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david adams


adams.david@neuf.fr

Journal articles

2010
David Adams, Michel Slama, Didier Samuel (2010)  Liver transplantation for familial amyloid polyneuropathy   Presse Med 39: 1. 17-25 Jan  
Abstract: Familial amyloid polyneuropathy (FAP) is the most serious of the hereditary neuropathies in adults and is due to endoneurial amyloid deposits. These sensorimotor and autonomic diseases are very progressive and disabling. A "typical" patient with FAP is 30-years-old, of Portuguese origin, and has insidiously developed pains or sensory loss in the feet and digestive disorders, such as diarrhea, and has lost weight. Clinical examination shows sensory polyneuropathy of the distal small fibers (with sensory loss prevailing over sensations of temperature and pain). Cardiac disorders are frequent. One parent will have died prematurely from this disease. FAP are fatal 10.8 years after the first symptoms, on average. Neuropathy is usually associated with cardiac manifestations, weight loss, and more rarely renal or eye complications. FAP are secondary to a point mutation of the transthyretin (TTR) or prealbumin gene (18q11.2-q12.1), of which there are 40 variants. In France, the variant TTRMet30 is present in half of all cases and one third of FAP patients present with sporadic disease. Liver transplantation has been proposed as a treatment for FAP because the liver is the main source of variant amyloidogenic TTR. Transplantation makes it possible to eliminate 98% of the variant TTR in the serum, doubles median survival for variant TTRMet30 carriers, and halts the progress of the sensorimotor neuropathy over the long term in 62% of cases. No regression or recurrence has been observed. Poor prognostic factors after liver transplantation are a mutation other than the TTRMet30 variant, severe neuropathy, and late onset. Liver transplantation must be proposed to the symptomatic patients as early as possible. It should be performed in a center specialized in FAP. After LT, periodic follow-up in such a center is essential.
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2009
Pierre Lozeron, Christian Denier, Catherine Lacroix, David Adams (2009)  Long-term course of demyelinating neuropathies occurring during tumor necrosis factor-alpha-blocker therapy.   Arch Neurol 66: 4. 490-497 Apr  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To report the long-term follow-up (mean, 41 months; range, 25-55 months) of patients with demyelinating neuropathy occurring after tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) blocker treatment (infliximab [Remicade], etanercept [Enbrel], and adalimumab [Humira]). BACKGROUND: Demyelinating neuropathy is a rare adverse event of anti-TNF-alpha therapy. Improvement usually occurs after drug interruption and/or in association with usual treatments for demyelinating neuropathies. DESIGN: Case report with review of the previously published cases. SETTING: University hospital in Le Kremlin-Bicêtre, France: tertiary reference center for peripheral neuropathies and national reference center for rare peripheral neuropathies (www.nnerf.fr). PATIENTS: Five patients (4 men, mean age, 47 years) who developed a demyelinating neuropathy during anti-TNF-alpha therapy. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Development of neuropathy. RESULTS: Neuropathy developed early (8 months) after treatment introduction. Various clinical patterns were encountered, including pure sensory neuropathy. Immunomodulating treatments were always required for neuropathy control. Chronic demyelinating neuropathy developed either after change of anti-TNF-alpha drug or spontaneously after treatment discontinuation without any drug reintroduction. CONCLUSION: Influence of anti-TNF-alpha treatment continuation on the long-term course of neuropathy is variable, suggesting that anti-TNF-alpha treatment withdrawal is not always necessary for neuropathy control.
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C Denier, G Tertian, V Ribrag, P Lozeron, C Bilhou-Nabera, T Lazure, K Abbed, C Lacroix, D Adams (2009)  Multifocal deficits due to leukemic meningoradiculitis in chronic lymphocytic leukemia.   J Neurol Sci 277: 1-2. 130-132 Feb  
Abstract: Symptomatic nervous system leukemic infiltration is rarely observed in CLL. Various clinical manifestations including headache, confusion, cranial nerve palsies, focal central deficits and peripheral neuropathies have been seldom reported, occurring in less than 1% of patients. We report herein 2 CLL patients with unusual clinical presentations of nervous system invasion. They presented multiple progressive peripheral deficits due to meningoradiculitis. In both, CSF immunophenotyping analysis identified a majority of T cells (>90%), and less than 10% of B-CLL cells expressing CD5, CD19 and CD20. Our analyses revealed the transformation of CLL into an aggressive B-cell lymphoma in one case (Richter's syndrome). A post mortem study showed massive infiltration of cranial nerves and spinal roots by large B lymphomatous cells. In the other case, CNS oriented chemotherapy led to remission and total neurological recovery. In practice, the etiological diagnosis of neurological deficits in CLL patients is difficult. CSF analysis may be useful, requiring viral PCR, repeated cytological studies and immunophenotyping analysis. Although rare, leptomeningeal leukemic localization has to be discussed, even in the absence of overt Richter syndrome, and may require an early therapeutic test.
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2008
2007
Pierre Lozeron, David Adams (2007)  Monoclonal gammopathy and neuropathy.   Curr Opin Neurol 20: 5. 536-541 Oct  
Abstract: PURPOSE OF REVIEW: To provide clinically useful guidelines in the management of neuropathy associated with monoclonal gammopathy from a review of the most recent literature and our own experience. RECENT FINDINGS: Recent data on neuropathy associated with monoclonal gammopathy come from better descriptions of subgroups, and from new treatment compounds that have shown encouraging results in different entities. SUMMARY: Neuropathies associated with monoclonal gammopathy are relatively rare and most often the neuropathy reveals the monoclonal gammopathy. These conditions require combined neurological and haematological assessments. Their clinical presentations are highly heterogeneous but most have an electrophysiological demyelinating pattern. The main described subgroup is IgM anti-(myelin-associated glycoprotein) neuropathy, which presents as a relatively benign, slowly progressive sensory neuropathy. Nerve biopsy should be considered in patients with progressive and disabling axonal neuropathy. Neuropathies associated with monoclonal gammopathy have various neurological and general outcomes, including life-threatening entities such as light-chain amyloid neuropathy and POEMS syndrome. Treatment choice is wide and depends both on the underlying haematological disorder and severity of the neuropathy. Intravenous immunoglobulin should be assessed in demyelinating monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance neuropathy. Malignant haematological disorders should be treated per se. The possibility of a malignant evolution of monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance warrants regular haematological monitoring.
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V Planté-Bordeneuve, A Ferreira, T Lalu, C Zaros, C Lacroix, D Adams, G Said (2007)  Diagnostic pitfalls in sporadic transthyretin familial amyloid polyneuropathy (TTR-FAP).   Neurology 69: 7. 693-698 Aug  
Abstract: Transthyretin familial amyloid polyneuropathies (TTR-FAPs) are autosomal dominant neuropathies of fatal outcome within 10 years after inaugural symptoms. Late diagnosis in patients who present as nonfamilial cases delays adequate management and genetic counseling. Clinical data of the 90 patients who presented as nonfamilial cases of the 300 patients of our cohort of patients with TTR-FAP were reviewed. They were 21 women and 69 men with a mean age at onset of 61 (extremes: 38 to 78 years) and 17 different mutations of the TTR gene including Val30Met (38 cases), Ser77Tyr (16 cases), Ile107Val (15 cases), and Ser77Phe (5 cases). Initial manifestations included mainly limb paresthesias (49 patients) or pain (17 patients). Walking difficulty and weakness (five patients) and cardiac or gastrointestinal manifestations (five patients), were less common at onset. Mean interval to diagnosis was 4 years (range 1 to 10 years); 18 cases were mistaken for chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy, which was the most common diagnostic error. At referral a length-dependent sensory loss affected the lower limbs in 2, all four limbs in 20, and four limbs and anterior trunk in 77 patients. All sensations were affected in 60 patients (67%), while small fiber dysfunction predominated in the others. Severe dysautonomia affected 80 patients (90%), with postural hypotension in 52, gastrointestinal dysfunction in 50, impotence in 58 of 69 men, and sphincter disturbance in 31. Twelve patients required a cardiac pacemaker. Nerve biopsy was diagnostic in 54 of 65 patients and salivary gland biopsy in 20 of 30. Decreased nerve conduction velocity, increased CSF protein, negative biopsy findings, and false immunolabeling of amyloid deposits were the main causes of diagnostic errors. We conclude that DNA testing, which is the most reliable test for TTR-FAP, should be performed in patients with a progressive length-dependent small fiber polyneuropathy of unknown origin, especially when associated with autonomic dysfunction.
