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Frederic Charlotte

fccharlot@yahoo.fr

Journal articles

2008
 
DOI   
PMID 
Yen Ngo, Yves Benhamou, Vincent Thibault, Patrick Ingiliz, Mona Munteanu, Pascal Lebray, Dominique Thabut, Rachel Morra, Djamila Messous, Frederic Charlotte, Françoise Imbert-Bismut, Dominique Rousselot-Bonnefont, Joseph Moussalli, Vlad Ratziu, Thierry Poynard (2008)  An accurate definition of the status of inactive hepatitis B virus carrier by a combination of biomarkers (FibroTest-ActiTest) and viral load.   PLoS ONE 3: 7. 07  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The combination of transaminases (ALT), biopsy, HBeAg and viral load have classically defined the inactive status of carriers of chronic hepatitis B. The use of FibroTest (FT) and ActiTest (AT), biomarkers of fibrosis and necroinflammatory activity, has been previously validated as alternatives to biopsy. We compared the 4-year prognostic value of combining FT-AT and viral load for a better definition of the inactive carrier status. METHODS AND FINDINGS: 1,300 consecutive CHB patients who had been prospectively followed since 2001 were pre-included. The main endpoint was the absence of liver-related complications, transplantation or death. We used the manufacturers' definitions of normal FT (< = 0.27), normal AT (< = 0.29) and 3 standard classes for viral load. The adjustment factors were age, sex, HBeAg, ethnic origin, alcohol consumption, HIV-Delta-HCV co-infections and treatment. RESULTS: 1,074 patients with baseline FT-AT and viral load were included: 41 years old, 47% African, 27% Asian, 26% Caucasian. At 4 years follow-up, 50 complications occurred (survival without complications 93.4%), 36 deaths occurred (survival 95.0%), including 27 related to HBV (survival 96.1%). The prognostic value of FT was higher than those of viral load or ALT when compared using area under the ROC curves [0.89 (95%CI 0.84-0.93) vs 0.64 (0.55-0.71) vs 0.53 (0.46-0.60) all P<0.001], survival curves and multivariate Cox model [regression coefficient 5.2 (3.5-6.9; P<0.001) vs 0.53 (0.15-0.92; P = 0.007) vs -0.001 (-0.003-0.000;P = 0.052)] respectively. A new definition of inactive carriers was proposed with an algorithm combining "zero" scores for FT-AT (F0 and A0) and viral load classes. This new algorithm provides a 100% negative predictive value for the prediction of liver related complications or death. Among the 275 patients with the classic definition of inactive carrier, 62 (23%) had fibrosis presumed with FT, and 3 died or had complications at 4 year. CONCLUSION: In patients with chronic hepatitis B, a combination of FibroTest-ActiTest and viral load testing accurately defined the prognosis and the inactive carrier status.
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PMID 
O Rosmorduc, D Wendum, L Arrivé, A Elnaggar, K Ennibi, L Hannoun, F Charlotte, J - D Grangé, R Poupon (2008)  Phenotypic expression of ferroportin disease in a family with the N144H mutation.   Gastroenterol Clin Biol 32: 3. 321-327 Mar  
Abstract: Ferroportin is a putative transmembrane channel involved in the exit of iron out of the enterocytes, the macrophages and the hepatocytes. Mutations in the human gene coding ferroportin have been linked to an unusual form of iron overload, now referred to as "hemochromatosis type IV" or "ferroportin disease" characterized by a prevalent iron overload of macrophages and liver Küpffer cells. We report four patients from a same family with ferroportin disease associated with the N144H mutation. We show that in this family the mutation which is fully penetrant, may act through an increased iron export from macrophages as suggested by the unexpected absence of iron overload in the spleen and bone marrow detected by magnetic resonance imaging, that it co-segregates with a phenotype close to the classical form of HFE-associated hemochromatosis and was associated, in the oldest patient, with the development of hepatocellular carcinoma in a non cirrhotic liver. Our findings illustrate the existence of a genotype-phenotype relationship in "ferroportin disease", suggest that MRI may be useful in determining this phenotype and show that hepatocellular carcinoma may occur in these patients even without cirrhosis. This observation justifies careful follow-up of this subgroup of patients.
