Project description:The Illumina Infinium HumanOmni5-Quad BeadChip was used to obtain genomewide SNP profiling of 32 human couples (64 individuals), selected by their facial resemblance.
Project description:The Illumina Infinium HumanOmni5-Quad BeadChip was used to obtain genomewide SNP profiling of 16 human couples (32 individuals), selected by their facial resemblance.
Project description:The Illumina Infinium MethylationEPIC Beadchip was used to obtain genomewide methylation profiles of 16 human couples (32 individuals), selected by their facial resemblance.
Project description:A total of 395 couples were subjected to IVF-PGD treatment, including 129 couples with NGS test and 266 couples with SNP-array test for the detection of embryonic chromosomal abnormalities. The NGS test was performed using low coverage whole genome sequencing with HiSeq 2000 platform. And the SNP array test was using Affymetrix Gene Chip Mapping Nsp I 262K.
Project description:ObjectiveLook-alike, sound-alike (LASA) drug name substitution errors in children may pose potentially severe consequences. Our objective was to determine the degree of potential harm pediatricians ascribe to specific ambulatory LASA drug substitution errors.MethodsWe developed a unified list of LASA pairs from published sources, removing selected drugs on the basis of preparation type (eg, injectable drugs). Using a modified Delphi method over 3 rounds, 38 practicing pediatricians estimated degree of potential harm that might occur should a patient receive the delivered drug in error and the degree of potential harm that might occur from not receiving the intended drug.ResultsWe identified 3550 published LASA drug pairs. A total of 1834 pairs were retained for the Delphi surveys, and 608 drug pairs were retained for round 3. Final scoring demonstrated that participants were able to identify pairs where the substitutions represented high risk of harm for receiving the delivered drug in error (eg, did not receive methylphenidate/received methadone), high risk of harm for not receiving the intended drug (eg, did not receive furosemide/received fosinopril), and pairs where the potential harm was high from not receiving the intended drug and from erroneously receiving the delivered drug (eg, did not receive albuterol/received labetalol).ConclusionsPediatricians have identified LASA drug substitutions that pose a high potential risk of harm to children. These results will allow future efforts to prioritize pediatric LASA errors that can be screened prospectively in outpatient pharmacies.