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C Denier, B Ducot, H Husson, P Lozeron, D Adams, L Meyer, G Said, V Planté-Bordeneuve (2007)  A brief compound test for assessment of autonomic and sensory-motor dysfunction in familial amyloid polyneuropathy.   J Neurol 254: 12. 1684-1688 Dec  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Familial amyloid polyneuropathies (FAP) patients manifest progressive sensory-motor length dependent polyneuropathy and severe autonomic dysfunction. In this setting the autonomic manifestations include mainly postural hypotension, nausea and vomiting, diarrhea and constipation, sphincter distur- bances and erectile dysfunction. Reproducible quantitative evaluation of signs and symptoms are necessary for the assessment of treatment efficacy. OBJECTIVE: To determine the reliability of a new compound test cumulating evaluation of autonomic and sensorymotor dysfunction in FAP. METHODS: Compound Autonomic Dysfunction Test (CADT) is a new questionnaire to evaluate the main symptoms of autonomic dysfunction observed in FAP. A separate functional questionnaire assesses the disability due to the sensorymotor deficit (Modified Norris Test; MNT). The compound test takes approximately 10 minutes to perform. In this prospective study, we enrolled consecutively 60 FAP patients to test interexaminer reliability, i.e., both questionnaires rated independently by 2 examiners. We also evaluate the reliability of testing patients face to face and by phone call, by the same examiner. RESULTS: Interexaminer reliabilities tested were high (ICC=0.92 for the CADT, p < 0.001; and ICC = 0.99 for the MNT, p < 0.001). In addition, testing by phone as compared to testing during the initial medical visit by the same investigator gave similar results (ICC = 0.91 for the CADT, p < 0.001; and ICC = 0.98 for the MNT, p < 0.001). CONCLUSION: In FAP, the CADT and the MNT have good reliability inter-investigators as well as between face to face and by phone call, by the same examiner. This newly designed compound test is a simple and reproducible scale which is adapted to evaluate the main neuropathic manifestations and will be useful for assessment of future treatments in this condition.
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2006
Nicolas Delahaye, François Rouzet, Laure Sarda, Carmen Tamas, Sylvie Dinanian, Violaine Plante-Bordeneuve, David Adams, Didier Samuel, Pascal Merlet, André Syrota, Michel S Slama, Dominique Le Guludec (2006)  Impact of liver transplantation on cardiac autonomic denervation in familial amyloid polyneuropathy.   Medicine (Baltimore) 85: 4. 229-238 Jul  
Abstract: Familial amyloid polyneuropathy (FAP) is a rare and severe hereditary form of amyloidosis, due to the deposition of a genetic variant transthyretin essentially produced by the liver, and characterized by both sensorimotor and autonomic neuropathy. Liver transplantation (LT) is the most effective treatment to stop the progression of the disease. Cardiac amyloid infiltration is usually associated with cardiac denervation, restrictive cardiomyopathy, conduction disturbances, and sometimes sudden death. Whether the cardiac involvement related to amyloid deposition may be altered after LT remains unclear. We conducted the present study to define the outcome of cardiac involvement after LT in 31 patients with FAP (age, 39 +/- 12 yr). Patients were evaluated before and after LT (24 +/- 15 mo). Cardiac sympathetic denervation was assessed by both iodine-123 metaiodobenzylguanidine (MIBG) scintigraphy and heart rate variability (HRV) analysis. The scintigraphic importance of sympathetic denervation was evaluated globally on planar imaging using heart-to-mediastinum activity ratio (H/M) measured 4 hours after injection, and regionally using single-photon emission tomography (SPET) imaging. Amyloid myocardial infiltration was assessed by echocardiography. Diffuse sympathetic denervation was found when using cardiac MIBG planar imaging in patients evaluated before LT and compared with 12 control subjects (H/M: 1.45 +/- 0.29 vs. 1.98 +/- 0.35, p < 0.001). On SPET images, defects were diffuse in 12 patients and focal in 19 patients, with predominance at the inferior and apical segments. No change in sympathetic innervation was found in patients after LT as assessed either with planar imaging (H/M after LT: 1.46 +/- 0.28, p = not significant vs. H/M before LT) or with SPET imaging. HRV nonspectral indexes showed that the standard deviation of all cycles was significantly lower in patients compared with control subjects, and remained unchanged after LT. Conduction disturbances and ventricular arrhythmias were associated with low cardiac MIBG uptake, and progressed after LT. The left ventricular wall was slightly thickened in patients, and a further increase was observed after LT (posterior wall from 9.2 +/- 1.8 to 10.1 +/- 2.3 mm, p = 0.02; septal wall from 10.6 +/- 2.7 to 12.1 +/- 4, p = 0.046). Neurologic status stabilized in 26 patients, but worsened in the 5 patients who had the most severe cardiac sympathetic denervation before LT as measured by MIBG imaging. The magnitude of the cardiac sympathetic denervation remained stable 2 years after LT in patients with FAP, whereas the cardiac amyloid infiltration progressed. The importance of cardiac sympathetic denervation found in FAP patients before LT was associated with a neurologic worsening after LT.
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C Denier, J - H Bourhis, C Lacroix, S Koscielny, J Bosq, R Sigal, G Said, D Adams (2006)  Spectrum and prognosis of neurologic complications after hematopoietic transplantation.   Neurology 67: 11. 1990-1997 Dec  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To describe the neurologic complications after hematopoietic progenitor cell transplantation (HPCT) in order to design rules for their management. METHODS: We reviewed 361 consecutive patients over 6 years, including 245 autologous and 116 allogeneic HPCT recipients for hematologic malignancies (87%) and solid cancers (13%). RESULTS: Fifty-seven patients developed 65 symptomatic neurologic complications (16%), with a higher incidence in allogeneic than in autologous HPCT recipients (p = 0.01) and in chronic myelogenous leukemia (42%) than in Hodgkin disease (2.5%) (p < 0.001). CNS infections (4.2%) were the main complications, marked by an early onset (within the first 4 months) after HPCT (87%), diagnostic difficulties, and a high mortality rate (47%). They mainly included cerebral toxoplasmosis, fungal infections, and viral encephalitis. Their incidence was markedly higher in allogeneic than in autologous HPCT recipients (p = 0.002). However, two CD34(+) selected autologous HPCT recipients developed cerebral toxoplasmosis. Other CNS complications included recurrent tumors (3.6%), metabolic encephalopathies (2.8%), and cerebrovascular events (1.7%). Seizures occurred in 5% of patients, most often associated with cerebral lesions. Peripheral nervous system manifestations occurred in 3.3%. Twenty-one patients (5.8%) died directly of neurologic complications. The 4-year probability of survival was markedly lower in the case of neurologic events than in the absence thereof (12% vs 58%, p < 0.0001). CONCLUSIONS: Severe neurologic complications after hematopoietic progenitor cell transplantations are common, vary according to the underlying disease and type of transplantation, and are associated with poor survival rates. Better prophylactic protocols and therapy for CNS infections are required in future studies.