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Vlad Ratziu, Philippe Giral, Sophie Jacqueminet, Fréderic Charlotte, Agnès Hartemann-Heurtier, Lawrence Serfaty, Philippe Podevin, Jean-Marc Lacorte, Carole Bernhardt, Eric Bruckert, André Grimaldi, Thierry Poynard (2008)  Rosiglitazone for nonalcoholic steatohepatitis: one-year results of the randomized placebo-controlled Fatty Liver Improvement with Rosiglitazone Therapy (FLIRT) Trial.   Gastroenterology 135: 1. 100-110 Jul  
Abstract: BACKGROUND & AIMS: Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) is a liver disease that complicates insulin-resistant states. This trial tested the efficacy and safety of rosiglitazone, an insulin-sensitizing agent, in patients with NASH. METHODS: Sixty-three patients with histologically proven NASH were randomly assigned to receive rosiglitazone (4 mg/day for the first month and 8 mg/day thereafter; n = 32) or placebo (n = 31) for 1 year. Liver biopsy was performed at the end of treatment. End points were improvement in the histologic score of steatosis, normalization of serum transaminase levels, and improvement in necroinflammation and fibrosis. RESULTS: More patients treated with rosiglitazone than receiving placebo had improved steatosis (47% vs 16%; P = .014) and normalized transaminase levels (38% vs 7%; P = .005), although only half of patients responded. There was no improvement in other histologic lesions, including fibrosis, and a composite score of activity, the nonalcoholic fatty liver disease activity score. Improvement of steatosis correlated with reduction of transaminase levels (r = 0.36; P < .005), improvement in insulin sensitivity (r = 0.34; P = .008), and increase in adiponectin levels (r = -0.54; P < .01) but not with weight variations. Independent predictors of response were rosiglitazone treatment, the absence of diabetes, and massive steatosis. Weight gain was the main adverse effect (mean gain of 1.5 kg in the rosiglitazone group vs -1 kg in the placebo group; P < .01), and painful swollen legs was the main reason for dose reduction/discontinuation. Serum hemoglobin level was slightly but significantly reduced. There was no hepatic toxicity. CONCLUSIONS: In patients with NASH, rosiglitazone improves steatosis and transaminase levels despite weight gain, an effect related to an improvement in insulin sensitivity. However, there is no improvement in other parameters of liver injury.
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2007
 
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PMID 
Eva Compérat, Abdel-Rahmène Azzouzi, Emmanuel Chartier-Kastler, Fabrice Ménégaux, Frédérique Capron, François Richard, Frédéric Charlotte (2007)  Late recurrence of a prostatic adenocarcinoma as a solitary splenic metastasis.   Urol Int 78: 1. 86-88  
Abstract: Splenic metastases of solid tumors are exceptional. We report the first case of an isolated splenic metastasis from prostate carcinoma, 5 years after radical prostatectomy. The splenic tumor was revealed by a pain and progressive increase in the serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) level. Histology of the spleen showed an adenocarcinoma immunostained with cytokeratin and PSA markers. The patient remained asymptomatic and his serum PSA level was within normal limits 17 months after the splenectomy. This case suggests that splenic metastasis might be the result of the growth of an early blood-borne micrometastasis within the spleen after a period of clinical latency.
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Olivier Rozenbaum, Flore Rozenberg, Frederic Charlotte, Bahram Bodaghi (2007)  Catastrophic acute retinal necrosis syndrome associated with diffuse orbital cellulitis: a case report.   Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol 245: 1. 161-163 Jan  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: To report a case of severe acute retinal necrosis syndrome (ARN) associated with initial features of orbital cellulitis. METHODS: A 49-year-old immunocompetent woman presented with unilateral painful orbital inflammation associated with deep visual loss due to ARN. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for detection of viral DNA was applied to ocular fluids. Immunohistochemistry for detection of viral antigens and histopathologic studies were performed on orbital biopsy specimens. RESULTS: HSV-2 DNA was detected by PCR in ocular fluids. Orbital biopsy disclosed non-specific inflammation without viral replication. Orbital inflammation resolved rapidly after the initiation of antiviral drugs, whereas intraocular inflammation worsened. Final ophthalmic examination disclosed no light perception due to optic atrophy. CONCLUSION: ARN and cellulitis may be associated. Consequently, ARN should be investigated in all patients with orbital inflammation, in order to initiate immediately an appropriate antiviral strategy.
