Adeyinka GLADYS Falusi

Adeyinka GLADYS Falusi
University of Ibadan · Institute for Advanced Medical Research and Training (PIMRAT)

Professor of Haematology / Genetics

About

105
Publications
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Introduction
My Current Research work is on Hepatitis B, and Hepatitis C Prevalence and Epidemiology in Sickle Cell Patients and Controls in South West Nigeria. Community Access and participation towards an attitudinal change for a Preventive approach to Sickle Cell disease in South west Nigeria. Advocacy and Support for Sickle Cell Affected Individuals and their significant others in the Community in South West Nigeria.

Publications

Publications (105)
Article
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Dapsone is employed for both non‐dermatological and dermatological indications but with non‐existent population pharmacokinetics (popPK) data in Nigerians. This study was therefore designed to develop a popPK model in Nigerians. Non‐compartmental analysis and nonlinear mixed effects modelling were utilized for data analysis. Eleven participants adm...
Article
The quest in finding an everlasting panacea to the pernicious impact of sickle cell disease (SCD) in the society hit a turn of success since the recent discovery of a small molecule reversible covalent inhibitor, Voxelotor. A drug that primarily promotes the stability of oxygenated hemoglobin and inhibit the polymerization of HbS by enhancing hemog...
Article
Transfusion transmissible infections (TTIs) such as Hepatitis B Virus (HBV), Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) and Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) are among the most frequent complications in individuals with Sickle Cell Disease (SCD). We investigated factors associated with TTIs in SCD patients and controls in South-west Nigeria. A total of 2,034 partici...
Article
Background: Hepatitis B virus infection, a major public health problem that primarily affects the liver, may cause reduction in the levels of haemoglobin, haematocrit and in the extreme, could cause aplastic anaemia. The haematological characteristics could be detected with a complete blood count which could provide invaluable information for diag...
Article
Background: Hepatitis B virus infection, a major public health problem that primarily affects the liver, may cause reduction in the levels of haemoglobin, haematocrit and in the extreme, could cause aplastic anaemia. The haematological characteristics could be detected with a complete blood count which could provide invaluable information for diagn...
Article
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Black women across the African diaspora experience more aggressive breast cancer with higher mortality rates than white women of European ancestry. Although inter-ethnic germline variation is known, differential somatic evolution has not been investigated in detail. Analysis of deep whole genomes of 97 breast cancers, with RNA-seq in a subset, from...
Article
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Our study describes breast cancer risk loci using a cross-ancestry GWAS approach. We first identify variants that are associated with breast cancer at P < 0.05 from African ancestry GWAS meta-analysis (9241 cases and 10193 controls), then meta-analyze with European ancestry GWAS data (122977 cases and 105974 controls) from the Breast Cancer Associa...
Article
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This study aimed to determine the performance of a rapid, point-of-care testing device (HemotypeSC)™ for diagnosing sickle cell disease (SCD) relative to 2 commonly-used methods compared to DNA polymerase chain reaction (PCR) as the reference standard. The diagnostic performance of (HemotypeSC)™ in diagnosing SCD and determining various other Hb ge...
Article
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Although many loci have been associated with height in European ancestry populations, very few have been identified in African ancestry individuals. Furthermore, many of the known loci have yet to be generalized to and fine-mapped within a large-scale African ancestry sample. We performed sex-combined and sex-stratified meta-analyses in up to 52,76...
Article
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Background: Recurrent chronic leg ulcers and its are morbidities associated with sickle cell anaemia (SCA). Compression therapy increases the rate of healing of these ulcers and also decreases the rate of recurrence. Objective: This study evaluated the haematological parameters of patients with SCA and chronic leg ulcers placed on high compressi...
Conference Paper
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BACKGROUND: Nigeria has a high burden of HIV and leprosy, therefore dapsone is frequently used in the population. However, data on population pharmacokinetic (popPK) analysis of dapsone in Nigerians are lacking. The aim of this study was to develop, on pilot scale, a popPK model for dapsone in Nigerians and to identify factors that account for vari...
Preprint
Full-text available
Black women of African ancestry experience more aggressive breast cancer with higher mortality rates than White women of European ancestry. Although inter-ethnic germline variation is known, differential somatic evolution has not been investigated in detail. Analysis of deep whole genomes of 97 breast tumors, with RNA-seq in a subset, from indigeno...
Conference Paper
Breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease and the incidence to mortality ratio is highest for women of African ancestry. Paucity of data from non-European ancestry groups limits our understanding of the underlying etiological differences or alternative routes to progression that may explain differential outcomes. To examine the contribution of genom...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
Breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease and the incidence to mortality ratio is highest for women of African ancestry. Paucity of data from non-European ancestry groups limits our understanding of the underlying etiological differences or alternative routes to progression that may explain differential outcomes. To examine the contribution of genom...