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C Denier, P Lozeron, D Adams, D Decaudin, F Isnard-Grivaux, C Lacroix, G Said (2006)  Multifocal neuropathy due to plasma cell infiltration of peripheral nerves in multiple myeloma.   Neurology 66: 6. 917-918 Mar  
Abstract: Patients with multiple myeloma (MM) can manifest a variety of neurologic complications. The authors report two patients who had development of a multifocal neuropathy related to infiltration of peripheral nerves by malignant plasma cells as the only manifestation of a relapse of MM, which was considered in full remission.
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Pascal Masnou, Jean-Paul Gagnepain, Amal Fouad, Denis Ducreux, David Adams (2006)  Pilomotor seizures associated with sequential changes in magnetic resonance imaging.   Epileptic Disord 8: 3. 232-237 Sep  
Abstract: Piloerection is rarely described in seizures. This symptom has been most frequently observed in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy and is rarely the principal clinical feature of seizures. No specific etiology of epilepsy associated with pilomotor seizures has been reported. We present the first case of a patient who experienced sudden and transitory epilepsy with pilomotor seizures occurring several times a day for months, and associated with sequential changes of the left hippocampus demonstrated by magnetic resonance imaging. [Published with video sequences].
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2005
Denis Ducreux, Ghaidaa Nasser, Catherine Lacroix, David Adams, Pierre Lasjaunias (2005)  MR diffusion tensor imaging, fiber tracking, and single-voxel spectroscopy findings in an unusual MELAS case.   AJNR Am J Neuroradiol 26: 7. 1840-1844 Aug  
Abstract: A 23-year-old man was admitted to the intensive care unit for respiratory failure, global lower and upper limb palsy, and higher cognitive function deterioration. Imaging, performed with a combination of the MR diffusion tensor imaging, fiber tracking, and MR spectroscopy, suggested the diagnosis of an acute severe unusual mitochondrial encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and strokelike event, which was confirmed by muscle biopsy, but fiber tracking showed unexpected unaltered white matter tracts.
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2004
M C Petit-Lacour, D Ducreux, D Adams (2004)  MRI of the brachial plexus   J Neuroradiol 31: 3. 198-206 Jun  
Abstract: Magnetic resonance imaging is the method of choice for the evaluation of brachial plexopathy. Knowledge of the anatomy and normal imaging appearance is required. High-resolution imaging technique is necessary with the use of adequate coils. Evaluation of the brachial plexus requires T1 weighted sequences in three plans, T2 weighted sequences with fat suppression and if necessary the study is completed with gadolinium injection sequences with fat suppression. A CISS sequence is used if a nerve root avulsion is suspected. The spatial resolution must be optimized with the use of adapted parameters. We illustrate a variety of pathologies that can involve the brachial plexus. The pathology includes trauma, primary (neurogenic tumors, lymphomatosis) or secondary tumors, radiation plexopathy or inflammatory polyneuropathy.
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Renaud Snanoudj, Antoine Durrbach, Eric Gauthier, David Adams, Didier Samuel, Sophie Ferlicot, Pierre Bedossa, Alain Prigent, Henri Bismuth, Bernard Charpentier (2004)  Changes in renal function in patients with familial amyloid polyneuropathy treated with orthotopic liver transplantation.   Nephrol Dial Transplant 19: 7. 1779-1785 Jul  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Familial amyloid polyneuropathy (FAP) is an autosomal dominant disease caused by a point mutation in the gene encoding transthyretin, which is secreted by the liver. Orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) has been proposed to prevent disease progression. Little is known about long-term changes in renal function and lesions after OLT. METHODS: The renal function of 33 patients with FAP was evaluated (proteinuria, serum creatinine, creatinine clearance) before OLT and over a period of at least 5 years afterwards. A pre-transplantation renal biopsy was performed in 14 patients and a follow-up biopsy in eight patients. RESULTS: Before transplantation, mean serum creatinine concentration was 86 micromol/l (47-126 micromol/l) and creatinine clearance was 71.9+/-31.6 ml/min/1.73 m(2). Proteinuria was detected in 54% of patients (0.3-4 g/day). Pre-transplant renal biopsies (n = 14) revealed glomerular, tubular and vascular amyloid deposits in 90, 58 and 66% of patients, respectively. Eleven patients (33%) died after OLT. Death occurred most frequently in patients having weight losses >7 kg (P<0.05). After transplantation, 25 patients (76%) suffered acute renal failure but only one required dialysis. One month after transplantation, the mean serum creatinine concentration was 134.1+/-73 micromol/l and remained constant during follow-up. Eight patients underwent a second renal biopsy 2 years after transplantation. No significant changes in deposits or renal toxicity due to calcineurin inhibitors were detected. CONCLUSION: Although liver transplantation in FAP does not affect existing renal amyloid deposits, it prevents the progression of renal disease.
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2003
Gérard Said, Catherine Lacroix, Pierre Lozeron, Angèle Ropert, Violaine Planté, David Adams (2003)  Inflammatory vasculopathy in multifocal diabetic neuropathy.   Brain 126: Pt 2. 376-385 Feb  
Abstract: Besides the common distal symmetrical sensory-motor polyneuropathy (DSP) that is often associated with autonomic dysfunction, diabetic patients may develop multifocal sensory-motor deficits (MDN) secondary to roots, plexus and nerve trunk involvement. Nerve ischaemia has been suggested as a common mechanism for the different patterns of diabetic neuropathies, yet the important clinical differences that exist between DSP and MDN suggest concurrent factors. In order to learn more on the subject, we prospectively studied 22 consecutive diabetic patients with MDN, for which other causes of neuropathy were excluded by appropriate investigations, including biopsy of a recently affected sensory nerve. Three patients had a relapsing course, and the others an unremitting subacute-progressive course. Painful MDN progressed over 2-12 months. The neurological deficit predominated in distal lower limbs which were involved in all patients, unilaterally in seven, bilaterally in the others, with an asynchronous onset in most cases. In addition, a proximal deficit of the lower limbs was present on one side in seven patients, and on both sides in six. Thoracic radiculoneuropathy was present bilaterally in two patients, and unilaterally in one. The ulnar nerve was involved in one patient, and the radial nerve in two. The CSF protein ranged from 0.40 to 3.55 g/l; mean: 0.87 g/l. Electrophysiological testing showed severe, multifocal, axonal nerve lesions in all cases. Asymmetrical axonal lesions were found in all nerve specimens. The mean density of myelinated axons was reduced to 1340 +/- 1070 per mm(2) of endoneurial area versus 8370 +/- 706 myelinated fibres/mm(2) in controls. The mean density of unmyelinated fibres was reduced to 5095 +/- 6875 per mm(2) (extremes: 0-26 600). On teased fibre preparations, 34 +/- 31% of the fibres were at different stages of axonal degeneration (extremes 0-99%); 7 +/- 6% of the fibres showed segmental demyelination or remyelination. Necrotizing vasculitis of perineurial and endoneurial blood vessels were found in six patients. Endoneurial seepage of red cells was present in 11 specimens, and endoneurial haemorrhage in five. Ferric iron deposits that characterize previous bleeding were found in seven patients, including two who had no red cells in the endoneurium. Perivascular mononuclear cell infiltrates were present in the nerve specimens of 21 out of 22 patients, prominently in four patients. In comparison, nerve biopsy specimens of 30 patients with severe distal symmetrical diabetic polyneuropathy showed mild epineurial mononuclear cell infiltrate in one patient and endoneurial seepage of red cells in another. We conclude that MDN is related to pre-capillary blood vessel involvement in elderly diabetic patients with a secondary inflammatory response.
