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David Shera

Philadelphia University

Publishes on Congenital Heart Disease Studies, Child and Adolescent Psychosocial and Emotional Development, Neonatal and fetal brain pathology. 91 papers and 7.1k citations.

91Publications
7.1kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

The Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) Hairpulling Scale: 1. Development and Factor Analyses
Nancy J. Keuthen, Richard O’Sullivan, Joseph N. Ricciardi et al.|Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics|2010
Cited by 442

We developed the MGH Hairpulling Scale to provide a brief, self-report instrument for assessing repetitive hairpulling. Seven individual items, rated for severity from 0 to 4, assess urges to pull, actual pulling, perceived control, and associated distress. We administered the scale to 119 consecutive patients with chronic hairpulling. Statistical analyses indicate that the seven items form a homogenous scale for the measurement of severity in this disorder.

Long-Term Follow-Up After Gene Therapy for Canavan Disease
Paola Leone, David Shera, Scott McPhee et al.|Science Translational Medicine|2012
Cited by 324Open Access

Canavan disease is a hereditary leukodystrophy caused by mutations in the aspartoacylase gene (ASPA), leading to loss of enzyme activity and increased concentrations of the substrate N-acetyl-aspartate (NAA) in the brain. Accumulation of NAA results in spongiform degeneration of white matter and severe impairment of psychomotor development. The goal of this prospective cohort study was to assess long-term safety and preliminary efficacy measures after gene therapy with an adeno-associated viral vector carrying the ASPA gene (AAV2-ASPA). Using noninvasive magnetic resonance imaging and standardized clinical rating scales, we observed Canavan disease in 28 patients, with a subset of 13 patients being treated with AAV2-ASPA. Each patient received 9 × 10(11) vector genomes via intraparenchymal delivery at six brain infusion sites. Safety data collected over a minimum 5-year follow-up period showed a lack of long-term adverse events related to the AAV2 vector. Posttreatment effects were analyzed using a generalized linear mixed model, which showed changes in predefined surrogate markers of disease progression and clinical assessment subscores. AAV2-ASPA gene therapy resulted in a decrease in elevated NAA in the brain and slowed progression of brain atrophy, with some improvement in seizure frequency and with stabilization of overall clinical status.