Article
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Somatic mutation signatures may represent footprints of genetic and environmental exposures that cause different cancer. Few studies have comprehensively examined their association with germline variants, and none in an indigenous African population. SomaticSignatures was employed to extract mutation signatures based on whole‐genome or whole‐exome...
Article
Background: The N-acetyltransferase 2 (NAT2) enzyme has been understudied in Nigerians including genotype-phenotype association studies. Objective: The aim of this study was NAT2 haplotype identification and genotype-phenotype investigations in HIV-positive and HIV-negative Nigerians. Patients and methods: Phenotypes included self-reported sul...
Article
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The original version of this Article contained an error in the author affiliations. The affiliation of Kevin P. White with Tempus Labs, Inc. Chicago, IL, USA was inadvertently omitted. This has now been corrected in both the PDF and HTML versions of the Article.
Article
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Racial/ethnic disparities in breast cancer mortality continue to widen but genomic studies rarely interrogate breast cancer in diverse populations. Through genome, exome, and RNA sequencing, we examined the molecular features of breast cancers using 194 patients from Nigeria and 1037 patients from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA). Relative to Black a...
Article
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Purpose: Among Nigerian women, breast cancer is diagnosed at later stages, is more frequently triple-negative disease, and is far more frequently fatal than in Europe or the United States. We evaluated the contribution of an inherited predisposition to breast cancer in this population. Patients and methods: Cases were 1,136 women with invasive b...
Article
Background: Somatic mutation signatures may represent the footprints of genetic and environmental exposures that cause different types of cancer. However, few studies have comprehensively examined the association between germline variants and somatic mutation signatures, and none in African ancestry populations. Methods: Study samples consist of 1,...
Article
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Background: Genome-wide association studies have identified ~100 common genetic variants associated with breast cancer risk, the majority of which were discovered in women of European ancestry. Due to different patterns of linkage disequilibrium, many of these genetic markers may not represent signals in populations of African ancestry. Methods:...
Article
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Objectives: Paucity of data on populations of African Ancestry in clinical trials continues to limit our ability to design and implement innovative solutions to narrow the breast cancer survival gap amongst Africans, African Americans, and European Americans. We have developed a cross-continent research infrastructure to examine the spectrum of gen...
Article
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Polymorphic expression of metabolic enzymes have been identified as one of the key factors responsible for the interindividual/ethnic/racial variability in drug metabolism and effect. In Nigeria, there is a disproportionately high incidence of sickle-cell disease (SCD), a condition characterized by painful crisis frequently triggered by malaria. Pr...
Article
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Multiple breast cancer loci have been identified in previous genome-wide association studies, but they were mainly conducted in populations of European ancestry. Women of African ancestry are more likely to have young-onset and estrogen receptor (ER) negative breast cancer for reasons that are unknown and understudied. To identify genetic risk fact...
Article
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IntroductionThe co-existence of malaria with bacterial infections is common in the tropics, hence the concurrent use of antimalarials and antibiotics. Objective This study aimed to investigate the effect on pharmacokinetics and antimicrobial activity of co-administration of quinine and combined ampicillin–cloxacillin. Methods In total, 14 healthy a...
Presentation
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KNOW YOUR GENOTYPE TO PREVENT AND CONTROL SICKLE CELL DISEASE BY Professor Adeyinka Falusi, FAS President Sickle Cell Hope Alive Foundation (SCHAF) @ UI Orientation Programme 16th March, 2016.
Article
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Background: Documentation of adverse drug reactions (ADRs) is critical to a safe health delivery system. The aim of our study was to explore the prevalence of self-reported sulphonamide hypersensitivity reactions in a community-based sample of the general population in Ibadan, Nigeria. We also examined sociodemographic factors associated with ADRs...
Article
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Objectives: Of all ethnic/racial groups, age-standardized mortality rate from breast cancer is highest for African American women in the US for reasons that remain understudied. The paucity of genomic studies of breast tumors across the African Diaspora further restricts our understanding of the biology of breast cancer in underserved populations....
Article
s: Sixth AACR Conference: The Science of Cancer Health Disparities; December 6–9, 2013; Atlanta, GA To date, more than 100 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) have been found to be associated with breast cancer susceptibility in large genome-wide association studies (GWAS) conducted predominantly in women of European and Asian ancestries. To id...
Conference Paper
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Abstract Background: Cytochrome P4502C19 is a polymorphic enzyme responsible for the metabolism of proguanil (PG), a prophylactic antimalarial to its active metabolite, cycloguanil (CG). Nigeria carries the highest sickle-cell disease (SCD) burden globally (2%) with a high prevalence of malaria, hence PG is used daily by SCD patients. Information o...
