmeder, V.; Zenker, M.; Mengual Hinojosa, M.; Perkins, J. R.; Ranea, J.; Kluger, G.; Hartlieb, T.; Pringsheim, M.; von Stuelpnagel, C.; Weghuber, D.; Eschermann, K.

2026-04-21 neurology 10.64898/2026.04.19.26351217 medRxiv
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1.PurposeSYNGAP1-related developmental and epileptic encephalopathy (SYNGAP1-DEE) is characterized by high rates of both epilepsy and autism spectrum disorder (ASD). While the clinical spectrum is well-documented, the link between specific seizure semiologies and caregiver-reported autistic behaviors is not well understood. This study analyzed the correlation between ten distinct seizure types, their frequencies, and a caregiver-reported autistic behavior score. MethodClinical data were extracted from the PATRE (PATient-based phenotyping and evaluation of therapy for Rare Epilepsies) Registry for SYNGAP1, in the framework of the EURAS project (Grant No. 101080580, Horizon Europe). This study employed a retrospective cross-sectional analysis of caregiver-reported registry data. Analysis was restricted to an analytic cohort of N=337 participants with complete data for both the epilepsy questionnaire (including epilepsy status, seizure semiology, and peak seizure frequency items) and the behavior questionnaire (from a total N=522 registry participants). Caregiver-reported autistic behaviors were quantified using a standardized caregiver-reported scale (Likert 1-5). Statistical associations were evaluated using the Wilcoxon rank-sum test to compare caregiver-reported autistic behavior scores across different seizure semiologies and Spearmans rank correlation to assess the impact of seizure frequency (9-point scale). ResultsWithin the analytic cohort (N=337), epilepsy was reported in 259 patients. Eyelid myoclonia was the most prevalent semiology, affecting 64.9% (n=168) of the epilepsy-positive group. Atypical absences (n=77) demonstrated the most profound and statistically robust association with higher caregiver-reported autistic behavior scores (FDR-adjusted p = 0.001). Significant associations were also observed for typical absences (n=70, FDR-adjusted p = 0.018), eyelid myoclonia (FDR-adjusted p = 0.018), myoclonic-atonic seizures (n=40, FDR-adjusted p = 0.019), and atonic seizures (n=72, FDR-adjusted p = 0.025). Focal and tonic-clonic seizures showed weaker associations (FDR-adjusted p = 0.026 and p = 0.047, respectively). Crucially, quantitative analysis revealed no significant correlation between ordinal caregiver-reported peak seizure frequency ratings and caregiver-reported autistic behavior scores across all semiologies (e.g., Eyelid Myoclonia: p=0.096; Atypical Absences: p=0.744), indicating no detectable association between peak-frequency ratings and caregiver-reported autistic behavior scores. ConclusionHigher caregiver-reported autistic behavior scores in SYNGAP1-DEE were most strongly associated with the presence of atypical absences, representing a generalized, thalamocortical seizure network dysfunction. In contrast, no detectable association was observed between caregiver-reported autistic behavior scores and the ordinal caregiver-reported peak seizure frequency metric. Atypical absences and related semiologies may serve as clinical "red flags" for increased neurodevelopmental comorbidity severity, regardless of reported peak seizure frequency. Abstract SummaryThis study investigates the relationship between ten seizure semiologies, seizure frequency, and severity of caregiver-reported autistic behaviors in a large-scale international cohort of N=337 patients with SYNGAP1-DEE. We identify a robust association between elevated caregiverreported autistic behavior scores and specific thalamocortical seizure patterns, most prominently atypical absences. Notably, our analysis reveals that this association is independent of seizure frequency, demonstrating no detectable association between this ordinal, caregiver-reported seizure frequency metric and caregiver-reported autistic behaviors.

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Rare protein-disrupting variants in NPY5R, DLGAP1 and MAPK8IP3 segregate with OCD in two multiplex pedigrees potentially implicating energy homeostasis and post-synaptic signalling in molecular etiology.