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PMID 
Eva Compérat, Armelle Bardier-Dupas, Philippe Camparo, Frédérique Capron, Frédéric Charlotte (2007)  Splenic metastases: clinicopathologic presentation, differential diagnosis, and pathogenesis.   Arch Pathol Lab Med 131: 6. 965-969 Jun  
Abstract: CONTEXT: Splenic metastases from solid tumors, defined as parenchymal lesion, are considered exceptional. Nevertheless, the number of case reports has been increasing due to the improvement of imaging techniques and the long-term follow-up of patients with cancer. Splenic metastases occur in a context of multivisceral disseminated cancer or as a solitary lesion. OBJECTIVE: To provide a general overview of the clinicopathologic features, differential diagnosis, and pathogenesis of splenic metastases. DATA SOURCES: Relevant articles indexed in PubMed (National Library of Medicine) database. The search was based on the following terms: (metastasis or metastases) and spleen. CONCLUSIONS: The most common primary sources of splenic metastasis are breast, lung, colorectal, and ovarian carcinomas and melanoma in cases of multivisceral cancer and colorectal and ovarian carcinomas in cases of solitary splenic lesion. Splenectomy can be replaced by less aggressive methods such as fine-needle aspiration or percutaneous biopsy for establishing the diagnosis of solitary splenic metastasis. The main differential diagnoses are primary lymphoma, vascular tumors, and infectious lesions of the spleen. The relative rarity of splenic metastases could be explained by anatomic factors and the inhibitory effect of the splenic microenvironment on the growth of metastatic cells. The analysis of clinical case reports suggests that solitary splenic metastases may result from the growth of an early blood-borne micrometastasis following a period of clinical latency, often several years after the diagnosis of the primary tumor.
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T Poynard, P Halfon, L Castera, F Charlotte, B Le Bail, M Munteanu, D Messous, V Ratziu, Y Benhamou, M Bourlière, V De Ledinghen (2007)  Variability of the area under the receiver operating characteristic curves in the diagnostic evaluation of liver fibrosis markers: impact of biopsy length and fragmentation.   Aliment Pharmacol Ther 25: 6. 733-739 Mar  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The area under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve is widely used as an estimate of the diagnostic value for fibrosis markers. Biopsy length and fragmentation are known as risk factors of false positive or false negative of biopsy but their quantitative impact on area under the receiver operating characteristic curve variability has not been assessed. AIM: To assess these relationships to better compare the fibrosis markers. METHODS: The area under the ROC curves of FibroTest for the diagnosis of fibrosis was estimated in patients with chronic hepatitis C using an integrated database including 1312 patients with FibroTest and biopsy. To take into account the biopsy length, we used two adjustment factors: one in which an observed area under the ROC curve could be adjusted according to the relative area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of a biopsy of a given length vs. the entire liver and one taking into account the prevalence of each fibrosis stage defining advanced and non-advanced fibrosis. RESULTS: The mean biopsy length was smaller for cirrhosis (F4, 16 mm) vs. F3, (18 mm, P=0.01) and F0 (19 mm, P=0.01). The mean number of fragments was higher for cirrhosis (F4=4.1 fragments) vs. all the other stages (F0=1.9, F1=1.9, F2=1.9, F3=2.3; P<0.001 vs. F4). The FibroTest area under the ROC curves for the diagnosis of advanced fibrosis, adjusted for stages' prevalence, ranged from 0.80 to 0.98 depending on biopsy length and fragmentation, respectively. CONCLUSION: The comparison of the area under the ROC curves of fibrosis markers should take into account the biopsy length and fragmentation.