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Background: Access to clean energy is a basic requirement in developed countries. Yet, over 3 billion people worldwide, mostly women and children in developing countries depend on biomass fuel for their cooking and energy needs. The smoke emanating from cooking with biomass causes indoor air pollution which pose significant health risks. Methods: A...
Data
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Rationale: The global increase in the prevalence of asthma has been attributed to "Westernization". Specifically, nutritional factors, obesity, exposure to house dust mites and being African American have been implicated. There is paucity of reliable data on the role of nutrition and other factors on asthma trend and severity in Sub−Saharan Africa....
Data
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Rationale Despite a heightened Th−2 response to the presence of helminthic infections in developing countries, the prevalence of atopy and asthma is supposed to be low. Intestinal helminthic infection has been postulated to lead to production of blocking antibodies that inhibit the inflammatory response which characterizes asthma. Objective To dete...
Article
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The importance of hormone receptor status in assigning treatment and the potential use of human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-targeted therapy have made it beneficial for laboratories to improve detection techniques. Because interlaboratory variability in immunohistochemistry (IHC) tests may also affect studies of breast cancer subtypes...
Article
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Domestic cooking with biomass fuels exposes women and children to pollutants that impair health. The objective of the study was to investigate the extent of household air pollution from biomass fuels and the effectiveness of stove intervention to improve indoor air quality, exposure-related health problems, and lung function. We conducted a communi...
Article
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The majority of clinical trials of neo-adjuvant therapy for breast cancer have been conducted in resource-rich countries. We chose Nigeria, a resource-poor country, as the major site for a phase II feasibility open-label multicenter clinical trial designed to evaluate the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of neo-adjuvant capecitabine in locally ad...
Article
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Numerous single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with breast cancer susceptibility have been identified by genome-wide association studies (GWAS). However, these SNPs were primarily discovered and validated in women of European and Asian ancestry. Because linkage disequilibrium (LD) is ancestry-dependent and heterogeneous among racial/eth...
Article
Full-text available
Inherited mutations in the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes are the strongest genetic predictors of breast cancer and are the primary causes of familial breast/ovarian cancer syndrome. The frequency, spectrum and penetrance of mutant BRCA1/BRCA2 alleles have been determined for several populations, but little information is available for populations of Africa...
Article
e11554 Background: The majority of clinical trials of neoadjuvant therapy for breast cancer have been conducted in resource-rich countries. We chose Nigeria, a resource-poor country, as the major site for a phase II feasibility open label multicenter clinical trial designed to evaluate the efficacy, safety and tolerability of neoadjuvant capecitabi...
Article
Factors affecting the course of asthma are not clearly understood in rural and urban communities within low-resource countries. Furthermore, the interactions between atopy, environmental exposure, and helminthic infections in modulating asthma have not been well investigated. To conduct a feasibility study to examine the relationship between atopy...
Article
Subjects with different CYP2C19 genotypes may metabolize proguanil, a pro-drug used for malaria prophylaxis differently and the frequency of the different alleles may be different in patients with sickle-cell disease (SCD) and normal controls. The objective of this study was to evaluate CYP2C19 *1, *2 and *3 allele and genotype frequencies in Niger...
Article
s: Thirty-Second Annual CTRC‐AACR San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium‐‐ Dec 10‐13, 2009; San Antonio, TX Macrophages, a key cell in the inflammatory cascade, have been associated with poor prognosis in cancers, including breast cancer. Tumor associated macrophages (TAM) have also been shown to play a role in invasion and metastases. In this study,...
Conference Paper
Genetic variability in CYP2C19 is an important cause for inter-individual variability in the pharmacokinetics of numerous clinically important drugs such as proguanil, omeprazole, diazepam and voriconazole. CYP2C19 genotypes might have implications in proguanil pharmacokinetics, an important pro-drug for malaria prophylaxis in sickle cell patients...
Article
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Compared with white women, black women experience a disproportionate burden of aggressive breast cancer for reasons that remain unknown and understudied. In the first study of its kind, we determined the distribution of molecular subtypes of invasive breast tumors in indigenous black women in West Africa. The study comprised 507 patients diagnosed...
Article
#4039 Introduction: The importance of hormone receptor status in assigning treatment and the potential use of HER2 targeted therapy have made it imperative for laboratories to improve detection techniques. As inter-laboratory variability in immunohistochemical (IHC) tests may also affect epidemiologic studies of breast cancer subtypes in different...
Article
Full-text available
AN ETHICS/INSTITUTIONAL REVIEW BOARD (IRB) was established according to International standards at the University of Ibadan in Nigeria. To achieve this, a private-public partnership was developed to support a review of prevailing practice and the development of necessary infrastructure for an effective IRB. An internationally registered and well-co...
