Helpline: 1‑267‑338‑4262 |Β helpline@genetic.org
AXYS - The Association for X&Y Chromosome Variations

Help Us to Fulfill Our Mission

Helpline: 1‑267‑338‑4262 | info@genetic.org

Search results for: Canadian pharmacy buy 🚜🐭⒟ www.UkMeds.online ⒟🐭🚜 Buying liquid Buy plaster/page/65/Stella_Boeckman@rush.edu

Parent Testimonial: A Journey Through XXY (Klinefelter Syndrome)

As the mother of an XXY son who did not receive a prenatal diagnosis, I began noticing signs between 10–12 months of age β€” delays in speech and muscle tone, late walking and potty training, and autism-like behaviors. After a vaccine reaction that caused a hydrocele, he became highly irritable and lost eye contact. I spent tremendous time, energy, and financial resources seeking help from pediatricians, specialists, educators, diagnosticians, and therapists β€” all in an effort to diagnose, understand, and advocate for my child’s developmental challenges.

Along the way, we were met with repeated insurance denials and patronizing advice from several in the medical community. We cycled through multiple diagnostic labels before finally discovering SCA (Sex Chromosome Aneuploidy). I quickly realized that the diagnosis often depended on the qualifications of the specialist we were seeing or the terminology I used when filling out paperwork β€” a frustrating and inconsistent process.

Despite having every advantage β€” a college education, scientific literacy, time to research, premium insurance, and a strong support system β€” I still felt lost and alone. The condition remained a mystery, and none of the practitioners had enough awareness or up-to-date knowledge to help guide our journey. I never felt like I truly had answers, much less solutions.

After waiting 15 months for an autism workup at the Bluebird Clinic in Houston, we finally received an accurate diagnosis at age 7 through a FISH/Chromosome array test. Now I had hard evidence β€” something I could use to advocate more effectively with insurance and medical systems. Still, I struggled to find quality, condition-specific information until I found the AXYS Organization a year later. Even then, locating competent providers who actually understood XXY and could offer impactful treatment and advice remained an uphill battle.

So much of my energy went into educating the very professionals from whom I was seeking guidance. I often felt like I had to β€œconvince” educators and medical providers of what my son needed just to get basic therapies. Eventually, I vowed to dedicate my future time and resources to raising awareness and early intervention strategies around SCA β€” so that no parent would have to fight this hard for their child.

Our goals, like all parents, are simple: to raise a self-sufficient, contributing adult member of society. But we need meaningful support, awareness, and research from insurance, the medical community, diagnostic providers, and our government-funded school systems to make that happen.

Testosterone therapy is a significant part of an XXY patient’s medical future during and after puberty β€” but, I had years to address co-occurring challenges: reading, writing, speech, comprehension, emotional regulation, and social skills. Yet, because my son didn’t β€œlook” disabled β€” unlike children with more visibly apparent conditions like Down Syndrome or cerebral palsy β€” he was often expected to perform like every other child. His condition was invisible, and therefore, to many, it appeared nonexistent.

Early misinformation led to harmful stereotypes, shame, and misunderstanding. Many practitioners simplistically believed that β€œyou just give testosterone at puberty and everything will be fine.” But that ignores the deeper and more complex co-morbidities: auditory processing (CAPD), language delays, executive function challenges, sensory issues, gut-brain dysfunction, eczema, OCD, ADHD, and emotional regulation difficulties.

We found that nutrition, neurofeedback therapy, vision therapy, behavioral intervention, and functional medicine had far more impact than most pharmaceutical solutions. The school-based β€œearly interventions” β€” like 20 minutes of group speech therapy once a week β€” were completely inadequate, especially when schools had 12–15 coaches for athletics but only one OT or SLP for the entire student body. We were fortunate to meet one exceptional elementary school counselor who truly made a difference β€” but stories like his were the exception, not the norm.

