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@ARTICLE{Uebachs:258694,
author = {Uebachs, Mischa and Wegner, Philipp and Schaaf, Sebastian
and Kugai, Simon and Jacobi, Heike and Kuo, Sheng-Han and
Ashizawa, Tetsuo and Fluck, Juliane and Klockgether, Thomas
and Faber, Jennifer},
collaboration = {group, EUROSCA study and group, ESMI study and group, RISCA
study and group, CRC-SCA study and group, SCA Registry
study},
othercontributors = {du Montcel, Sophie Tezenas and Bauer, Peter and Giunti,
Paola and Cook, Arron and Labrum, Robyn and Parkinson,
Michael H and Durr, Alexandra and Brice, Alexis and Charles,
Perrine and Marelli, Cecilia and Mariotti, Caterina and
Nanetti, Lorenzo and Panzeri, Marta and Rakowicz, Maria and
Sulek, Anna and Sobanska, Anna and Schmitz-Hübsch, Tanja
and Schöls, Ludger and Hengel, Holger and Baliko, Laszlo
and Melegh, Bela and Filla, Alessandro and Antenora,
Antonella and Infante, Jon and Berciano, José and van de
Warrenburg, Bart P and Timmann, Dagmar and Szymanski, Sandra
and Boesch, Sylvia and Kang, Jun-Suk and Pandolfo, Massimo
and Schulz, Jörg B and Molho, Sonia and Diallo, Alhassane
and Grobe-Einsler, Marcus and Önder, Demet and Raposo,
Mafalda and Vasconcelos, João and Lima, Manuela and de
Almeida, Luís Pereira and Silva, Patrick and Cunha, Inês
and Giunti, Paola and Garcia-Moreno, Hector and Manso,
Katarina and Synofzik, Matthis and Hengel, Holger and
Traschuetz, Andreas and van de Warrenburg, Bart and van
Gaalen, Judith and Perbolt, Tessa and Bushara, Khalaf and
Hutter, Diane and Infante, Jon and Manrique, Leire and
Thieme, Andreas and Erdlenbruch, Friedrich and Onyike,
Chiadi and Fishman, Ann and Reetz, Kathrin and Dogan, Imis
and Ratai, Eva and Schmahmann, Jeremy and Santana, Magda and
Hübener-Schmid, Jeannette and du Montcel, Sophie Tezenas
and Romanzetti, Sandro and Harmuth, Florian and Mariotti,
Caterina and Nanetti, Lorenzo and Rakowicz, Maria and
Makowicz, Grzegorz and Durr, Alexandra and Filla, Alessandro
and Roca, Alessandro and Schöls, Ludger and Hengel, Holger
and Infante, Jon and Kang, Jun-Suk and Casalo, Carlo and
Masciullo, Marcella and Baliko, Laszlo and Melegh, Bela and
Nachbauer, Wolfgang and Bürk-Gergs, Katrin and Schulz,
Jörg B and Riess, Olaf and Reetz, Kathrin and Figueroa,
Karla P and Perlman, Susan L and Gomez, Christopher M and
Wilmot, George R and Schmahmann, Jeremy D and Ying, Sarah H
and Zesiewicz, Theresa A and Paulson, Henry L and
Shakkottai, Vikram G and Bushara, Khalaf and Geschwind,
Michael D and Xia, Guangbin and Pulst, Stefan M and
Subramony, Sub H and Grobe-Einsler, Marcus and Önder, Demet
and Koyak, Berkan and Reetz, Kathrin},
title = {{SCA}view: an {I}ntuitive {V}isual {A}pproach to the
{I}ntegrative {A}nalysis of {C}linical {D}ata in
{S}pinocerebellar {A}taxias.},
journal = {The Cerebellum},
volume = {23},
number = {3},
issn = {1473-4222},
address = {London},
publisher = {Dunitz},
reportid = {DZNE-2023-00667},
pages = {887 - 895},
year = {2024},
abstract = {With SCAview, we present a prompt and comprehensive tool
that enables scientists to browse large datasets of the most
common spinocerebellar ataxias intuitively and without
technical effort. Basic concept is a visualization of data,
with a graphical handling and filtering to select and define
subgroups and their comparison. Several plot types to
visualize all data points resulting from the selected
attributes are provided. The underlying synthetic cohort is
based on clinical data from five different European and US
longitudinal multicenter cohorts in spinocerebellar ataxia
type 1, 2, 3, and 6 (SCA1, 2, 3, and 6) comprising > 1400
patients with overall > 5500 visits. First, we developed a
common data model to integrate the clinical, demographic,
and characterizing data of each source cohort. Second, the
available datasets from each cohort were mapped onto the
data model. Third, we created a synthetic cohort based on
the cleaned dataset. With SCAview, we demonstrate the
feasibility of mapping cohort data from different sources
onto a common data model. The resulting browser-based
visualization tool with a thoroughly graphical handling of
the data offers researchers the unique possibility to
visualize relationships and distributions of clinical data,
to define subgroups and to further investigate them without
any technical effort. Access to SCAview can be requested via
the Ataxia Global Initiative and is free of charge.},
keywords = {Humans / Spinocerebellar Ataxias: genetics / Cohort Studies
/ Software / Observational studies (Other) / Spinocerebellar
ataxia (SCA) (Other) / Visualization (Other)},
cin = {Patient Studies Bonn / Clinical Research Platform (CRP) /
AG Klockgether},
ddc = {610},
cid = {I:(DE-2719)1011101 / I:(DE-2719)1011401 /
I:(DE-2719)1011001},
pnm = {353 - Clinical and Health Care Research (POF4-353)},
pid = {G:(DE-HGF)POF4-353},
typ = {PUB:(DE-HGF)16},
pmc = {pmc:PMC10544694},
pubmed = {pmid:37002505},
doi = {10.1007/s12311-023-01546-0},
url = {https://pub.dzne.de/record/258694},
}