Article
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Non-specific cellular immunity was determined in 59 Nigerian children aged between 1-9 years with uncomplicated malaria and 93 age-matched uninfected controls using percentage migration index (%M.I) and Mantoux tuberculin skin test. The mean %M.I (using malaria Pf 155 antigen) was significantly lower in malaria subjects compared with the controls (...
Article
The prevalence of malaria parasitemia, bacteremia, certain hematological parameters, leucocyte migration index and nitroblue tetrazolium dye reduction were determined in 147 Nigerian children (4.24+/-2.88 years of age). Sixty (40.8%), 28(19.1%) and 26(17.7%) had malaria parasitemia only, bacteremia only and both malaria parasitemia and bacteremia,...
Article
To determine accurately the relative frequencies and enzyme activities of the polymorphic variants of G6PD in a homogeneous population in Nigeria. Abanla village in the outskirt of Ibadan city and the University College Hospital, Ibadan Nigeria. Seven hundred and twenty one subjects who belong to the Yoruba tribe of Southwestern Nigeria. Two mls of...
Article
Alpha-thalassaemia is common in malaria-endemic regions and is considered to confer protection from clinical disease due to infection with Plasmodium falciparum. In vitro, sensitivity to chloroquine (CQ) of P. falciparum infecting alpha-thalassaemic erythrocytes is reduced. We examined, in a cross-sectional study of 405 Nigerian children, associati...
Article
Childhood anaemia in sub-Saharan Africa is often caused by Plasmodium falciparum malaria. The influence of subpatent, multi-species and polyclonal infections with malaria parasites on haematological parameters was assessed in 1996/97 in clinically healthy children in Nigeria. Of the 228 children studied, 64% were anaemic by the WHO age-dependent cr...
Article
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Consumption of chloroquine (CQ) and subtherapeutic drug levels in blood are considered to be widespread in areas where malaria is endemic. A cross-sectional study was performed with 405 Nigerian children to assess factors associated with the presence of CQ in blood and to examine correlations of drug levels with malaria parasite species and densiti...
Article
Phenotype and gene frequencies of ABO and RH (D) systems were studied in 37,846 random blood donors in five zone of Nigeria (South West) (Yoruba)--Zone A, North West (Hausa-Fulani)--Zone B, Plateau (Birom)--Zone C, South East (Igbo)--Zone D and North East (Kanuri)--Zone E). We assessed the micro differences of genetic markers of ABO and RH blood gr...
Article
Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase A- (G6PD A-) deficiency is a common enzymopathy in Africa that sporadically leads to manifest haemolytic anaemia. It is not exactly known how far the haematological status of individuals with either homozygous or heterozygous G6PD A- deficiency differs from that of individuals with normal G6PD activity. In a field...
Article
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The serum transferrin receptor (sTfR) concentration in an individual reflects the extent of erythropoietic activity and is considered a useful marker of iron deficiency independent of concurrent inflammation or infection. However, data on the impact of malaria on this parameter are ambiguous. We have examined potential associations of asymptomatic...
Article
Plasmodium falciparum malaria, α-thalassemia, and anemia are frequent in African children. In 494 nonhospitalized Nigerian children, P. falciparum infection rates, α-globin genotypes, and hematologic parameters were determined. P. falciparum infection was observed in 78% of the children. The gene frequency of α-thalassemia was 0.28. Infection rates...
Article
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The rate of malarial parasitemia in children and adults was assessed by microscopy and the polymerase chain reaction in a holoendemic area in Nigeria. A high rate of subpatent Plasmodium falciparum parasitemia (19.6%) was found. Plasmodium malariae and P. ovale infections were common in a rural area (26.1% and 14.8%) but were observed sporadically...
Article
The proportion to which alpha-thalassaemia contributes to anaemia in Africa is not well recognized. In an area of intense malaria transmission in South-West Nigeria, haematological parameters of alpha-thalassaemia were examined in 494 children and 119 adults. The -alpha3.7 type of alpha+-thalassaemia was observed at a gene frequency of 0.27. Nine a...
Article
The frequencies of DPA1 and DPB1 alleles and their occurrence in haplotypic linkage were assessed and compared in Nigerian, Liberian, and Gabonese individuals. Differences were seen in the distribution patterns; these differences were more pronounced between the Gabonese and the other two populations than between Liberians and Nigerians. Several ha...
Article
The frequencies of DPA1 and DPB1 alleles and their occurrence in haplotypic linkage were assessed and compared in Nigerian, Liberian, and Gabonese individuals. Differences were seen in the distribution patterns; these differences were more pronounced between the Gabonese and the other two populations than between Liberians and Nigerians. Several ha...
Article
The prevalence of malaria parasitaemia was investigated among secondary school students in Ibadan city and a neighbouring rural community in Nigeria. Of 343 urban and 249 rural seemingly healthy subjects examined, 8 pc and 27 pc respectively were found positive for malaria parasitaemia. This showed a significantly higher parasite rate in the rural...