Again, we were lucky β€” we got a diagnosis at 7. But many children with XXY are not diagnosed until puberty (or even adulthood, during infertility testing). How much earlier could their lives have improved if they had received appropriate T-therapy during adolescence and support for co-morbidities in childhood? This is not a rare condition β€” it affects 1 in every 590 males β€” yet it is still underdiagnosed and misunderstood by many in the medical field. How many adult men go through life never knowing why they’ve struggled?

The myth that testosterone worsens emotional or behavioral issues is not only false, it’s dangerous. Testosterone can actually help regulate mood, focus, and emotional control β€” yet hormone imbalances are too often ignored in difficult diagnoses. The years between childhood and puberty β€” a critical window β€” are typically void of standardized treatment plans or interventions.

Even after diagnosis, finding providers is difficult. Coordinating endocrinology appointments, dealing with long waitlists, refilling controlled medications, managing varied opinions about treatment, and handling injection-related anxiety is emotionally exhausting for families. At 18, the Xyosted auto-injector became a game-changer. It gave my son control over his treatment and relieved him of years of needle-related fear.

Today, at 21, my son is finally doing well. We endured many misdirected pharmaceutical treatments that didn’t align with his genetics. Compounding the challenge, we dealt with disruptions in care due to moving for my husband’s career. He was pulled from public school in 6th grade β€” right around the time his father was diagnosed with ALS. After years in residential treatment and behavioral education programs, he earned his high school diploma, shortly after his father’s passing during the height of COVID.

I often felt jealous of the multi-disciplinary care my husband received for ALS and wondered: Why can’t families dealing with SCA receive the same holistic support?

My son is currently in a transitional living program, has a driver’s license, and makes his own truck payment. I asked this program to help him grow from a teen into a man β€” and I believe we’re on that path. I hope he will soon be living and working independently.

His diagnosis deeply affected his childhood, our family, and his siblings β€” but I could not be prouder of the young man he is becoming. His resilience, and ours as a family, are a testament to love, determination, and the belief that no child should be left behind due to ignorance of a common, treatable condition. This is a worthwhile endeavor that needs attention, funding, and multi-disciplinary clinics across the nation.

2025-09-19T15:31:34-04:00Categories: 47,XXY (Klinefelter)|Tags: , |

Generating Advancements in Longitudinal Analysis in X and Y Variations

Article Title: Generating Advancements in Longitudinal Analysis in X and Y Variations: Rationale, Methods, and Diagnostic Characteristics for the GALAXY Registry

Authors: Carl, Bothwell, Swenson, Bregante, Cohen, Cover, Dawczyk, Decker, Gerken, Hong, Howell, Raznahan, Rogol, Tartaglia, and Davis

Date of Publication: July 26, 2025

β€œSex chromosome aneuploidies (SCAs) are a family of genetic disorders that result from an atypical number of X and/or Y chromosomes. SCAs are the most common chromosomal abnormality, affecting ~1/400 live births, yet are often underdiagnosed, leading to over-representation of more severely impacted individuals in many clinical studies. In addition to this ascertainment bias, existing work in SCAs has also been limited by low geographic and demographic diversity. To address these limitations, we have created the Generating Advancements with Longitudinal Analysis in X and Y variations (GALAXY) Registry. Through prioritizing sustainability, transparency, and minimizing participant burden, the overarching goal of the GALAXY Registry is to improve health outcomes for individuals with SCAs by serving as an infrastructure for future SCA research based on a large, heterogeneous, and longitudinal sample. To date, GALAXY has accrued 335 verified SCA participants with an average accrual of 11.2 participants/month (6.7 47,XXY, 1.9 47,XXX, 2.0 47,XYY, 3.2 48,XXYY, 1.8 48,XXXY, and 1.3 Other). Demographic data between those identified to have SCA prenatally (predominantly cell-free DNA screening) differ from those diagnosed postnatally for insurance status, age at enrollment, genetic test type, and reason for SCA diagnosis. Next steps include targeted recruitment of underrepresented groups (e.g., non-47, XXY karyotypes, older adults, minoritized individuals), extraction of medical record data into the registry, international expansion, and continued engagement with the SCA community. As a collaboration between clinician investigators and the SCA community, the GALAXY Registry is a powerful resource for future patient-centered clinical research.”