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2001
D Adams (2001)  Hereditary and acquired amyloid neuropathies.   J Neurol 248: 8. 647-657 Aug  
Abstract: Amyloid neuropathies occur in a context of hereditary (FAP) or acquired amyloidosis. They present usually as severe and progressive polyneuropathy and carry a poor prognosis. Most FAP are associated with endoneurial deposits of variant transthyretin (TTR) with substitution of one aminoacid and are secondary to a point mutation of the TTR gene. Portugal is the main endemic area of TTR-FAP, secondary to point mutation of exon 2. However, around the world, 50 other TTR gene mutations have been recently reported, each one in few families. Genetic studies are useful for diagnosis of FAP in patients with a positive family history and for identification of the cause of seemingly sporadic cases. TTR gene analysis is also useful for genetic counselling including antenatal diagnosis in variants with early onset. Gel-solin-FAP are the second variety and present as a benign cranial and sensory polyneuropathy and affect essentially Finnish patients. Acquired amyloid neuropathy concerns only immunoglobulin light chain amyloidosis (AL) and are frequently associated with renal manifestations and monoclonal protein in serum or urine. Specific treatment of amyloid polyneuropathy varies with the variety of amyloidosis including liver transplantation in TTR-FAP, at the onset of the disease or chemotherapy for immunoglobulin light chain amyloidosis.
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N Delahaye, D Le Guludec, S Dinanian, J Delforge, M S Slama, L Sarda, F Dollé, H Mzabi, D Samuel, D Adams, A Syrota, P Merlet (2001)  Myocardial muscarinic receptor upregulation and normal response to isoproterenol in denervated hearts by familial amyloid polyneuropathy.   Circulation 104: 24. 2911-2916 Dec  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Patients with familial amyloid polyneuropathy, a rare hereditary form of amyloidosis, have progressive autonomic neuropathy. The disease usually does not induce heart failure but is associated with sudden death, conduction disturbances, and an increased risk of complications during anesthesia. Although cardiac sympathetic denervation has been clearly demonstrated, the postsynaptic status of the cardiac autonomic nervous system remains unelucidated. METHODS AND RESULTS: Twenty-one patients were studied (age, 39+/-11 years; normal coronary arteries; left ventricular ejection fraction 68+/-9%). To evaluate the density and affinity constants of myocardial muscarinic receptors, PET with (11)C-MQNB (methylquinuclidinyl benzilate), a specific hydrophilic antagonist, was used. Cardiac beta-receptor functional efficiency was studied by the heart rate (HR) response to intravenous infusion of isoproterenol (5 minutes after 2 mg of atropine, 5, 10, and 15 ng/kg per minute during 5 minutes per step). The mean muscarinic receptor density was higher in patients than in control subjects (B'(max), 35.5+/-8.9 versus 26.1+/-6.7 pmol/mL, P=0.003), without change in receptor affinity. The increase in HR after injection of atropine as well as of MQNB was lower in patients compared with control subjects despite a similar basal HR (DeltaHR after atropine, 11+/-21% versus 62+/-17%; P<0.001), consistent with parasympathetic denervation. Incremental infusion of isoproterenol induced a similar increase in HR in patients and control subjects. CONCLUSIONS: Cardiac autonomic denervation in familial amyloid polyneuropathy results in an upregulation of myocardial muscarinic receptors but without change in cardiac beta-receptor responsiveness to catecholamines.
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2000
E Frau, M Lautier-Frau, F Saindelle-Ribeaudeau, D Adams, A Bousquet, M Labétoulle, H Offret (2000)  Familial amyloid polyneuropathy type I complicated by chronic glaucoma: 3 cases   J Fr Ophtalmol 23: 3. 217-220 Mar  
Abstract: PURPOSE: We report 3 cases of familial amyloid polyneuropathy type I (FAP) with amyloid infiltration of the vitreum and glaucoma. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We reviewed the records of three patients, 2 females and one male, aged 41, 47 and 83 years respectively. The 3 patients had familial amyloid polyneuropathy type I with vitreous infiltration and open angle glaucoma. The two women underwent a liver graft four years earlier. Vitrectomy allowed confirmation of the diagnosis in the 83-year-old patient. Two patients underwent trabeculectomy, histological analysis of the iris and the trabeculum was obtained for one patient. RESULTS: The tree patients presented a polyneuropathy, vitreous infiltration and open angle glaucoma. Results of light microscopy of the iris and the trabeculum showed amyloid deposits in the iris and the trabecular meshworks. CONCLUSION: Familial amyloid polyneuropathy is a hereditary disease which may have a wide range of ocular manifestations. Glaucoma is among the most serious complications of familial amyloid polyneuropathy.
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D Adams, D Samuel, C Goulon-Goeau, M Nakazato, P M Costa, C Feray, V Planté, B Ducot, P Ichai, C Lacroix, S Metral, H Bismuth, G Said (2000)  The course and prognostic factors of familial amyloid polyneuropathy after liver transplantation.   Brain 123 ( Pt 7): 1495-1504 Jul  
Abstract: Familial amyloid polyneuropathy (FAP) associated with mutations of the transthyretin (TTR) gene is the most common type of FAP, a devastating disease causing death within 10 years after the first symptoms. Because most of the amyloidogenic mutated TTR is secreted by the liver, transplantation is widely used to treat these patients, but long-term quantitative evaluation of the effects of liver transplantation on the progression of the neuropathy are not available. We have treated 45 patients with symptomatic TTR-FAP, including 43 with the Met30 TTR gene mutation, and report on the results of periodic evaluation of markers of neuropathy in 25 of them, who have been followed for more than 2 years after liver transplantation (mean follow-up 4 years). The overall survival rates at 1 and 5 years were 82 and 60%, respectively. Urinary incontinence and a low Norris score at liver transplantation were associated with poorer outcome. The motor score stabilized in seven of 11 patients (64%) with mild sensorimotor neuropathy (walking unaided) and in two of the eight patients (25%) with severe sensorimotor deficit (walking with aid) at liver transplantation. In five other patients, deterioration of motor deficit occurred only within the first year after liver transplantation, but was progressive after this interval in two patients. None of the six patients with pure sensory neuropathy developed motor loss and superficial sensory loss remained unchanged. Two years after liver transplantation, the rate of myelinated axon loss in nerve biopsy specimens was markedly lower in seven transplanted patients (0.9/mm(2) of endoneurial area/month) than in non-transplanted patients (70/mm(2) of endoneurial area/month). Symptoms of dysautonomia and quantitated cardiocirculatory autonomic tests remained unchanged. In all patients, serum mutated TTR decreased to 2.5% of pre-liver transplantation values and remained at this level during follow-up. We presently recommend liver transplantation in FAP patients at onset of first symptoms and exclusion of those with a Norris score below 55 and/or with urinary incontinence.
