A
Anatoli Kamali
Researcher at University of London
Publications - 23
Citations - 955
Anatoli Kamali is an academic researcher from University of London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & HIV vaccine. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 23 publications receiving 751 citations. Previous affiliations of Anatoli Kamali include Uganda Virus Research Institute & International AIDS Vaccine Initiative.
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Journal ArticleDOI
CLSI-derived hematology and biochemistry reference intervals for healthy adults in eastern and southern Africa
Etienne Karita,Nzeera Ketter,Matthew Price,Kayitesi Kayitenkore,Pontiano Kaleebu,Annet Nanvubya,Omu Anzala,Walter Jaoko,Gaudensia Mutua,Eugene Ruzagira,Joseph Mulenga,Eduard J. Sanders,Eduard J. Sanders,Mary Mwangome,Susan Allen,Agnes N. Bwanika,Ubaldo Bahemuka,Ken Awuondo,Gloria Omosa,Bashir Farah,Pauli N. Amornkul,Josephine Birungi,Sarah Yates,Lisa Stoll-Johnson,J Gilmour,Gwynn Stevens,Erin Shutes,Olivier Manigart,Peter Hughes,Len Dally,Janet T Scott,Wendy S. Stevens,Pat Fast,Anatoli Kamali +33 more
TL;DR: Establishing clinical laboratory reference intervals for 25 hematology, immunology and biochemistry values among healthy African adults typical of those who might join a clinical trial provides ranges that will inform inclusion criteria and evaluation of adverse events for studies in these regions of Africa.
Journal ArticleDOI
The general population cohort in rural south-western Uganda: a platform for communicable and non-communicable disease studies
Gershim Asiki,Georgina A. V. Murphy,Jessica Nakiyingi-Miiro,Janet Seeley,Rebecca N Nsubuga,Alex Karabarinde,Laban Waswa,Samuel Biraro,Ivan Kasamba,Cristina Pomilla,Dermot Maher,Elizabeth H. Young,Anatoli Kamali,Manjinder S. Sandhu +13 more
TL;DR: The General Population Cohort was set up in 1989 to examine trends in HIV prevalence and incidence, and their determinants in rural south-western Uganda to address the limited data on the burden and risk factors for NCDs in sub-Saharan Africa.
Journal ArticleDOI
Uganda Genome Resource Enables Insights into Population History and Genomic Discovery in Africa
Deepti Gurdasani,Tommy Carstensen,Segun Fatumo,Guanjie Chen,Chris S Franklin,Javier Prado-Martinez,Heleen J. Bouman,Federico Abascal,Marc Haber,Ioanna Tachmazidou,Iain Mathieson,Kenneth Ekoru,Kenneth Ekoru,Marianne K. DeGorter,Rebecca N Nsubuga,Chris Finan,Eleanor Wheeler,Eleanor Wheeler,Li Chen,David Neil Cooper,Stephen Schiffels,Yuan Chen,Graham R. S. Ritchie,Martin O. Pollard,Mary D Fortune,Alexander J. Mentzer,Erik Garrison,Anders Bergström,Konstantinos Hatzikotoulas,Adebowale Adeyemo,Ayo P. Doumatey,Heather Elding,Louise V. Wain,Louise V. Wain,Georg Ehret,Georg Ehret,Paul L. Auer,Charles Kooperberg,Alexander P. Reiner,Alexander P. Reiner,Nora Franceschini,Dermot Maher,Stephen B. Montgomery,Stephen B. Montgomery,Carl M. Kadie,Chris Widmer,Yali Xue,Janet Seeley,Gershim Asiki,Anatoli Kamali,Elizabeth H. Young,Elizabeth H. Young,Cristina Pomilla,Cristina Pomilla,Nicole Soranzo,Nicole Soranzo,Nicole Soranzo,Eleftheria Zeggini,Fraser J. Pirie,Andrew P. Morris,Andrew P. Morris,David Heckerman,Chris Tyler-Smith,Ayesha A. Motala,Charles N. Rotimi,Pontiano Kaleebu,Inês Barroso,Inês Barroso,M. S. Sandhu +68 more
TL;DR: The largest study of its kind, comprising genome-wide data from 6,400 individuals and whole-genome sequences from rural Uganda, finds evidence of geographically correlated fine-scale population substructure.
Journal ArticleDOI
The transferability of lipid loci across African, Asian and European cohorts
Karoline Kuchenbaecker,Nikita Telkar,Theresa Reiker,Robin G Walters,Kuang Lin,Anders Eriksson,Deepti Gurdasani,Arthur Gilly,Lorraine Southam,Lorraine Southam,Emmanouil Tsafantakis,Maria Karaleftheri,Janet Seeley,Anatoli Kamali,Gershim Asiki,Gershim Asiki,Iona Y Millwood,Iona Y Millwood,Michael V. Holmes,Michael V. Holmes,Huaidong Du,Huaidong Du,Yu Guo,Meena Kumari,George Dedoussis,Liming Li,Zhengming Chen,Manjinder S. Sandhu,Eleftheria Zeggini +28 more
TL;DR: It is found that the major lipid loci are mostly transferrable between Europeans and Asians while there are notable exceptions for African populations.
Journal ArticleDOI
Sociodemographic distribution of non-communicable disease risk factors in rural Uganda: a cross-sectional study
Georgina A. V. Murphy,Gershim Asiki,Kenneth Ekoru,Rebecca N Nsubuga,Jessica Nakiyingi-Miiro,Elizabeth H. Young,Janet Seeley,Manjinder S. Sandhu,Anatoli Kamali +8 more
TL;DR: A better understanding of the determinants of the sociodemographic distribution of NCDs and their risk factors in rural sub-Saharan African populations will help identify populations at most risk of developing N CDs and help plan interventions to reduce their burden.