Read more

AXYS Community Monthly Open House

For a link to the Zoom meeting, please email Rob & Jamie Lee at axysrockymountain@gmail.com or contact them via the Facebook group: facebook.com/groups/axysdenver

This gathering will happen on the 3rd Friday of every month. The room will be open from 5pm to 7pm Mountain Time (7pm-9pm Eastern, 6pm-8pm Central, 4pm-6pm Pacific).

“Because this is an Open House, you can join when you want and leave when you need to. You don’t have to be on time, but you can stay as long as you like. We are keeping the room open for two hours. We can keep the room open longer if there are good conversations happening. If you join after the room has been closed, we’ll open it back up if we’re able. If we can’t be present, we’ll pass the host hat to another person in the room and the conversations can continue.

This room is open to everyone impacted by any X&Y chromosome variation to connect with each other, and this includes families and caregivers. The Open House is a place to share resources, stories, and ask questions of the community.

This community is full of knowledge and experience. We all are navigating relationships, doctors and treatments, education, and making decisions while living life. Sometimes you get to connect with someone because they tell a story that sounds like your own. There are times that hearing another perspective gives you ideas about how to improve things in your daily life. Sometimes someone has a resource that really helps.

You may not feel like you need a support group, but please consider, you may be there for someone else. We have seen lives changed by a chance remark. All of our experiences are of value and our stories need to be heard. Often, we get answers to questions we didn’t even know we needed to ask.”

“Thank you for your consideration and we look forward to seeing everybody Friday night!”

– Rob & Jamie Lee
AXYS Rocky Mountain Support Group

2025-08-11T11:34:47-04:00Categories: |

2025 AXYS Community Conference Materials

2025 AXYS Community Conference Materials

Presentations Slides

Poster Presentations

All Variations

15-year trends in US pediatric sex chromosome trisomy diagnoses | Shanlee Davis, Karli Swenson, Alexandra Carl, Agnethe Berglund, Courtney Finlayson, Chijioke Ikomi, Nicole Tartaglia

Demographic Composition of Participants in Sex Chromosome Aneuploidy Studies across the Globe: a 20-year Systematic Review | Karli Swenson

The eXtraordinary Babies Study: Breastfeeding Trends and Challenges in the First Year of Life | Lidia H. Grzybacz, Susan Howell, Shanlee Davis, Judith Ross, Nicole Tartaglia

The eXtraordinarY Babies Study: Evolving Parental Perspectives and Priorities While Raising a Child Prenatally Diagnosed with Sex Chromosome Trisomy | Susan Howell, Kayla Molison, Talia Thompson, Shanlee Davis, Judith Ross, Nicole Tartaglia

The eXtraordinarY Babies Study: Parental Emotional Experiences and Coping Strategies During Prenatal Sex Chromosome Aneuploidy Diagnosis | Kayla Molison, Susan Howell, Talia Thompson, Samantha Bothwell, Shanlee Davis, Judy Ross, Nicole Tartaglia

From Deficit to Difference: Depathologizing the Language of Genetics | Elliot Polak, Nina Polak

Prenatal, Birth, and Neonatal Outcomes in Sex Chromosome Aneuploidies: Data from the INSIGHTS and GALAXY RegistriesΒ | Alyssa Keller, Alexandra Carl, Samantha Bothwell, Karli Swenson, Susan Howell, Nicole Tartaglia, Shanlee Davis

47,XXY

Could there be a link between venous thromboembolic events and testosterone replacement therapy in patients with Klinefelter Syndrome? | I. Samy, A. Alarayedh, Kapz, P. Carroll, T. Yap