Ormond, C.; Cap, M.; Chang, Y.-C.; Ryan, N.; Chavira, D.; Williams, K.; Grant, J. E.; Mathews, C.; Heron, E. A.; Corvin, A.

2026-04-22 psychiatry and clinical psychology 10.64898/2026.04.21.26350600 medRxiv
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Obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) is significantly heritable, but only a fraction of the contributory genetic variation has been identified, and the molecular etiology involved remains obscure. Identifying rare contributory variants of large effect would be an important milestone in helping to elucidate the mechanisms involved. Analysis of densely affected pedigrees is a potentially useful strategy to bypass the sample size challenges of standard case-control approaches. Here we performed whole genome sequencing (WGS) of 25 individuals across two multiplex OCD pedigrees. We prioritised rare variants using a Bayesian inference approach which incorporates variant pathogenicity and co-segregation with OCD. In the first pedigree, we identified a highly deleterious missense variant in NPY5R, carried by the majority of affected individuals. This gene is brain-expressed and has previously been implicated in panic disorder and internet addiction GWAS studies. In the second pedigree, we identified a large deletion of DLGAP1 and a missense variant in MAPK8IP3, that perfectly co-segregated in a specific branch of the family: both genes have previously been implicated in OCD and autism. Both genes contribute to a protein interaction network including ERBB4 and RAPGEF1 which we had previously identified in a large Tourette Syndrome pedigree. Our analysis suggests that both energy homeostasis and downstream signalling from the post-synaptic density may both be important avenues for future research.

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Genetic and Environmental Predictors of Seasonality and Seasonal Affective Disorder in Individuals with Depression

Huider, F.; Crouse, J.; Medland, S.; Hickie, I.; Martin, N.; Thomas, J. T.; Mitchell, B. L.

2026-04-24 genetic and genomic medicine 10.64898/2026.04.22.26351539 medRxiv
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Background: The etiology and nosological status of seasonal affective disorder (SAD) as a specifier of depressive episodes versus a transdiagnostic disorder are the subject of debate. In this study, we investigated the underlying etiology of SAD and dimensional seasonality by examining their association with latitude and genetic risk for a range of traits, and investigated gene-environment interactions. Methods: This study included 12,460 adults aged 18-90 with a history of depression from the Australian Genetics of Depression Study. Regression models included predictors for latitude (distance from equator) and polygenic scores for eight traits; major depressive disorder, bipolar disorder, anxiety disorders, chronotype, sleep duration, body mass index, vitamin D levels, and educational attainment. Outcomes were SAD status and general seasonality score. Results: SAD was positively associated with latitude (OR[95%CI] = 1.05[1.03-1.06], padjusted<0.001), and there was nominal evidence of additive and multiplicative interactions between chronotype genetic risk and latitude (OR = 0.99[0.99-0.99], padjusted=0.381; OR=0.98[0.97-0.99], padjusted=0.489). General seasonality score was associated with latitude (IRR=1.01[1.01-1.01], padjusted 0.001) and genetic risk for major depressive disorder (IRR =1.02[1.01-1.03], padjusted<0.001), bipolar disorder (IRR=1.02[1.01-1.03], padjusted=0.001), anxiety disorders (IRR=1.03[1.01-1.04], padjusted<0.001), vitamin D levels (OR=0.89[0.80-0.95], padjusted=0.048), and educational attainment (IRR=0.97[0.96-0.99], padjusted<0.001). Conclusions: These findings enhance understanding of SAD etiology, highlighting contributions of psychiatric genetic risk and geographic measures on seasonal behavior, and support examining seasonality as a continuous dimension.

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Patient preferences for portable versus table-mounted visual field devices in rural Alabama: a mixed methods study within a telemedicine setting

Antwi-Adjei, E. K.; Datta, S.; Girkin, C. A.; Owsley, C.; Rhodes, L. A.; Fifolt, M.; Racette, L.