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1999
N Delahaye, S Dinanian, M S Slama, H Mzabi, D Samuel, D Adams, P Merlet, D Le Guludec (1999)  Cardiac sympathetic denervation in familial amyloid polyneuropathy assessed by iodine-123 metaiodobenzylguanidine scintigraphy and heart rate variability.   Eur J Nucl Med 26: 4. 416-424 Apr  
Abstract: Familial amyloid polyneuropathy (FAP) is a rare and severe hereditary form of amyloidosis, due to nervous deposits of a genetic variant transthyretin produced by the liver and characterized by both sensorimotor and autonomic neuropathy. Left ventricular systolic dysfunction is rare, but conduction disturbances and sudden deaths can occur. The neurological status of the heart has not been elucidated, and an alteration of the sympathetic nerves may be involved. We studied 17 patients (42+/-12 years) before liver transplantation by iodine-123 metaiodobenzylguanidine (MIBG) scintigraphy, heart rate variability analysis, coronary angiography, radionuclide ventriculography, rest thallium single-photon emission tomography (SPET) and echocardiography. Coronary arteries, left ventricular systolic function and rest thallium SPET were normal in all patients. Only mild evidence of amyloid infiltration was found at echocardiographic examination. Cardiac MIBG uptake was dramatically decreased in patients compared with age-matched control subjects (heart-to-mediastinum activity ratio at 4 h: 1.36+/-0.26 versus 1.98+/-0.35, P<0.001), while there was no difference in MIBG washout rate. Heart rate variability analysis showed a considerable scatter of values, with high values in four patients despite cardiac sympathetic denervation as assessed by MIBG imaging. The clinical severity of the polyneuropathy correlated with MIBG uptake at 4 h but not with the heart rate variability indices. Cardiac MIBG uptake and the heart rate variability indices did not differ according to the presence or absence of conduction disturbances. Patients with FAP have sympathetic cardiac denervation as assessed by MIBG imaging despite a preserved left ventricular systolic function and cardiac perfusion, without correlation with conduction disturbances. Results of the heart rate variability analysis were more variable and this technique does not seem to be the best way to evaluate the extent of cardiac sympathetic denervation in FAP patients.
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D Azoulay, D Samuel, D Castaing, R Adam, D Adams, G Said, H Bismuth (1999)  Domino liver transplants for metabolic disorders: experience with familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy.   J Am Coll Surg 189: 6. 584-593 Dec  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Shortage of liver donors means that new methods of liver procurement must be explored. In domino transplantation, organs explanted during transplantation in one patient are transplanted into a second patient. Domino procedures can be performed with livers from patients having transplantation for hepatic metabolic disorders that cause systemic disease without affecting other liver functions. Familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy (FAP) type I is one of these. STUDY DESIGN: We reviewed the Paul Brousse experience with a domino liver transplant program for FAP, hoping to extend the approach to other metabolic disorders. RESULTS: Livers from 10 patients transplanted for FAP type 1 were used for domino transplants to patients with unresectable primary or metastatic liver cancers. There was no perioperative mortality. Neuropathy or cardiomyopathy did not increase the morbidity of the domino liver explant and transplant procedures. Morbidity for the domino recipients did not appear to be increased. Variant transthyretin was detected in the serum in FAP liver recipients, with no immediate clinical consequences. CONCLUSIONS: The domino approach is feasible and requires careful planning of the surgical procedures for liver explantation, particularly for the nature and site of vascular anastomoses. Domino transplantation of metabolically dysfunctional livers creates new categories of potential donors and potential recipients. It raises new ethical, technical, and societal issues. The domino approach could be used in several genetic or biochemical disorders now treated by liver transplantation. It has the potential to increase the number of liver grafts available for transplantation.
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C Bouchard, C Lacroix, V Planté, D Adams, F Chedru, J M Guglielmi, G Said (1999)  Clinicopathologic findings and prognosis of chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy.   Neurology 52: 3. 498-503 Feb  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the clinicopathologic features and prognostic factors of 100 patients with chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP). METHODS: Comparison of clinical and biopsy findings with functional score evaluated an average of 6 years after referral. RESULTS: CIDP followed a relapsing course in 14% of the patients and a progressive course in 45%. After progressive onset, little change was noted during follow-up in the others. Five patients had symptomatic involvement of the CNS. Teased fiber preparations of nerve biopsy specimens showed that 68 patients had purely demyelinative lesions, 20 had mixed axonal and demyelinative lesions, and 5 had predominantly axonal lesions. Axonal loss was a common finding, with 47% of the patients retaining less than half of the normal density of fibers. Inflammatory infiltrates, found in 18 samples, were prominent only in 4. Of the 83 patients evaluated an average of 6 years after onset, 56 were in good condition; 24 had deteriorated and failed to respond to treatment, including 9 patients who died as a consequence of their neurologic deficit. Progressive course, CNS involvement, high proportion of fibers showing active demyelination on nerve biopsy, and axonal loss overall correlated with higher disability. CONCLUSION: Axonal loss is the major long-term pejorative prognostic factor in CIDP.
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1998
A M Misrahi, V Plante, T Lalu, L Serre, D Adams, D C Lacroix, G Saïd (1998)  New transthyretin variants SER 91 and SER 116 associated with familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy. Mutations in brief no. 151. Online.   Hum Mutat 12: 1.  
Abstract: Mutations of the transthyretin (TTR) gene are associated with familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy (FAP). Two new mutations were detected in French patients with TTR amyloidosis. The first patient was a 72 year old man who presented with severe and rapidly evolving sensory motor polyneuropathy of the 4 limbs, a bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome and a restrictive cardiomyopathy. His father died after a clinical history suggestive in retrospect of TTR amyloidosis. The second patient was a 75 year old man who presented with axonal sensory neuropathy of the 4 limbs and a bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome. In both cases immunohistochemistry performed on a nerve biopsy reveled TTR positive amyloid. Direct genomic sequencing of the full TTR gene coding region indicated two heterozygous transversions encoding Ser for Ala 91 substitution in the third exon of the gene in patient 1 and Ser for Tyr 116 substitution in the fourth exon of the gene in patient 2. The mutations were confirmed by digesting PCR products with restriction enzymes and were not found in a control population of 100 unrelated individuals. The Ser 116 substitution was also detected in the daughter and the 70 year old sister of the proband. However the absence of symptomatology suggestive of TTR amyloidosis may be related to the late onset of the disease. The clinical immunohistochemical and molecular studies in both patients are highly suggestive of an association between the Ser 91 and Ser 116 TTR variants with amyloidosis.
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D Adams, G Said (1998)  Ultrastructural characterisation of the M protein in nerve biopsy of patients with POEMS syndrome.   J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 64: 6. 809-812 Jun  
Abstract: To learn more about the mechanisms of nerve lesions in POEMS syndrome, nerve specimens from four patients were studied with an immunogold method at the ultrastructural level to detect and localise the M protein in the different nerve compartments. An indirect immunolabelling technique was applied on 4% PFA fixed and LR White embedded nerve specimens. Antisera against IgG, IgA, IgM, and lambda and kappa light chains were used as primary antisera. Morphological studies disclosed an important axonal loss in association with the demyelinative process. Endoneurial deposits of immunoglobulins were found in all cases. In the patient with the most severe form of neuropathy, diffuse deposits were present in the endoneurial space, especially in the subperineurial area. In the other patients, occasional deposits of the M protein were found in the myelin sheath (n=2); or between cells (n=1). No deposit was found in the axons. The class of the M protein labelled in the nerve corresponded to that detected in the serum in three of four patients, with labelling of two heavy chains in one patient. Immunolabelling of the M protein on the myelin sheath, Schwann cells, and in the endoneurial space favour a direct role of the M component in the lesions of nerve fibres, and justify active treatment of the plasmacytic proliferation.
