Browsing by Author "Gallagher, Louise (7005393044)"
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Publication A genetics-first approach to dissecting the heterogeneity of autism: Phenotypic comparison of autism risk copy number variants(2021) ;Chawner, Samuel J.R.A. (57028520000) ;Doherty, Joanne L. (54899597300) ;Anney, Richard J.L. (6507478936) ;Antshel, Kevin M. (6603383055) ;Bearden, Carrie E. (57215862155) ;Bernier, Raphael (57203215362) ;Chung, Wendy K. (57211703344) ;Clements, Caitlin C. (55215563700) ;Curran, Sarah R. (55676019500) ;Cuturilo, Goran (23469119900) ;Fiksinski, Ania M. (57193001098) ;Gallagher, Louise (7005393044) ;Goin-Kochel, Robin P. (14119856800) ;Gur, Raquel E. (7103065698) ;Hanson, Ellen (26531025600) ;Jacquemont, Sebastien (57217186954) ;Kates, Wendy R. (57207550410) ;Kushan, Leila (25930868900) ;Maillard, Anne M. (57221324284) ;McDonald-McGinn, Donna M. (7005251917) ;Mihaljevic, Marina (55345716000) ;Miller, Judith S. (56120239700) ;Moss, Hayley (57202194800) ;Pejovic-Milovancevic, Milica (57218683898) ;Schultz, Robert T. (7401556290) ;Green-Snyder, LeeAnne (55027305400) ;Vorstman, Jacob A. (12344759400) ;Wenger, Tara L. (56318233300) ;Hall, Jeremy (22034087100) ;Owen, Michael J. (36044041500)van den Bree, Marianne B.M. (57204543263)Objective: Certain copy number variants (CNVs) greatly increase the risk of autism. The authors conducted a genetics-first study to investigate whether heterogeneity in the clinical presentation of autism is underpinned by specific genotype-phenotype relationships. Methods: This international study included 547 individuals (mean age, 12.3 years [SD=4.2], 54% male) who were ascertained on the basis of having a genetic diagnosis of a rare CNV associated with high risk of autism (82 16p11.2 deletion carriers, 50 16p11.2 duplication carriers, 370 22q11.2 deletion carriers, and 45 22q11.2 duplication carriers), as well as 2,027 individuals (mean age, 9.1 years [SD=4.9], 86% male) with autism of heterogeneous etiology. Assessments included the Autism Diagnostic Interview-Revised and IQ testing. Results: The four genetic variant groups differed in autism symptom severity, autism subdomain profile, and IQ profile. However, substantial variability was observed in phenotypic outcome in individual genetic variant groups (74%-97% of the variance, depending on the trait), whereas variability between groups was low (1%-21%, depending on the trait). CNV carriers who met autism criteria were compared with individuals with heterogeneous autism, and a range of profile differences were identified. When clinical cutoff scores were applied, 54% of individuals with one of the four CNVs who did not meet full autism diagnostic criteria had elevated levels of autistic traits. Conclusions: Many CNV carriers do not meet full diagnostic criteria for autism but nevertheless meet clinical cutoffs for autistic traits. Although profile differences between variants were observed, there is considerable variability in clinical symptoms in the same variant. © 2021 American Psychiatric Association. All rights reserved. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Meta-analysis of GWAS of over 16,000 individuals with autism spectrum disorder highlights a novel locus at 10q24.32 and a significant overlap with schizophrenia(2017) ;Anney, Richard J. L. (6507478936) ;Ripke, Stephan (23398729000) ;Anttila, Verneri (57198263652) ;Grove, Jakob (57191270755) ;Holmans, Peter (57172024600) ;Huang, Hailiang (59615544600) ;Klei, Lambertus (8677655900) ;Lee, Phil H. (57208169598) ;Medland, Sarah E. (34571085600) ;Neale, Benjamin (7003484514) ;Robinson, Elise (57212235680) ;Weiss, Lauren A. (7403207395) ;Zwaigenbaum, Lonnie (6602185665) ;Yu, Timothy