2026-04-25 ophthalmology 10.64898/2026.04.23.26351565 medRxiv
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Purpose To evaluate patient satisfaction and preferences for portable versus table-mounted visual field (VF) devices in a rural telemedicine setting and identify influencing factors. Methods We conducted a sequential explanatory mixed methods study at three Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) within the Alabama Screening and Intervention for Glaucoma and eye Health through Telemedicine (AL-SIGHT) study. Participants completed VF testing with table-mounted Humphrey Field Analyzer (HFA), tablet-based Melbourne Rapid Fields (MRF), and virtual reality (VR)-based VisuALL perimeters. Participants rated satisfaction, comfort, ease of use, and future testing preference. Chi-square tests assessed differences in device preferences. Twelve participants completed semi-structured interviews to explore reasons underlying preferences. Qualitative data were analyzed in NVivo 14 using reflexive thematic analysis. Results Among 271 respondents (mean age 60.4 years; 62.4% women), 50.6% preferred VR-based, 35.1% tablet-based, and 14.4% table-mounted for future testing ({chi}2 (2) = 53.52, p<0.001, Cramers V = 0.31). Satisfaction was highest for VR-based (56.9% very satisfied), followed by tablet-based (49.4%), and HFA (38.0%). VR-based perimeter was most frequently selected as the most comfortable (55.7%; {chi}2 (2) = 63.33, p<0.001, V = 0.34) and easiest to use (54.6%; {chi}2 (2) = 71.96, p<0.001, V = 0.36). Preferences did not vary significantly across demographic variables (all p>0.05). Qualitative themes identified four key drivers: comfort and physical experience, visual experience, ease of use and interaction, and psychological and motivational factors. Portability and community suitability were valued. Conclusion Rural underserved patients strongly preferred portable visual field devices, particularly VR-based, over table-mounted HFA. Comfort, ergonomic flexibility, immersive visual experience, and simplicity of interaction were central determinants of preference. Portable perimetry may enhance patient-centered glaucoma monitoring within telemedicine programs and access in resource-limited settings.

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Subtypes of Internalizing and Externalizing Problems in Autistic Preschool Children: Participation in Daily Life and Family Outcomes

Nakamura, T.; Koshio, I.; Nagayama, H.

2026-04-21 psychiatry and clinical psychology 10.64898/2026.04.14.26350723 medRxiv
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AimAutistic children have a high but varied prevalence of internalizing and externalizing problems. This study aimed to identify the subtypes of internalizing and externalizing problems among autistic preschool children in Japan, examine their temporal stability, and investigate differences in participation in daily life and family outcomes across these subtypes. MethodsA prospective cohort study was conducted with 275 caregivers of autistic children aged 51-75 months. Internalizing and externalizing problems were assessed using the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire. ResultsLatent transition analysis identified five subtypes: Low-symptom, High-emotional, Externalizing, Comorbid, and Peer-difficulty groups. Membership in the High-emotional and Externalizing groups was relatively stable over time, whereas the Peer-difficulty group showed frequent transitions to subtypes with higher levels of internalizing or externalizing problems. Significant differences in participation in daily life and family outcomes were observed across subtypes, but these patterns were inconsistent with a simple gradient of symptom levels. ConclusionsThe novel findings that the temporal stability of subtype membership varied and that differences in participation in daily life and family outcomes were observed across the subtypes suggest that the heterogeneity of internalizing and externalizing problems may be associated with variations in childrens participation in daily life and family outcomes over time. Plain Language SummaryAutistic preschool children often experience emotional and behavioral difficulties, but the way these difficulties manifest varies widely across individuals. This study aimed to identify the patterns of these difficulties, examine how they change over time, and investigate how participation in daily life and family outcomes differ across autistic preschool children. We conducted a study with 275 caregivers of autistic children aged 4-6 years in Japan. From caregiver reports of childrens emotional and behavioral difficulties, five distinct patterns were identified: a group with mainly emotional difficulties, a group with mainly behavioral difficulties, a group with both types of difficulties, a group with relatively low levels of difficulties, and a group characterized primarily by peer-related difficulties. Our findings suggest that different patterns of emotional and behavioral difficulties are associated with differences in childrens participation in daily life and family outcomes. These differences could not be explained simply by the overall severity of difficulties but rather reflect distinct patterns based on the type of difficulty. The results indicate that autistic children face diverse difficulties that change over time.