A double diagnosis: The psychological impact of discovering Klinefelter Syndrome during infertility evaluation | Claire Harkin, J. Elander, B. Woodward, T. Yap

Growth Charts for Boys with 47,XXY | Samantha Bothwell, Shanlee Davis, Taylor Marshall, Karli Swenson, Natalie Nokoff, Amelia Middleton,, Anna Furniss, Maram Alkhdour, Dimitri Christakis, Victoria Elliott, Jennifer Heeley, Chijioke Ikomi, Judith Ross, Stephen Stone, Maria Vogiatzi, Nicole Tartaglia

KidS Camp: Encouraging Physical Fitness and Positive Self-Concept in Adolescents with Klinefelter Syndrome | S. Ratnam, J. Papadakis, A. Goetsch Weisman, E. Leeth, T. Huit, D. Lee, K. Pothast, A. Tubman, L. Lucio, W. Brickman, C. Finlayson

Predicting Variable Developmental Outcomes from Family Data in XXY Syndrome | Shara Reimer, Siyuan Liu, Kathleen E. Wilson, Liv S. Clasen, Erin N. Torres, Jonathan Blumenthal, Armin Raznahan

48,XXYY

The eXtraordinarY Baby Study: Natural History of Infants Identified with XXYY in the Prenatal Period | Kayla Nocon, Karli Swenson, Susan Howell, Shanlee Davis, Samantha Bothwell, Judy Ross, Nicole Tartaglia

Psychotropic Medication Use In 48,XXYY Syndrome: Patterns, Effectiveness, and Clinical Implications | Joanna Dreyer, Amity Howard, Susan Howell, Samantha Bothwell, Kayla Molison, Alexandra Carl, Karli Swenson, Shanlee Davis, Gail Decker, GALAXY consortia, Nicole Tartaglia

2025-08-07T13:31:16-04:00

2025 AXYS Community Conference Agenda for Virtual Attendees

We will be using Zoom for the various virtual conference sessions. Download the latest version of Zoom here.

Instructions for signing up and joining virtual conference sessions will be emailed to registrants after registration closes on July 21.

2025 AXYS Community Conference

2025 AXYS Community Conference Agenda for Virtual Attendees

Saturday, July 26

8:30-9:15am
Session 1
9:30-11:45am
Session 2
Welcome and Keynote
12-1pm
Lunch
1-1:50pm
Session 3
2-2:50pm
Session 4
3-3:50pm
Session 5
4-5pm
Session 6
The Extraordinary Babies Study- Progress and Research Findings

Nicole Tartaglia
Kayla Nocon
1) Welcome
2) Site Summaries - ACRC Members
3) GALAXY Registry -
Past Insights, Current Progress, Future Directions

Shanlee Davis
Alexa Carl
Lunch Hour BreakMeet and ChatUpdates from the NIMH Intramural Research Program Study on X/Y Chromosome Variations

Armin Raznahan
X and Y Chromosome Variations and Fertility Options

Hooman Sadri
"Ask the Doctors” Chat

Courtney A. Finlayson (pediatric endocrinologist)

T. Zachary Huit (pediatric psychologist)

Sunday, July 27

9-10am
Session 7
10-11am
Session 8
11am-12pm
Session 9
12-1:30pm
Lunch
1:45-3pm
Session 10
Unpacking Social and Emotional Challenges for Teens/Young Adults with X/Y Variations

Caitlin Middleton
Kate Deer
Eval and Treatment
Of ADHD & Anxiety
In Children

Caitlin Middleton
Ciara Gurley
Understanding X and Y Variations: Genetic Diagnosis, Terminology & Next Steps Planning

Susan Howell
Kayla Molison
Lunch BreakOpen Chat

All presentations being live streamed to virtual participants will be available for viewing after the conference.