W. (36653367900) ;Wittemeyer, Kerstin (16023492400) ;Willsey, A.Jeremy (57216597171) ;Wijsman, Ellen M. (7004392227) ;Werge, Thomas (6701738296) ;Wassink, Thomas H. (6701331115) ;Waltes, Regina (23394370900) ;Walsh, Christopher A. (57198837491) ;Wallace, Simon (7403227605) ;Vorstman, Jacob A. S. (12344759400) ;Vieland, Veronica J. (7004097431) ;Vicente, Astrid M. (7005820790) ;Vanengeland, Herman (57194326974) ;Tsang, Kathryn (55991085700) ;Thompson, Ann P. (7404597478) ;Szatmari, Peter (57188789189) ;Svantesson, Oscar (56270730200) ;Steinberg, Stacy (56822324300) ;Stefansson, Kari (56833814500) ;Stefansson, Hreinn (6604083232) ;State, Matthew W. (6603734659) ;Soorya, Latha (8708848500) ;Silagadze, Teimuraz (55484573500) ;Scherer, Stephen W. (35374654500) ;Schellenberg, Gerard D. (35371216000) ;Sandin, Sven (9335084800) ;Sanders, Stephan J. (36119091700) ;Saemundsen, Evald (6506046204) ;Rouleau, Guy A. (57192120844) ;Rogé, Bernadette (55350794500) ;Roeder, Kathryn (7103005216) ;Roberts, Wendy (57215120890) ;Reichert, Jennifer (7102454469) ;Reichenberg, Abraham (55782719300) ;Rehnström, Karola (57207795811) ;Regan, Regina (7006387968) ;Poustka, Fritz (57206289559) ;Poultney, Christopher S. (15837720400) ;Piven, Joseph (7006193038) ;Pinto, Dalila (7005542371) ;Pericak-Vance, Margaret A. (56690667900) ;Pejovic-Milovancevic, Milica (57218683898) ;Pedersen, Marianne Giørtz (16686782600) ;Pedersen, Carsten Bøcker (7202774222) ;Paterson, Andrew D. (55554856400) ;Parr, Jeremy R. (57203047270) ;Pagnamenta, Alistair T. (57195444627) ;Oliveira, Guiomar (57201814516) ;Nurnberger, John I. (35353542700) ;Nordentoft, Merete (7006191523) ;Murtha, Michael T. (6701472780) ;Mouga, Susana (55256195500) ;Mortensen, Preben Bo (7102903327) ;Mors, Ole (7004006411) ;Morrow, Eric M. (7004225731) ;Moreno-De-Luca, Daniel (24071462500) ;Monaco, Anthony P. (55704771100) ;Minshew, Nancy (7007164757) ;Merikangas, Alison (16176260800) ;McMahon, William M. (7005744225) ;McGrew, Susan G. (13103291100) ;Mattheisen, Manuel (8636730800) ;Martsenkovsky, Igor (56066626300) ;Martin, Donna M. (35517455800) ;Mane, Shrikant M. (35449435000) ;Magnusson, Pall (57202728486) ;Magalhaes, Tiago (57216303355) ;Maestrini, Elena (6701371736) ;Lowe, Jennifer K. (35503678800) ;Lord, Catherine (9634532200) ;Levitt, Pat (56761088600) ;Martin, Christa Lese (56748304900) ;Ledbetter, David H. (7102381682) ;Leboyer, Marion (7005287140) ;Lecouteur, Ann S. (19735294900) ;Ladd-Acosta, Christine (6507548443) ;Kolevzon, Alexander (12807093600) ;Klauck, Sabine M. (6701531086) ;Jacob, Suma (7202574761) ;Iliadou, Bozenna (57194344914) ;Hultman, Christina M. (7004101287) ;Hougaard, David M. (7003632207) ;Hertz-Picciotto, Irva (7006735866) ;Hendren, Robert (57206412309) ;Hansen, Christine Søholm (57194712998) ;Haines, Jonathan L. (35371857000) ;Guter, Stephen J. (6507957800) ;Grice, Dorothy E. (57205593246) ;Green, Jonathan M. (55161737900) ;Green, Andrew (20734278400) ;Goldberg, Arthur P. (55315056800) ;Gillberg, Christopher (7101634220) ;Gilbert, John (7401451965) ;Gallagher, Louise (7005393044) ;Freitag, Christine M. (7003868143) ;Fombonne, Eric (7004793820) ;Folstein, Susan E. (7005540878) ;Fernandez, Bridget (57027102500) ;Fallin, M. Daniele (8280224300) ;Ercan-Sencicek, A. Gulhan (9242823300) ;Ennis, Sean (57206360541) ;Duque, Frederico (23093713700) ;Duketis, Eftichia (57208461721) ;Delorme, Richard (26425769200) ;Derubeis, Silvia (57205593172) ;Dejonge, Maretha V. (57194343784) ;Dawson, Geraldine (7201539036) ;Cuccaro, Michael L. (6701789594) ;Correia, Catarina T. (16038881900) ;Conroy, Judith (9533912300) ;Conceição, Ines C. (23970252000) ;Chiocchetti, Andreas G. (35073732600) ;Celestino-Soper, Patrícia B. S. (57208457799) ;Casey, Jillian (36466105000) ;Cantor, Rita M. (35375307600) ;Café, Cátia (56116876300) ;Bybjerg-Grauholm, Jonas (57188986921) ;Brennan, Sean (57190394859) ;Bourgeron, Thomas (7003474593) ;Bolton, Patrick F. (22946425500) ;Bölte, Sven (7003433798) ;Bolshakova, Nadia (6601942081) ;Betancur, Catalina (57215019700) ;Bernier, Raphael (57203215362) ;Beaudet, Arthur L. (7102581677) ;Battaglia, Agatino (7103154890) ;Bal, Vanessa H. (56579998100) ;Baird, Gillian (7102025681) ;Bailey, Anthony J. (7402596134) ;Bækvad-Hansen, Marie (57216111429) ;Bader, Joel S. (7201629332) ;Bacchelli, Elena (57205306989) ;Anagnostou, Evdokia (8708847900) ;Amaral, David (7007019852) ;Almeida, Joana (36552066200) ;Børglum, Anders D. (7004609664) ;Buxbaum, Joseph D. (57204776552) ;Chakravarti, Aravinda (35355137200) ;Cook, Edwin H. (7202259523) ;Coon, Hilary (7005857533) ;Geschwind, Daniel H. (7006637577) ;Gill, Michael (35228962600) ;Hallmayer, Joachim (7006260488) ;Palotie, Aarno (7005614368) ;Santangelo, Susan (7003488082) ;Sutcliffe, James S. (7101638712) ;Arking, Dan E. (57212013993) ;Devlin, Bernie (57203044911) ;Daly, Mark J. (7201456226)Hakonarson, Hakon (55531171800)Background: Over the past decade genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have been applied to aid in the understanding of the biology of traits. The success of this approach is governed by the underlying effect sizes carried by the true risk variants and the corresponding statistical power to observe such effects given the study design and sample size under investigation. Previous ASD GWAS have identified genome-wide significant (GWS) risk loci; however, these studies were of only of low statistical power to identify GWS loci at the lower effect sizes (odds ratio (OR) <1.15). Methods: We conducted a large-scale coordinated international collaboration to combine independent genotyping data to improve the statistical power and aid in robust discovery of GWS loci. This study uses genome-wide genotyping data from a discovery sample (7387 ASD cases and 8567 controls) followed by meta-analysis of summary statistics from two replication sets (7783 ASD cases and 11359 controls; and 1369 ASD cases and 137308 controls). Results: We observe a GWS locus at 10q24.32 that overlaps several genes including PITX3, which encodes a transcription factor identified as playing a role in neuronal differentiation and CUEDC2 previously reported to be associated with social skills in an independent population cohort. We also observe overlap with regions previously implicated in schizophrenia which was further supported by a strong genetic correlation between these disorders (Rg = 0.23; P = 9 × 10-6). We further combined these Psychiatric Genomics Consortium (PGC) ASD GWAS data with the recent PGC schizophrenia GWAS to identify additional regions which may be important in a common neurodevelopmental phenotype and identified 12 novel GWS loci. These include loci previously implicated in ASD such as FOXP1 at 3p13, ATP2B2 at 3p25.3, and a 'neurodevelopmental hub' on chromosome 8p11.23. Conclusions: This study is an important step in the ongoing endeavour to identify the loci which underpin the common variant signal in ASD. In addition to novel GWS loci, we have identified a significant genetic correlation with schizophrenia and association of ASD with several neurodevelopmental-related genes such as EXT1, ASTN2, MACROD2, and HDAC4. © 2017 The Author(s). - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Meta-analysis of GWAS of over 16,000 individuals with autism spectrum disorder highlights a novel locus at 10q24.32 and a significant overlap with schizophrenia(2017) ;Anney, Richard J. L. (6507478936) ;Ripke, Stephan (23398729000) ;Anttila, Verneri (57198263652) ;Grove, Jakob (57191270755) ;Holmans, Peter (57172024600) ;Huang, Hailiang (59615544600) ;Klei, Lambertus (8677655900) ;Lee, Phil H. (57208169598) ;Medland, Sarah E. (34571085600) ;Neale, Benjamin (7003484514) ;Robinson, Elise (57212235680) ;Weiss, Lauren A. (7403207395) ;Zwaigenbaum, Lonnie (6602185665) ;Yu, Timothy W. (36653367900) ;Wittemeyer, Kerstin (16023492400) ;Willsey, A.Jeremy (57216597171) ;Wijsman, Ellen M. (7004392227) ;Werge, Thomas (6701738296) ;Wassink, Thomas H. (6701331115) ;Waltes, Regina (23394370900) ;Walsh, Christopher A. (57198837491) ;Wallace, Simon (7403227605) ;Vorstman, Jacob A. S. (12344759400) ;Vieland, Veronica J. (7004097431) ;Vicente, Astrid M. (7005820790) ;Vanengeland, Herman (57194326974) ;Tsang, Kathryn (55991085700) ;Thompson, Ann P. (7404597478) ;Szatmari, Peter (57188789189) ;Svantesson, Oscar (56270730200) ;Steinberg, Stacy (56822324300) ;Stefansson, Kari (56833814500) ;Stefansson, Hreinn (6604083232) ;State, Matthew W. (6603734659) ;Soorya, Latha (8708848500) ;Silagadze, Teimuraz (55484573500) ;Scherer, Stephen W. (35374654500) ;Schellenberg, Gerard D. (35371216000) ;Sandin, Sven (9335084800) ;Sanders, Stephan J. (36119091700) ;Saemundsen, Evald (6506046204) ;Rouleau, Guy A. (57192120844) ;Rogé, Bernadette (55350794500) ;Roeder, Kathryn (7103005216) ;Roberts, Wendy (57215120890) ;Reichert, Jennifer (7102454469) ;Reichenberg, Abraham (55782719300) ;Rehnström, Karola (57207795811) ;Regan, Regina (7006387968) ;Poustka, Fritz (57206289559) ;Poultney, Christopher S. (15837720400) ;Piven, Joseph (7006193038) ;Pinto, Dalila (7005542371) ;Pericak-Vance, Margaret A. (56690667900) ;Pejovic-Milovancevic, Milica (57218683898) ;Pedersen, Marianne Giørtz (16686782600) ;Pedersen, Carsten Bøcker (7202774222) ;Paterson, Andrew D. (55554856400) ;Parr, Jeremy R. (57203047270) ;Pagnamenta, Alistair T. (57195444627) ;Oliveira, Guiomar (57201814516) ;Nurnberger, John I. (35353542700) ;Nordentoft, Merete (7006191523) ;Murtha, Michael T. (6701472780) ;Mouga, Susana (55256195500) ;Mortensen, Preben Bo (7102903327) ;Mors, Ole (7004006411) ;Morrow, Eric M. (7004225731) ;Moreno-De-Luca, Daniel (24071462500) ;Monaco, Anthony P. (55704771100) ;Minshew, Nancy (7007164757) ;Merikangas, Alison (16176260800) ;McMahon, William M. (7005744225) ;McGrew, Susan G. (13103291100) ;Mattheisen, Manuel (8636730800) ;Martsenkovsky, Igor (56066626300) ;Martin, Donna M. (35517455800) ;Mane, Shrikant M. (35449435000) ;Magnusson, Pall (57202728486) ;Magalhaes, Tiago (57216303355) ;Maestrini, Elena (6701371736) ;Lowe, Jennifer K. (35503678800) ;Lord, Catherine (9634532200) ;Levitt, Pat (56761088600) ;Martin, Christa Lese (56748304900) ;Ledbetter, David H. (7102381682) ;Leboyer, Marion (7005287140) ;Lecouteur, Ann S. (19735294900) ;Ladd-Acosta, Christine (6507548443) ;Kolevzon, Alexander (12807093600) ;Klauck, Sabine M. (6701531086) ;Jacob, Suma (7202574761) ;Iliadou, Bozenna (57194344914) ;Hultman, Christina M. (7004101287) ;Hougaard, David M. (7003632207) ;Hertz-Picciotto, Irva (7006735866) ;Hendren, Robert (57206412309) ;Hansen, Christine Søholm (57194712998) ;Haines, Jonathan L. (35371857000) ;Guter, Stephen J. (6507957800) ;Grice, Dorothy E. (57205593246) ;Green, Jonathan M. (55161737900) ;Green, Andrew (20734278400) ;Goldberg, Arthur P. (55315056800) ;Gillberg, Christopher (7101634220) ;Gilbert, John (7401451965) ;Gallagher, Louise (7005393044) ;Freitag, Christine M. (7003868143) ;Fombonne, Eric (7004793820) ;Folstein, Susan E. (7005540878) ;Fernandez, Bridget (57027102500) ;Fallin, M. Daniele (8280224300) ;Ercan-Sencicek, A. Gulhan (9242823300) ;Ennis, Sean (57206360541) ;Duque, Frederico (23093713700) ;Duketis, Eftichia (57208461721) ;Delorme, Richard (26425769200) ;Derubeis, Silvia (57205593172) ;Dejonge, Maretha V. (57194343784) ;Dawson, Geraldine (7201539036) ;Cuccaro, Michael L. (6701789594) ;Correia, Catarina T. (16038881900) ;Conroy, Judith (9533912300) ;Conceição, Ines C. (23970252000) ;Chiocchetti, Andreas G. (35073732600) ;Celestino-Soper, Patrícia B. S. (57208457799) ;Casey, Jillian (36466105000) ;Cantor, Rita M. (35375307600) ;Café, Cátia (56116876300) ;Bybjerg-Grauholm, Jonas (57188986921) ;Brennan, Sean (57190394859) ;Bourgeron, Thomas (7003474593) ;Bolton, Patrick F. (22946425500) ;Bölte, Sven (7003433798) ;Bolshakova, Nadia (6601942081) ;Betancur, Catalina (57215019700) ;Bernier, Raphael (57203215362) ;Beaudet, Arthur L. (7102581677) ;Battaglia, Agatino (7103154890) ;Bal, Vanessa H. (56579998100) ;Baird, Gillian (7102025681) ;Bailey, Anthony J. (7402596134) ;Bækvad-Hansen, Marie (57216111429) ;Bader, Joel S. (7201629332) ;Bacchelli, Elena (57205306989) ;Anagnostou, Evdokia (8708847900) ;Amaral, David (7007019852) ;Almeida, Joana (36552066200) ;Børglum, Anders D. (7004609664) ;Buxbaum, Joseph D. (57204776552) ;Chakravarti, Aravinda (35355137200) ;Cook, Edwin H. (7202259523) ;Coon, Hilary (7005857533) ;Geschwind, Daniel H. (7006637577) ;Gill, Michael (35228962600) ;Hallmayer, Joachim (7006260488) ;Palotie, Aarno (7005614368) ;Santangelo, Susan (7003488082) ;Sutcliffe, James S. (7101638712) ;Arking, Dan E. (57212013993) ;Devlin, Bernie (57203044911) ;Daly, Mark J. (7201456226)Hakonarson, Hakon (55531171800)Background: Over the past decade genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have been applied to aid in the understanding of the biology of traits. The success of this approach is governed by the underlying effect sizes carried by the true risk variants and the corresponding statistical power to observe such effects given the study design and sample size under investigation. Previous ASD GWAS have identified genome-wide significant (GWS) risk loci; however, these studies were of only of low statistical power to identify GWS loci at the lower effect sizes (odds ratio (OR) <1.15). Methods: We conducted a large-scale coordinated international collaboration to combine independent genotyping data to improve the statistical power and aid in robust discovery of GWS loci. This study uses genome-wide genotyping data from a discovery sample (7387 ASD cases and 8567 controls) followed by meta-analysis of summary statistics from two replication sets (7783 ASD cases and 11359 controls; and 1369 ASD cases and 137308 controls). Results: We observe a GWS locus at 10q24.32 that overlaps several genes including PITX3, which encodes a transcription factor identified as playing a role in neuronal differentiation and CUEDC2 previously reported to be associated with social skills in an independent population cohort. We also observe overlap with regions previously implicated in schizophrenia which was further supported by a strong genetic correlation between these disorders (Rg = 0.23; P = 9 × 10-6). We further combined these Psychiatric Genomics Consortium (PGC) ASD GWAS data with the recent PGC schizophrenia GWAS to identify additional regions which may be important in a common neurodevelopmental phenotype and identified 12 novel GWS loci. These include loci previously implicated in ASD such as FOXP1 at 3p13, ATP2B2 at 3p25.3, and a 'neurodevelopmental hub' on chromosome 8p11.23. Conclusions: This study is an important step in the ongoing endeavour to identify the loci which underpin the common variant signal in ASD. In addition to novel GWS loci, we have identified a significant genetic correlation with schizophrenia and association of ASD with several neurodevelopmental-related genes such as EXT1, ASTN2, MACROD2, and HDAC4. © 2017 