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Sexual Function and Clitoral Anatomy after Vaginal Surgery with and without Midurethral Sling

Bowen, S. T.; Moalli, P. A.; Rogers, R. G.; Corton, M. M.; Andy, U. U.; Rardin, C. R.; Hahn, M. E.; Weidner, A. C.; Ellington, D. R.; Mazloomdoost, D.; Sridhar, A.; Gantz, M. G.

2026-04-21 obstetrics and gynecology 10.64898/2026.04.20.26351291 medRxiv
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STRUCTURED ABSTRACTO_ST_ABSImportanceC_ST_ABSSexual dysfunction can occur after midurethral sling (MUS) and transvaginal prolapse surgery. It remains unclear whether these procedures impact the clitoris, despite its role in sexual function and proximity to the MUS and vagina. ObjectivesTo compare postoperative sexual function and clitoral features by MUS and vaginal surgery approach after transvaginal prolapse repair with/without concomitant MUS. DesignCross-sectional ancillary study of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and sexual function data from the Defining Mechanisms of Anterior Vaginal Wall Descent study. SettingEight clinical sites in the US Pelvic Floor Disorders Network. Participants: 88 women with uterovaginal prolapse who underwent vaginal mesh hysteropexy or vaginal hysterectomy with uterosacral ligament suspension with/without MUS between 2013-2015. Data were analyzed between September 2021-June 2023. ExposuresBetween June 2014-May 2018, participants underwent pelvic MRI 30-42 months after surgery, or earlier if reoperation was desired. Sexual activity and function at baseline and 24-48-month follow-up were evaluated using the Pelvic Organ Prolapse/Incontinence Sexual Questionnaire, IUGA-Revised (PISQ-IR). Clitoral features were obtained from postoperative MRI-based 3-dimensional models. Main Outcomes and MeasuresPISQ-IR scores and clitoral features (size, position). ResultsEighty-two women (median [range] age, 65 [47-79] years) were analyzed: 45 MUS (22 hysteropexy, 23 hysterectomy) and 37 No-MUS (19 hysteropexy, 18 hysterectomy). Postoperatively, 25 MUS, 12 No-MUS, 20 hysteropexy, and 17 hysterectomy patients were sexually active (SA). Overall, within the MUS and vaginal surgery groups, sexual function remained unchanged or improved (most PISQ-IR change from baseline scores were [&ge;]0) among SA and NSA women. Among SA women after surgery, the MUS group (vs No-MUS) had a poorer PISQ-IR arousal/orgasm (SA-AO) score (median, 3.5 vs 4.3; P=.02). The hysteropexy group (vs hysterectomy) had less improvement in PISQ-IR SA-AO score (median, 0.0 vs 0.3; P=.01). Women with MUS (vs without) had a smaller clitoral glans thickness (median, 9.0 mm vs 10.0 mm; P=.008) and clitoral body volume (median, 2783.5 mm3 vs 3587.4 mm3; P=.01). Conclusions and RelevanceSA women with MUS (vs without) or hysteropexy (vs hysterectomy) experienced poorer postoperative sexual function. MUS was linked to a smaller clitoris. Future studies should explore surgery-induced changes in clitoral anatomy and sexual function. KEY POINTSO_ST_ABSQuestionC_ST_ABSHow do sexual function and clitoral anatomy differ by midurethral sling placement and vaginal surgery approach? FindingsThis cross-sectional study compared patient-reported sexual function outcomes and 30-42-month postoperative magnetic resonance imaging-based 3-dimensional clitoral models of 82 women after vaginal prolapse surgery with or without concomitant midurethral sling. Midurethral sling (vs no sling) and vaginal mesh hysteropexy (vs vaginal hysterectomy) were associated with poorer postoperative sexual function outcomes. Additionally, midurethral sling was associated with a smaller clitoral glans and body. MeaningMidurethral sling and vaginal mesh hysteropexy were associated with, and may adversely alter, postoperative sexual function and/or clitoral anatomy. VISUAL ABSTRACT/PROMOTIONAL IMAGE O_FIG O_LINKSMALLFIG WIDTH=200 HEIGHT=113 SRC="FIGDIR/small/26351291v1_ufig1.gif" ALT="Figure 1"> View larger version (33K): org.highwire.dtl.DTLVardef@904497org.highwire.dtl.DTLVardef@187514aorg.highwire.dtl.DTLVardef@e9e799org.highwire.dtl.DTLVardef@640f1a_HPS_FORMAT_FIGEXP M_FIG C_FIG