2025-07-22T10:57:23-04:00

AXYS Community Monthly Open House

For a link to the Zoom meeting, please email Rob & Jamie Lee at axysrockymountain@gmail.com or contact them via the Facebook group: facebook.com/groups/axysdenver

This gathering will happen on the 3rd Friday of every month. The room will be open from 5pm to 7pm Mountain Time (7pm-9pm Eastern, 6pm-8pm Central, 4pm-6pm Pacific).

“Because this is an Open House, you can join when you want and leave when you need to. You don’t have to be on time, but you can stay as long as you like. We are keeping the room open for two hours. We can keep the room open longer if there are good conversations happening. If you join after the room has been closed, we’ll open it back up if we’re able. If we can’t be present, we’ll pass the host hat to another person in the room and the conversations can continue.

This room is open to everyone impacted by any X&Y chromosome variation to connect with each other, and this includes families and caregivers. The Open House is a place to share resources, stories, and ask questions of the community.

This community is full of knowledge and experience. We all are navigating relationships, doctors and treatments, education, and making decisions while living life. Sometimes you get to connect with someone because they tell a story that sounds like your own. There are times that hearing another perspective gives you ideas about how to improve things in your daily life. Sometimes someone has a resource that really helps.

You may not feel like you need a support group, but please consider, you may be there for someone else. We have seen lives changed by a chance remark. All of our experiences are of value and our stories need to be heard. Often, we get answers to questions we didn’t even know we needed to ask.”

“Thank you for your consideration and we look forward to seeing everybody Friday night!”

– Rob & Jamie Lee
AXYS Rocky Mountain Support Group

2025-06-24T15:24:06-04:00Categories: |

2025 AXYS Community Conference | Conference Safety

Conference Safety

AXYS cares about safety and security for all of our Family Conference attendees and we provide a family-friendly atmosphere at our events where all participants feel comfortable. With this in mind the board has adopted the AXYS Activities Conduct Policy. Please read this document. Your registration for attendance at any AXYS event indicates your agreement to abide by this policy and its terms. Should you not agree, you can apply to have your registration refunded by sending a request to our Board Chair.

Name Badges

AXYS requires attendees to wear their name badges at all times during the conference. You must display your badge to be admitted to the conference educational sessions as well as the Wisteria Lanes and other hotel areas being used by the conference.

Badges are picked up upon arrival when you check in at the registration desk. Should you lose your badge, please come back to the registration desk with a photo ID to receive a replacement.

Family members not attending sessions

We know that some of our conference attendees bring family members to assist with family member care. We welcome those family members and ask that if they wish to assist at the conference that they register with Ginnie Cover, our Chair as a conference volunteer so they can be issued a name badge. Please note if they are able to volunteer to assist others, or if they are only able to care for just your family member.

Children under 18

AXYS strives to create a family-friendly conference. Therefore, the registration fee for children ages 0-17 includes a professionally staffed child care center to give parents the opportunity to fully enjoy the speakers for both Saturday and Sunday. On Saturday, Children 11-17 will have the opportunity to participate in a Chromodiversity Camp which is also professionally staffed. The camp is available on a first come first serve basis with enrollment limited to 15. On Sunday, there will be a variety of activities for children 11 to 17 including board games, crafts and videos. Children ages 0-17 who are registered will have breakfast and lunch available on Saturday and Sunday. Bracelets will be provided for children 0-17 registered for childcare and Chromodiversity Camp indicating that they may have meals and participate in organized activities.

We warmly welcome older children and teens at our conference. We’ve contracted for 2 sessions in the Wisteria Lanes bowling center at the hotel. While these areas will be staffed with volunteers, parents are responsible for their children at all times. Parents will be required to sign children in and out of the childcare services or Chromodiversity Camp, and must provide a cell phone number where they can be reached at any time. Parents must be available at any time to collect their child in case any problem occurs.

Teens ages 13-17 need not be registered for the conference if they do not wish to have provided meals or to participate in childcare activities and camp. Children 0-12 must be supervised by a parent or other guardian if they are not registered.

2025 AXYS Community Conference Logo

2025-06-13T12:51:33-04:00
Go to Top