The Author(s). - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Rare pathogenic copy number variation in the 16p11.2 (bp4–bp5) region associated with neurodevelopmental and neuropsychiatric disorders: A review of the literature(2020) ;Oliva-Teles, Natália (57210417832) ;de Stefano, Maria Chiara (26639291000) ;Gallagher, Louise (7005393044) ;Rakic, Severin (57190137515) ;Jorge, Paula (7005566496) ;Cuturilo, Goran (23469119900) ;Markovska-Simoska, Silvana (57211128454) ;Borg, Isabella (7005933809) ;Wolstencroft, Jeanne (57191861000) ;Tümer, Zeynep (7004511379) ;Harwood, Adrian J. (7006339768) ;Kodra, Yllka (23008944800)Skuse, David (7004857206)Copy number variants (CNVs) play an important role in the genetic underpinnings of neuropsychiatric/neurodevelopmental disorders. The chromosomal region 16p11.2 (BP4–BP5) harbours both deletions and duplications that are associated in carriers with neurodevelopmental and neuropsychiatric conditions as well as several rare disorders including congenital malformation syndromes. The aim of this article is to provide a review of the current knowledge of the diverse neurodevelopmental disorders (NDD) associated with 16p11.2 deletions and duplications reported in published cohorts. A literature review was conducted using the PubMed/MEDLINE electronic database limited to papers published in English between 1 January 2010 and 31 July 2020, describing 16p11.2 deletions and duplications carriers’ cohorts. Twelve articles meeting inclusion criteria were reviewed from the 75 articles identified by the search. Of these twelve papers, eight described both deletions and duplications, three described deletions only and one described duplications only. This study highlights the heterogeneity of NDD descriptions of the selected cohorts and inconsistencies concerning accuracy of data reporting. © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Rare pathogenic copy number variation in the 16p11.2 (bp4–bp5) region associated with neurodevelopmental and neuropsychiatric disorders: A review of the literature(2020) ;Oliva-Teles, Natália (57210417832) ;de Stefano, Maria Chiara (26639291000) ;Gallagher, Louise (7005393044) ;Rakic, Severin (57190137515) ;Jorge, Paula (7005566496) ;Cuturilo, Goran (23469119900) ;Markovska-Simoska, Silvana (57211128454) ;Borg, Isabella (7005933809) ;Wolstencroft, Jeanne (57191861000) ;Tümer, Zeynep (7004511379) ;Harwood, Adrian J. (7006339768) ;Kodra, Yllka (23008944800)Skuse, David (7004857206)Copy number variants (CNVs) play an important role in the genetic underpinnings of neuropsychiatric/neurodevelopmental disorders. The chromosomal region 16p11.2 (BP4–BP5) harbours both deletions and duplications that are associated in carriers with neurodevelopmental and neuropsychiatric conditions as well as several rare disorders including congenital malformation syndromes. The aim of this article is to provide a review of the current knowledge of the diverse neurodevelopmental disorders (NDD) associated with 16p11.2 deletions and duplications reported in published cohorts. A literature review was conducted using the PubMed/MEDLINE electronic database limited to papers published in English between 1 January 2010 and 31 July 2020, describing 16p11.2 deletions and duplications carriers’ cohorts. Twelve articles meeting inclusion criteria were reviewed from the 75 articles identified by the search. Of these twelve papers, eight described both deletions and duplications, three described deletions only and one described duplications only. This study highlights the heterogeneity of NDD descriptions of the selected cohorts and inconsistencies concerning accuracy of data reporting. © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