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Expanding Faculty Representation in US Academic Neurological Surgery: Achievements and On-going Challenges.

Shireman, J.; Mukherjee, N.; Brackman, K.; Kurtz, N.; Patniak, A.; McCarthy, L.; Gonugunta, N.; Ammanuel, S.; Dey, M.

2026-04-27 medical education 10.64898/2026.04.24.26351672 medRxiv
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Objectives: Academic medical institutions are the gatekeepers of the physician workforce and shape the future of medicine by regulating medical school admissions as well as residency training. Although broadly the field of medicine is seeing more representation from traditionally underrepresented groups, the critical decision-making platform of academic medicine continues to be uncharacteristically homogeneous, represented mainly by white males. This is even more pronounced in surgical subspecialties, such as academic neurosurgery. This study aims to quantify this phenomenon, uncover its driving factors, and define opportunities for improvement. Methods: Using a mixed research methodology, academic neurosurgical faculty in the U.S were identified, and their demographic data was collected. An internet search using Google Scholar and Scopus was conducted to determine scholarly activity using number of publications and h-index. Results: We found a significant increase in female faculty in academic neurosurgery within the last decade. Comparing the faculty rank amongst male and female faculty, we found that the majority of female faculty are at the assistant professor level (n=36/79; 45.6%) while male faculty are more at the full professor rank (n=265/582; 45.5%). A similar trend was seen for under-represented minority neurosurgery faculty. Strong scholarly activity corelated with a departmental chair position for male faculty, however, this trend was not true for female faculty. There was a significant difference in the number of publications and h-index in female vs male faculty, but only when including male faculty outliers at the full professor level. Conclusion: Slowly but steadily, academic neurosurgery is making progress towards a more diverse and representative workforce in the U.S that better reflects the patient population. Facilitating timely progression of females and URM neurosurgeons into senior professorship and academic leadership roles will further advance this essential progress.

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Germline-mediated ubiquitous recombination in ScxCre male mice: implications for tendon research

Li, H.; Cao, C.

2026-04-21 genetics 10.64898/2026.04.16.719028 medRxiv
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Scleraxis (Scx), a basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) transcription factor, is a primary marker for tendon and ligament lineages. Consequently, mouse models utilizing Cre recombinase under the control of the Scx locus represents a powerful tool for control of gene expression in tendon. The constitutive ScxCre mouse line is widely used for tendon-specific genetic manipulation. In this study, we demonstrate that ScxCre exhibits undesired significant off-target activity in the male germline, leading to ubiquitous recombination of floxed alleles in all tissues of the resulting offspring. This inheritance of recombined LoxP alleles occurs independently of Cre inheritance, indicating that ScxCre-induces recombination occurs prior to meiosis in diploid germ cells. This off-target activity is not observed in female germline. These findings highlight a critical need for stringent parental sex selection when using ScxCre lines to ensure tissue-specific targeting and avoid unintentional global gene deletion or transgene activation.