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V Planté-Bordeneuve, T Lalu, M Misrahi, M M Reilly, D Adams, C Lacroix, G Said (1998)  Genotypic-phenotypic variations in a series of 65 patients with familial amyloid polyneuropathy.   Neurology 51: 3. 708-714 Sep  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To investigate the genotypic-phenotypic variations in a series of patients with familial amyloid polyneuropathy (FAP). BACKGROUND: Progress in molecular genetics has led to the identification of point mutations in the transthyretin (TTR) gene in FAP--a dominantly inherited neuropathy with a fatal outcome. These findings have modified the management of patients with small-fiber neuropathy and allow genetic counseling. METHODS: We performed a clinical and molecular genetic study with screening of the TTR gene mutations and associated haplotypes in 65 patients from 29 unrelated families of French ancestry. RESULTS: We detected nine heterozygous point mutations segregating with FAP. Fourteen families (48%) carried the common methionine (Met) 30 substitution. Seven kindreds (24%) had previously unreported TTR variants, namely asparagine 35, serine (Ser) 91, phenylalanine (Phe) 77, and Ser 116. At least two different haplotypes were associated with each of the following: Met 30, Phe 77, and valine 107, suggesting that multiple founders occurred for each variant. Only 35% of the index patients had affected relatives. Other patients had a sporadic presentation. All progressed to a severe sensorimotor and autonomic neuropathy with frequent cardiac involvement (80%). On average, a late age at onset (54.3 +/- 13.3 years) and a disease duration shorter than 10 years were observed for virtually all variants. CONCLUSION: The heterogeneity of the TTR variants, the late age at onset, and the short duration of the disease found in our patients contrast with the presentation of FAP in Portugal. These findings must be taken into account in the management of both patients and asymptomatic carriers.
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1997
N Le Forestier, B Chassande, A Moulonguet, T Maisonobe, S Schaeffer, N Birouk, N Baumann, D Adams, J M Léger, V Meininger, G Said, P Bouche (1997)  Multifocal motor neuropathies with conduction blocks. 39 cases   Rev Neurol (Paris) 153: 10. 579-586 Oct  
Abstract: Clinical, biological and electrophysiological features from a cohort of 39 multifocal motor neuropathies with conduction blocks (NMM with CB) have been studied. There were 29 males and 10 females with an average of 47.3. At the first evaluation, the mean duration of the symptoms was of 8 years with extremes between 1 and 28. Pain and paresthesias were present in respectively 10 and 18 p. 100 of the patients. Fasciculations and cramps were observed in more than 2/3 of the cases. Three patients had tremor at rest. Upper limb muscular weakness was the predominant initial symptom (84.6 p. 100). The weakness always affected distal and unilateral muscles. Radial and cubital nerve distribution are mainly affected and in half of the cases an unilateral motor deficit in the lower limb was associated. Muscle atrophy was frequent (74 p. 100) and rapidly developed in the first 2 years. Reflexes were decreased or absent in 64 p. 100. In 78 p. 100 of cases, biological study showed normal serum immunoelectrophoresis and CSF. IgM anti-GM1 antibodies were found in 24/36 patients. Very high titres were found in 5 cases. All patients had CB in upper limbs. The preferential localizations of the CB were equally at the median and ulnar nerves. Only 7 patients had CB localized to the lower limbs. In many cases, marked reduction of the motor amplitude prevented the detection of CB, marked reduction of the motor amplitude prevented the detection of CB. Moderate fibrillation potentials were found in 28 p. 100 of patients. Giant muscular unit potentials were frequent (21/39). F-waves in nerve with CB were always abnormal with marked increased latencies. Late responses sometimes seemed to be repeater F-waves. Axon reflexes were detected in 5 cases. The late responses abnormalities could precede the block. Clinical, biological and electrophysiological described arguments could may distinguish NMM with CB from motor neuron disease and relate them to the group of chronic demyelinating neuropathies.
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L Trandafir, P Ruffié, C Borel, I Monnet, P Soulié, D Adams, E Cvitkovic, J P Armand (1997)  Higher doses of alpha-interferon do not increase the activity of the weekly cisplatin-interferon combination in advanced malignant mesothelioma.   Eur J Cancer 33: 11. 1900-1902 Oct  
Abstract: Management of advanced malignant mesothelioma (MM) still requires innovative systemic therapy as its prognosis is poorly affected by currently available chemotherapy. The combination cisplatin and alpha-interferon (alpha-INF) has synergistic antitumoral activity in preclinical models and interesting activity in phase I-II clinical trials. Weekly CDDP (60 mg/m2) and alpha-IFN (3 MUI/d: d1-d4) in combination was tested in a previous phase I-II study in 23 MM patients, with a 36% objective response rate (ORR). A trial with higher doses of alpha-IFN in the same combination schedule was conducted to explore an incrementalist hypothesis. Thirty patients with MM received the same CDDP dose (60 mg/m2/w) and doubled doses of alpha-IFN (6 MUI/d: d1-d4). The treatment protocol consisted of two cycles of 4 weeks on/4 weeks off followed by two shorter cycles of 3 weeks on/3 weeks off, in the absence of life-threatening toxicity or progressive disease. All patients were evaluable for toxicity. The main treatment-limiting side-effects were digestive intolerance (nausea, vomiting) and severe asthenia. Antitumoral efficacy was not increased (ORR = 27%). Haematological and neurological toxicities were moderate and manageable. The antitumoral activity of the CDDP-alpha-IFN combination with higher doses of the latter is similar to our previous experience, but tolerance issues make it a poorer choice for eventual comparative trials, or as a standard therapeutic indication.
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G Said, F Elgrably, C Lacroix, V Planté, C Talamon, D Adams, M Tager, G Slama (1997)  Painful proximal diabetic neuropathy: inflammatory nerve lesions and spontaneous favorable outcome.   Ann Neurol 41: 6. 762-770 Jun  
Abstract: Proximal diabetic neuropathy is a disabling neuropathy that occurs predominantly in non-insulin-dependent diabetic patients over the age of 50. Inflammatory lesions have been found in nerve biopsy specimens of diabetic patients with severe proximal neuropathy or with other patterns of multifocal neuropathy. Some of these patients respond dramatically to treatment with corticosteroids or with other immunomodulators. In this article we report on our findings in 4 additional patients with painful proximal diabetic neuropathy and different patterns of inflammatory nerve lesions whose condition improved spontaneously shortly after performance of a nerve biopsy, without additional treatment.
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1996
L Chia, A Fernandez, C Lacroix, D Adams, V Planté, G Said (1996)  Contribution of nerve biopsy findings to the diagnosis of disabling neuropathy in the elderly. A retrospective review of 100 consecutive patients.   Brain 119 ( Pt 4): 1091-1098 Aug  
Abstract: Peripheral neuropathy is an important factor of disability in the elderly. In order to learn more on the usefulness of intensive evaluation of patients over 65 years of age with subacute or chronic disabling peripheral neuropathy, we reviewed the clinical and nerve biopsy findings of the last 100 patients of this age group who suffered from a peripheral neuropathy severe enough to justify performance of a nerve biopsy for a diagnostic or prognostic purpose. Normal nerve biopsy findings led to the diagnosis of lower motor neuron disease in three patients and pointed to lesions of the spinal roots in six other patients. Necrotizing arteritis was demonstrated in the biopsy specimens of 23 patients, and non-necrotizing vasculitis in five. In five additional patients the diagnosis of vasculitic neuropathy was kept in spite of non-contributive biopsy findings. In two diabetic patients who had a multifocal neuropathy the biopsy also revealed the presence of vasculitis. Thus 35% of the patients included in this series had one form or another of vasculitic neuropathy. Fourteen patients had a chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy. In 11 patients the neuropathy was associated with monoclonal gammopathy, which was benign in nine and associated with malignant plasma cell dyscrasia in two. Among the six patients with diabetes mellitus, two patients who presented with a multifocal neuropathy were found to have vasculitis in the nerve specimen; in the others the biopsy was performed because of uncommonly severe pains or motor involvement due to an extremely severe diabetic neuropathy. Six patients suffered from a long-lasting disability secondary to a drug-induced neuropathy. The remaining 15% had neuropathies of different origin, including amyloidosis, lepromatous leprosy, carcinomatous neuropathy and alcoholic neuropathy. Six patients had a mild, non-progressive or slowly progressive axonopathy of unknown origin, ageing of the peripheral nervous system may have played a role in its development. Our findings show that vasculitis is an important and treatable cause of disabling neuropathy in the elderly and that the proportion of patients with severe neuropathy of unknown origin is small.
