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One or more keywords matched the following properties of Greeley, Siri Atma W.
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overview Siri Atma W. Greeley, MD, PhD is an internationally recognized expert on monogenic diabetes. Since 2006, he has pursued patient-oriented and outcomes based clinical research, with a focus on neonatal diabetes. Anyone diagnosed with diabetes before 6 months of age is very likely to have an underlying monogenic cause. Almost 50% of these babies will have a mutation in one of the genes encoding the KATP channel that allows for switching from intensive insulin injections to incredibly good glycemic control on exclusive oral sulfonylurea treatment. Along with a variety of local and international collaborators, Dr. Greeley has made several key contributions to the overall understanding of monogenic forms of diabetes. Among his ongoing efforts are his role as the Chair appointed by the Pediatric Endocrine Society to led an international effort to develop consensus guidelines for diagnosis and management of congenital forms of diabetes With the support of Drs. Louis Philipson and Graeme Bell, Dr. Greeley conceived of and developed the web-based University of Chicago Monogenic Diabetes Registry (http://monogenicdiabetes.uchicago.edu) for those with known or suspected monogenic forms of diabetes. The Registry remains the only one of its kind in the Western Hemisphere and now includes well over 2500 participants (over 1400 probands with diabetes as well as family members), of whom over 700 are now known to have an underlying genetic cause. Of these, over 400 were diagnosed with diabetes under a year of age, of whom over 200 have a known monogenic cause (largely due to inclusion in studies at the University of Chicago). The Registry receives frequent inquiries from self-referring patients as well as from an expanding network of clinicians asking advice about interesting or difficult patients. Dr. Greeley is frequently invited to speak about his research, including national meetings of the American Diabetes Association, the Endocrine Society, the Pediatric Endocrine Society, and the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists (AACE). Through the Registry, Dr. Greeley’s overall goal is to clarify phenotype/genotype correlations, response to treatment, and long-term outcome among the rare group of patients with various forms of monogenic neonatal diabetes. Dr. Greeley has over 50 publications, including several studies that have gained international attention and have helped to guide treatment considerations in these patients. With Elbert Huang, Dr. Greeley published the first and only formal cost-effectiveness analysis of genetic testing in neonatal diabetes, demonstrating that testing not only improves quality of life but also represents one of few examples of a medical advancement that is actually cost-saving. His ongoing studies include NIH- and American Diabetes Association funded efforts to understand sleep disturbances, brain functioning and mechanisms of insulin secretion in patients with KATP mutations, as well as the long-term neurodevelopmental consequences of diabetes that begins at a very young age.
One or more keywords matched the following items that are connected to Greeley, Siri Atma W.
Item TypeName
Concept Autoimmune Diseases
Concept Endocrine System Diseases
Concept Hematologic Diseases
Concept Immune System Diseases
Concept Pediatrics
Concept Nervous System Diseases
Concept Vestibular Diseases
Concept Genetic Diseases, X-Linked
Concept Genetic Diseases, Inborn
Concept Epilepsy, Generalized
Concept Infant, Newborn, Diseases
Concept Infant, Premature, Diseases
Concept Pancreatic Diseases
Concept Genetic Predisposition to Disease
Concept Rare Diseases
Academic Article Neonatal diabetes: an expanding list of genes allows for improved diagnosis and treatment.
Academic Article Creation of the Web-based University of Chicago Monogenic Diabetes Registry: using technology to facilitate longitudinal study of rare subtypes of diabetes.
Academic Article Genomic sequencing in newborn screening programs.
Academic Article Visuomotor performance in KCNJ11-related neonatal diabetes is impaired in children with DEND-associated mutations and may be improved by early treatment with sulfonylureas.
Academic Article I-Ag7-mediated antigen presentation by B lymphocytes is critical in overcoming a checkpoint in T cell tolerance to islet beta cells of nonobese diabetic mice.
Academic Article Specialized CC-chemokine secretion by Th1 cells in destructive autoimmune myocarditis.
Academic Article B-cell deficiency and type 1 diabetes.
Academic Article Hypoglycaemia following diabetes remission in patients with 6q24 methylation defects: expanding the clinical phenotype.
Academic Article Gain-of-function mutations in the K(ATP) channel (KCNJ11) impair coordinated hand-eye tracking.
Academic Article Microcephaly, epilepsy, and neonatal diabetes due to compound heterozygous mutations in IER3IP1: insights into the natural history of a rare disorder.
Academic Article Neonatal diabetes, gallbladder agenesis, duodenal atresia, and intestinal malrotation caused by a novel homozygous mutation in RFX6.
Academic Article Extremely Early Onset IPEX Syndrome Caused by a Novel Small Exonic Deletion in FOXP3.
Academic Article Hyperinsulinism in a neonate.
Academic Article Commentary: Launch of a quality improvement network for evidence-based management of uncommon pediatric endocrine disorders: Turner syndrome as a prototype.
Academic Article An online monogenic diabetes discussion group: supporting families and fueling new research.
Academic Article Patients with KCNJ11-related diabetes frequently have neuropsychological impairments compared with sibling controls.
Academic Article ADHD, learning difficulties and sleep disturbances associated with KCNJ11-related neonatal diabetes.
Academic Article Congenital hyperinsulinism as the presenting feature of Kabuki syndrome: clinical and molecular characterization of 9 affected individuals.
Academic Article FOXP3 mutations causing early-onset insulin-requiring diabetes but without other features of immune dysregulation, polyendocrinopathy, enteropathy, X-linked syndrome.
Academic Article ISPAD Clinical Practice Consensus Guidelines 2018: The diagnosis and management of monogenic diabetes in children and adolescents.
Award or Honor Receipt The George M. Eisenberg Foundation for Charities Excellence Award for Pediatrics
Award or Honor Receipt Research Fellowship Award
Grant Chicagoland Diabetes TrialNet Clinical Center
Grant Incretin Regulation of Insulin Secretion in Human Neonatal Diabetes
Grant Pediatric Endocrinology Research Training Grant
Academic Article Update of variants identified in the pancreatic ß-cell KATP channel genes KCNJ11 and ABCC8 in individuals with congenital hyperinsulinism and diabetes.
Academic Article A Non-Coding Disease Modifier of Pancreatic Agenesis Identified by Genetic Correction in a Patient-Derived iPSC Line.
Academic Article Developmental defects and impaired network excitability in a cerebral organoid model of KCNJ11 p.V59M-related neonatal diabetes.
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