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Determinants of DNA-sequence-based Diagnostic Yield in the CSER Consortium

Mavura, Y.; Crosslin, D.; Ferar, K. D.; Lawlor, J. M.; Greally, J. M.; Hindorff, L.; Jarvik, G. P.; Kalla, S.; Koenig, B. A.; Kvale, M.; Kwok, P.-Y.; Norton, M.; Plon, S. E.; Powell, B. C.; Slavotinek, A.; Thompson, M. L.; Popejoy, A. B.; Kenny, E. E.; Risch, N.

2026-04-22 genetic and genomic medicine 10.64898/2026.04.20.26351140 medRxiv
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PurposeDiagnostic yield from exome and genome sequencing varies widely across studies. It remains unclear how much of this variation reflects patient-level factors (e.g., sex, clinical features, race/ethnicity, genetic ancestry) versus site-level practices such as sequencing modality or variant interpretation workflows. We aimed to quantify the contributions of these factors to diagnostic outcomes across five U.S. clinical sequencing sites. MethodsWe performed a cross-sectional analysis of 3,008 prenatal, neonatal, and pediatric cases from the NHGRI Clinical Sequencing Evidence-Generating Research (CSER) consortium (2017-2023). Clinical indications spanned neurodevelopmental, neurological, immunological, metabolic, craniofacial, skeletal, cardiac, prenatal, and oncologic presentations. Genetic ancestry was inferred from sequencing data, and variants were interpreted using ACMG/AMP guidelines to classify DNA-based diagnoses. Generalized linear mixed models were used to estimate associations between diagnostic yield and fixed effects (sex, prenatal status, isolated cancer, number of clinical indications, sequencing modality, race/ethnicity, and genetic ancestry), while modeling study site as a random effect to quantify between-site variation. ResultsThe overall diagnostic yield was 19.0%. Multiple clinical indications (OR=1.47, 95% CI 1.20-1.80, p<0.001) were associated with higher diagnostic yield, and male sex (OR=0.80, 95% CI 0.66-0.96, p=0.017) and prenatal status (OR=0.63, 95% CI 0.44-0.90, p=0.012) were associated with lower yield. Sequencing modality, race/ethnicity, genetic ancestry, and isolated cancer were not statistically significantly associated with diagnostic outcomes.. A model without fixed effects attributed [~]10% of variance in diagnostic yield to between-site differences. After adjusting for covariates, site-level variance decreased to 5.7%, indicating consistent variation across sites not explained by measured patient factors. ConclusionAcross five sites, patient-level clinical features influenced diagnostic yield, but substantial site-level variation remained even after adjustment. Differences in variant interpretation, or case-classification practices may contribute to this residual variability. Further efforts to increase consistency in exome- and genome-sequencing diagnostic workflows may help reduce inter-site differences.

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Transcriptome-Wide Alternative Splicing Analysis Implicates Complex Events in Bipolar Disorder

Martinez-Jimenez, M.; Garcia-Ortiz, I.; Romero-Miguel, D.; Kavanagh, T.; Marshall, L. L.; Bello Sousa, R. A.; Sanchez Alonso, S.; Alvarez Garcia, R.; Benavente Lopez, S.; Di Stasio, E.; Schofield, P. R.; Baca-Garcia, E.; Mitchell, P. B.; Cooper, A. A.; Fullerton, J. M.; Toma, C.