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D Adams, G Said (1996)  Ultrastructural immunolabelling of amyloid fibrils in acquired and hereditary amyloid neuropathies.   J Neurol 243: 1. 63-67 Jan  
Abstract: Both acquired and familial amyloid neuropathies carry a poor prognosis. In addition, amyloid is sometimes difficult to visualise in nerve biopsy specimens, and the pathogenesis of nerve lesions is still a matter of controversy. In order to learn more on the subject, we studied nerve specimens from seven patients with proven amyloid neuropathy by ultrastructural immunocytochemistry in order to better understand their pathogeny and to evaluate the reliability of the method for detection of amyloid antigens in the endoneurium. An indirect immunolabelling technique using protein A-gold complex (pA-g) was applied. Polyclonal antisera against human IgG, IgM, lambda and kappa light chains and prealbumin were assayed. Amyloid fibrils were labelled in six of seven cases: in four cases with anti-transthyretin (TTR) antibodies and in two with anti-lambda light chain antibodies. The type of immunolabelling correlated with the biochemical type of the amyloidosis as defined by TTR gene analysis and serum immunoelectrophoresis. The amyloid fibrils and gold labelling were always located in the endoneurial space. No intracellular deposit or labelling was found. The immunolabelling was highly specific, gold particles being detected only near to amyloid fibrils with no background gold labelling. Ultrastructural immunolabelling with pA-g could be used for detection of amyloid in progressive axonal neuropathy of unknown origin, with important therapeutic implications.
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1995
L Belli, T LeChevalier, M Gottfried, D Adams, P Ruffie, A LeCesne, L Tete, B Pellae-Cosset (1995)  Phase I/II study of paclitaxel plus cisplatin as first-line chemotherapy for advanced non-small cell lung cancer: preliminary results.   Semin Oncol 22: 6 Suppl 15. 29-33 Dec  
Abstract: From March 1993 to May 1994, 32 chemotherapy-naive patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer entered a phase I/II study to determine the maximum tolerated dose and the activity of the paclitaxel (Taxol; Bristol-Myers Squibb Company, Princeton, NJ)/cisplatin combination. The 21 men and 11 women had a median age of 59 years (range, 25 to 72 years) and a median performance status of 1 (range, 0 to 2). Histologic types were adenocarcinoma (13 cases), squamous cell carcinoma (10), and large cell carcinoma (nine). Nine patients had stage IIIB disease and 23 had stage IV disease. The first four dose levels of paclitaxel were 135, 175, 200, and 225 mg/m2 given with a fixed cisplatin dose of 100 mg/m2; at level 5, paclitaxel 225 mg/m2 was again given, and the cisplatin dose was increased to 120 mg/m2. Cycles were given every 3 weeks. Paclitaxel was administered as a 3-hour infusion followed by cisplatin, with standard premedication and hyperhydration. The maximum tolerated dose for the first cycle was not reached. Grades 3 and 4 neutropenia occurred in 24% and 16% of cycles (two cases with fever), respectively. Grades 2 and 3 peripheral axonal neurotoxicity occurred in two and 16 patients, respectively; the neurotoxicity appeared to be dose dependent and cumulative after a median total paclitaxel dose of 1,300 mg/m2. Of the 29 patients evaluable for efficacy, 11 (38%) had a partial response; efficacy was superior at paclitaxel doses of at least 200 mg/m2, with eight (47%) of 17 evaluable patients responding at these levels. In conclusion, at these doses of paclitaxel and cisplatin, the dose-limiting neurologic toxicity is dose dependent and cumulative after a total paclitaxel dose of approximately 1,300 mg/m2. This combination is highly active, with a total objective response rate of 38% and an objective response rate of 47% at paclitaxel doses of 200 mg/m2 or higher. Further evaluation is warranted.
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P Bouche, A Moulonguet, A B Younes-Chennoufi, D Adams, N Baumann, V Meininger, J M Léger, G Said (1995)  Multifocal motor neuropathy with conduction block: a study of 24 patients.   J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 59: 1. 38-44 Jul  
Abstract: Twenty four patients with pure motor neuropathy are reported. The chronic motor involvement associated with fasciculations and cramps, mainly in the arms, led, in most patients, to an initial diagnosis of motor neuron disease. In some patients (nine of 24), there was no appreciable muscle atrophy. Tendon reflexes were often absent or weak. The finding of persistent multifocal conduction block confined to motor nerve fibres raises questions about the nature and the importance of this syndrome. Segmental reduction of motor conduction velocity occurred at the site of the block, but significant slowing of motor nerve conduction was not found outside this site. The response to intravenous IVIg treatment seems to be correlated with the absence of amyotrophy. Patients with little or no amyotrophy had an initial and sustained response to IVIg, and did not develop amyotrophy during the follow up study. They could be considered to have a variant of chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy. Patients with pronounced amyotrophy independent of the disease duration did not respond as well to IVIg treatment, suggesting the existence of a distinct entity. Among the patients treated about two thirds who had an initial good response to IVIg had high or significant antiganglioside GM1 (anti-GM1) antibody titres, but there was no correlation between the high titres before treatment and long lasting response to IVIg treatment.
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M M Reilly, D Adams, M B Davis, G Said, A E Harding (1995)  Haplotype analysis of French, British and other European patients with familial amyloid polyneuropathy (met 30 and tyr 77).   J Neurol 242: 10. 664-668 Oct  
Abstract: Familial amyloid polyneuropathy (FAP) is an autosomal dominant disorder originally and most frequently described in Portugal. The usual constituent amyloid fibril protein is transthyretin (TTR) and the most frequent mutation in the TTR gene associated with FAP (including all Portuguese cases) is that at position 30 (met 30). Three different TTR haplotypes have been described in association with the met 30 mutation in European patients. We studied the haplotypes of 27 families (24 French, 2 British and 1 Greek) with FAP met 30 by analysing three polymorphisms in introns of the TTR gene. We also studied 6 families (2 British, 3 French and 1 Spanish) with FAP tyr 77. There were two main haplotypes in French patients with FAP met 30, one most commonly seen in the French families of Portuguese descent which was the same haplotype as previously described in Portuguese patients (haplotype I) and another haplotype (III) detected in most informative French families not of Portuguese origin. The age of onset of symptoms was consistently later in French than in Portuguese patients and in patients with haplotype III as the disease-associated haplotype rather than haplotype I. British and French patients with the tyr 77 mutation had different haplotypes. The most likely explanation of these findings is multiple founders of both mutations.