2026-04-21 genetic and genomic medicine 10.64898/2026.04.19.26351209 medRxiv
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Alternative-splicing events (ASE) increase transcriptomic variability and play key roles in biological functions. The contribution of ASE to bipolar disorder (BD) remains largely unexplored. We performed a Transcriptome-Wide Alternative-Splicing Analysis (TWASA) to identify ASEs and genes potentially involved in BD. The study comprised 635 individuals: a discovery sample (DS) of 31 individuals from eight multiplex BD families (16 BD cases; 15 unaffected relatives), and a replication sample (RS) of 604 subjects (372 BD cases; 232 controls). Sequencing was conducted on RNA from lymphoblastoid cell lines (DS) and whole blood (RS). TWASA was performed using VAST-TOOLS (VT), rMATS (RM), and MAJIQ/MOCCASIN (MCC). Gene-set association analyses of genes containing ASEs were performed across six psychiatric disorders. Novel ASE (nASE) were investigated in the DS using FRASER. Limited gene overlap was observed across TWASA tools. MCC identified 2,031 complex ASEs involving 1,508 genes, showing the strongest genetic association with BD across psychiatric phenotypes. Prioritization of MCC-identified ASE genes yielded 441 candidates, including DOCK2 as top candidate from the DS. Replication was obtained for 98 genes, five with an identical ASE, and four (RBM26, QKI, ANKRD36, and TATDN2) showing a concordant percentage-spliced-in direction with the DS. Finally, 578 nASE were identified in the DS, with no evidence of familial segregation or differences in ASE types. This first TWASA in BD reveals tool-specific variability, complex ASE for genes specifically associated with BD, and novel candidate genes for BD. Alternative transcript isoform abundance may represent a mechanism contributing to BD pathophysiology.

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Variation at COMT, ADH1B-ADH1C and HTR2A loci is associated with genetic predisposition to substance use disorders in Ukrainians

Bashynska, V.; Zahorodnia, O.; Borysovych, Y.; Zaplatnikov, Y.; Vasilyeva, V.; Arefiev, I.; Darvishov, N.; Osychanska, D.; Karapetov, A.; Melnychuk, O.; Boiko, O.; Zil'berblat, G.; Turos, O.; Prokopenko, I.; Kaakinen, M.

2026-04-24 genetic and genomic medicine 10.64898/2026.04.23.26351594 medRxiv
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Background: Substance use disorders (SUDs), including alcohol and drug dependence, and smoking, pose a public health threat with their high prevalence and comorbidity with other diseases, and contribution to mortality. SUDs are highly correlated, and their genetic background is shared to some degree. Objectives: We aimed to investigate the genetic associations of previously reported loci for a wide range of SUDs in an unstudied Ukrainian population. Methods: We collected data from 595 individuals (339 women, 253 men), including 321 participants from two rehab centres. Based on clinical review and questionnaire data we defined drug dependence, alcohol dependence, alcohol abuse, binge drinking, smoking, opiate, amphetamine, cannabis, and hallucinogen use, along with several intermediary alcohol use and smoking variables considering the amount of use and the level of dependence. We genotyped COMT-rs4680, ADH1B-ADH1C-rs1789891, and HTR2A-rs6313, and applied logistic and ordered logistic regression assuming an additive inheritance model, controlling for the recruitment group, other substance uses, age, and sex, in the association analyses. Results: We replicate (P<0.05) the associations at COMT-rs4680 with smoking status (OR[95% CI]=1.56[1.01-2.41], P=0.047) and heaviness (1.37[1.04-1.80], P=0.026), and at ADH1B-ADH1C-rs1789891 and HTR2A-rs6313 with alcohol dependence (1.69[1.03-2.76], P=0.038 and 0.66[0.47-0.92, P=0.016], respectively). Furthermore, we provide evidence for an association at HTR2A-rs6313 with hallucinogen use (0.58[0.35-0.98], P=0.040). Conclusion: In this study on multiple SUDs we shed light on the genetic background of SUDs in Ukrainians and provide further evidence that variation at COMT is mainly associated with smoking, at ADH1B-ADH1C with alcohol-related variables, whereas HTR2A is a more general SUD-associated locus.