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M M Reilly, D Adams, D R Booth, M B Davis, G Said, M Laubriat-Bianchin, M B Pepys, P K Thomas, A E Harding (1995)  Transthyretin gene analysis in European patients with suspected familial amyloid polyneuropathy.   Brain 118 ( Pt 4): 849-856 Aug  
Abstract: We investigated 99 patients from 64 European families (51 French, 11 British, one Italian and one Spanish) with suspected familial amyloid polyneuropathy (FAP) for transthyretin (TTR) gene mutations. Thirty-nine families were found to have point mutations causing the following amino acid substitutions: Met30 (28 families), Tyr77 (five), Arg 50 (one), Ala49 (one), Gln89 (one), Ala60 (one) and one each with previously undescribed mutations at Asn35 and Gys54. The clinical picture in the patients with new and known mutations were typical of FAP, without any specific features for a particular mutation. Onset of symptoms was late (over 50 years) in many French and British patients with the Met30 and Tyr77 mutations, and only 30% of all index cases had affected relatives. We propose an approach to molecular diagnosis in European patients with FAP, apart from members of families with known mutations, based on the frequency of TTR mutations observed in this and and other studies of FAP in Europe. It is logical to screen for the Met30 and Tyr77 mutations and Ala60 in the UK, using restriction enzyme analysis. If these are absent, the TTR gene should be sequenced directly to detect less common or unknown mutations.
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1994
1993
D Adams, T Kuntzer, A J Steck, A Lobrinus, R C Janzer, F Regli (1993)  Motor conduction block and high titres of anti-GM1 ganglioside antibodies: pathological evidence of a motor neuropathy in a patient with lower motor neuron syndrome.   J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 56: 9. 982-987 Sep  
Abstract: A patient with a progressive lower motor neuron syndrome and neurophysiological evidence of motor axon loss, multifocal proximal motor nerve conduction block, and high titres of anti-ganglioside GM1 antibodies. Neuropathological findings included a predominantly proximal motor radiculoneuropathy with multifocal IgG and IgM deposits on nerve fibres associated with a loss of spinal motor neurons. These findings support an autoimmune origin of this lower motor neuron syndrome with retrograde degeneration of spinal motor neurons and severe neurogenic muscular atrophy.
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G Grateau, D Adams, D Malapert, M Viemont, M Delpech, G Said (1993)  Late-onset familial amyloid polyneuropathy with the TTR Met 30 mutation in France.   Clin Genet 43: 3. 143-145 Mar  
Abstract: Four unrelated French cases of familial amyloid polyneuropathy are reported. Clinical onset ranged from the sixth to the ninth decade. Sensory signs were predominant initially in the lower limbs; motor changes, and in one case autonomic involvement, appeared later. Amyloid disease was clinically limited to the peripheral nervous system. In two cases, there was no evidence of familial disease. DNA analysis was performed in these four patients and in two children of Patient 1. Restriction analysis of amplification products of exon 2 of the transthyretin gene was positive for the valine 30 to methionine mutation. These four unrelated patients live in different areas of France. Further studies are needed to determine whether these mutations have a common origin and whether they are related to the Portuguese mutation.
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E Erdem, R Carlier, A B Idir, P O Masnou, A Moulonguet, D Adams, D Doyon (1993)  Gadolinium-enhanced MRI in central nervous system Behçet's disease.   Neuroradiology 35: 2. 142-144  
Abstract: Two cases of central nervous system Behçet's disease, studied by gadolinium-enhanced MRI, are presented. In one patient, whose clinical picture was dominated by a brain syndrome, the gadolinium enhancement resolved with clinical improvement, although the hyperintense areas in the mesencephalon on T2-weighted images persisted. In the second, who had a pseudobulbar palsy and a mild right hemiparesis, there were many abnormal areas, but an enhancing focus in the posterior limb of the left internal capsule was probably the lesion responsible for the hemiparesis.
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K Bhatia, M Reilly, D Adams, M B Davis, C H Hawkes, P K Thomas, G Said, A E Harding (1993)  Transthyretin gene mutations in British and French patients with amyloid neuropathy.   J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 56: 6. 694-697 Jun  
Abstract: Five patients, two British and three French, with late onset amyloid neuropathy were found to have mutations of the transthyretin (TTR) gene associated with the Portuguese and German types of familial amyloid polyneuropathy. Familial amyloid polyneuropathy is rare in the United Kingdom and has not previously been defined at a molecular genetic level. None of the patients had a history of affected antecedents; the role of TTR gene analysis in diagnosing known or suspected amyloid neuropathy, regardless of family history or ethnic background, is emphasised.
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1992
D Adams, M Reilly, A E Harding, G Said (1992)  Demonstration of genetic mutation in most of the amyloid neuropathies with sporadic occurrence   Rev Neurol (Paris) 148: 12. 736-741  
Abstract: The Portuguese type of familial amyloid polyneuropathy (FAP type I) is a disabling autosomic dominant disorder, which is caused by a point mutation in the transthyretin (TTR) gene. Other TTR gene mutations have been reported recently in other FAP. In the absence of monoclonal gammopathy, sporadic amyloid neuropathies raise a problem for their pathogenicity. In this study, we have looked for TTR gene mutations in apparently sporadic cases of amyloid polyneuropathy by Southern's technique. All the patients were of french origin. None had monoclonal gammopathy. The mean age at onset was 64 (50 to 79 years). Most of the patients (9/1) were male. Five patients were found to carry FAP type 1 mutation, and 2 the tyr 77 (German) mutation. This study suggests that investigations in amyloid polyneuropathy with no overt family history should include systematic DNA analysis.
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1991
D Adams, T Kuntzer, D Burger, M Chofflon, M R Magistris, F Regli, A J Steck (1991)  Predictive value of anti-GM1 ganglioside antibodies in neuromuscular diseases: a study of 180 sera.   J Neuroimmunol 32: 3. 223-230 Jun  
Abstract: The incidence of anti-GM1 antibodies in the serum of 104 patients with neurological diseases, 35 patients with non-neurological diseases (NND) and 41 normal controls was determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Anti-GM1 antibodies were found in 90% of patients presenting with a motor neuropathy (all except one had multifocal conduction blocks). A large proportion (60%) of these patients displayed high antibody titer ranging from 101 to 788. A low incidence of anti-GM1 antibodies was found in the other groups of patients, i.e. 21% of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), 26% of other neurological diseases (OND) and 23% of NND. High antibody titers ranging from 106 to 260 were found in two (5%) ALS patients, one (2%) OND patient (myasthenia gravis), and one (3%) NND patient (Waldenström's disease). This study shows that high titers of anti-GM1 antibodies are found in a large proportion of patients with motor neuropathy with multifocal conduction blocks. This argues for a possible autoimmune origin of this neuropathy. We suggest that anti-GM1 antibody determination should be included systematically in the evaluation of all patients with motor neuron diseases and predominantly motor neuropathies.
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1989
F Mahieux, F Gray, G Fenelon, R Gherardi, D Adams, A Guillard, J Poirier (1989)  Acute myeloradiculitis due to cytomegalovirus as the initial manifestation of AIDS.   J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 52: 2. 270-274 Feb  
Abstract: A 26 year old male intravenous drug abuser presented with rapidly progressive paraplegia and total incontinence. CSF examination showed elevated protein level and pleocytosis. HIV testing was positive. Anti CMV titres were mildly elevated in serum and CSF. Death occurred 26 days after the onset of neurological signs. Necrotic and inflammatory lesions with numerous inclusion bodies characteristic of CMV were found in the roots of the cauda equina, conus terminalis and lumbar segments of the spinal cord. CMV subependymal encephalitis and HIV encephalitis were also present.
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