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Decision-making in patients with ALS: experiences and implications for decision support

Nagase, M.; Hino, K.; Sakamoto, A.; Seo, M.

2026-04-24 nursing 10.64898/2026.04.22.26351518 medRxiv
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Patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) face critical decisions regarding life-sustaining treatments, such as invasive mechanical ventilation and percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy. Advance care planning and shared decision-making are standard supportive frameworks but they often fail to account for structural pressures like progressive decline, shifting patient values, and fear of becoming a burden that may influence decision-making. This study explores how patients with ALS interpret ventilator and care options amid progressive physical decline, thereby reconsidering approaches to decision support. Using a qualitative descriptive design, the researcher (a nurse/sociologist) conducted 2-3 hour home interviews with five purposively sampled patients with ALS. Data, including eye-tracking-aided responses, were analysed via Sandelowskis framework. Rigour was ensured through team-based triangulation, independent coding by two researchers, and a reflexive audit trail. Subjective narratives were prioritised without medical record cross-referencing to capture patients experiences. Four categories emerged: (1) Rewriting clinical prognosis into a narrative of exploration via peer models, where meeting active ventilator users transformed future perceptions; (2) The conflict between securing care infrastructure and the burden on family, which greatly influenced the will to survive; (3) Existential fluctuation, where patients intentions shifted with daily fulfilment and family events; and (4) Governance of the body via pre-emptive technology use and training carers as physical extensions. Findings showed decision-making was a multi-layered process redefining lifes meaning within social resources. This necessitate shifting from independent to relational autonomy, where agency relies on care infrastructure, not physical ability. Treatment choice is a dynamic exploration requiring narrative companions to support existential fluctuations. Professionals must coordinate environments to reduce patient indebtedness. Limitations include the small, resource-advantaged sample (N = 5) and reliance on subjective narratives without medical record verification. Living with ALS means governing a new self through relational support and continuous dialogue.

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A systematic review and meta-analysis of the efficacy and safety of pharmacological treatments for obesity in adults: 2026 Update

Ciudin Mihai, A.; Baker, J. L.; Belancic, A.; Busetto, L.; Dicker, D.; Fabryova, L.; Fruhbeck, G.; Goossens, G. H.; Gordon, J.; Monami, M.; Sbraccia, P.; Martinez Tellez, B.; Yumuk, V.; McGowan, B.

2026-04-24 endocrinology 10.64898/2026.04.19.26351196 medRxiv
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This updated systematic review and network meta-analysis evaluated the efficacy and safety of obesity management medications (OMMs) in terms of reducing body weight and obesity related complications. Medline and Embase were searched up to 21 November 2025 for randomized controlled trials comparing OMMs versus placebo or active comparators in adults. The primary endpoint was percentage total body weight loss (TBWL%) at the end of the study. Secondary endpoints were TBWL% at 1, 2 and 3 years, anthropometric, metabolic, mental health and quality of life outcomes, cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, remission of obesity related complications, serious adverse events and all cause mortality. Sixty six RCTs (66 comparisons) were identified: orlistat (22), semaglutide (18), liraglutide (11), tirzepatide (8), naltrexone/bupropion (5) and phentermine/topiramate (2), enrolling 63,909 patients (34,861 and 29,048 with active compound and placebo, respectively). All OMMs showed significantly greater TBWL% versus placebo; tirzepatide and semaglutide exceeded 10% TBWL and showed the most favourable glycaemic effects. Semaglutide reduced major adverse cardiovascular events and all cause mortality. In dedicated complication specific trials, semaglutide and tirzepatide showed benefit on heart failure related outcomes; tirzepatide was associated with improved obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome and semaglutide with knee osteoarthritis pain remission. Tirzepatide and semaglutide were associated with improvements in metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis remission, and semaglutide with improvement in liver fibrosis. No OMMs were associated with an increased risk of serious adverse events. These updated results reinforce the need to individualize OMMs selection according to weight loss efficacy, complication profile and safety.