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R Morra, M Munteanu, P Bedossa, D Dargere, J - L Janneau, V Paradis, V Ratziu, F Charlotte, V Thibault, F Imbert-Bismut, T Poynard (2007)  Diagnostic value of serum protein profiling by SELDI-TOF ProteinChip compared with a biochemical marker, FibroTest, for the diagnosis of advanced fibrosis in patients with chronic hepatitis C.   Aliment Pharmacol Ther 26: 6. 847-858 Sep  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: FibroTest has been validated for the diagnosis of liver fibrosis in patients with chronic hepatitis C. AIM: To compare FibroTest with a new proteome-based model for the prediction of advanced liver fibrosis. METHODS: Sera from 191 consecutive patients with simultaneous liver biopsy and FibroTest on fresh sera were used for retrospective mass spectrometry analysis. A new fibrosis index was constructed combining proteomic peaks, selected on differential expression according to fibrosis stages in logistic regression analyses. The main end point was the diagnosis of advanced fibrosis on liver biopsy. RESULTS: Eight out of 1000 peaks were selected for the construction of the proteomic index. The area under the receiver operating curve (AUROC) of the proteomic index was 0.88 (95% CI: 0.82-0.92), significantly greater than the FibroTest AUROC of 0.81 (95% CI: 0.74-0.86; P = 0.04); the AUROC of the proteomic and FibroTest combination was 0.88 (95% CI: 0.83-0.92). Seven of the eight selected peaks were highly associated with the FibroTest score, with different patterns of association with the five components of FibroTest. CONCLUSIONS: A proteomic index combining eight peaks had an excellent accuracy value for the diagnosis of advanced fibrosis in patients with chronic hepatitis C. However, despite a statistical significance, the small improvement delivered by proteomics impairs clinical applications because of its cost and its variability compared with the well validated FibroTest.
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V Ratziu, E Bugianesi, J Dixon, E Fassio, M Ekstedt, F Charlotte, S Kechagias, T Poynard, R Olsson (2007)  Histological progression of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease: a critical reassessment based on liver sampling variability.   Aliment Pharmacol Ther 26: 6. 821-830 Sep  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: In non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, histological lesions display a significant sampling variability that is ignored when interpreting histological progression during natural history or therapeutic interventions. AIM: To provide a method taking into account sampling variability when interpreting crude histological data, and to investigate how this alters the conclusions of available studies. METHODS: Natural history studies detailing histological progression and therapeutic trials were compared with the results of a previously published sampling variability study. RESULTS: Natural history studies showed an improvement in steatosis, which was significantly higher than expected from sampling variability (47% vs. 8%, P < 0.0001). In contrast, no study showed a change in activity grade or ballooning higher than that of sampling variability. There was only a marginal effect on fibrosis with no convincing demonstration of a worsening of fibrosis, a conclusion contrary to what individual studies have claimed. Some insulin sensitizing drugs and anti-obesity surgery significantly improved steatosis, while most did not significantly impact on fibrosis or activity. CONCLUSIONS: Sampling variability of liver biopsy is an overlooked confounding factor that should be considered systematically when interpreting histological progression in patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.
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Julien Haroche, Zahir Amoura, Bertrand Wechsler, Catherine Veyssier-Belot, Frédéric Charlotte, Jean-Charles Piette (2007)  Erdheim-Chester disease   Presse Med 36: 11 Pt 2. 1663-1668 Nov  
Abstract: Erdheim-Chester disease is a non-Langerhans cell histiocytosis, classically thought to be rare, but diagnosed more frequently nowadays (250 published cases). Histiocytes of Erdheim-Chester disease are positive for CD68 but not for CD1a, contrary to Langerhans cell histiocytosis. Two signs highly evocative of this diagnosis are nearly constant tracer uptake by the long bones on (99)Tc bone scintigraphy and a "hairy kidney" appearance on abdominal CT scan. A more "elegant" diagnostic method is ultrasound-guided biopsy of the perirenal infiltration. Cardiovascular involvement, which affects the aorta ("coated aorta") as well as all the cardiac layers, leads to one third of the deaths related to this disease. Central nervous system infiltration (especially cerebellar) is severe and difficult to treat. The prognosis is extremely variable and is often worse when there is a cardiovascular and/or central nervous system involvement. The treatment, decided upon on a case-by-case basis at a specialist center, often begins with interferon alpha.
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2006
 
DOI   
PMID 
Vlad Ratziu, Julien Massard, Frederic Charlotte, Djamila Messous, Françoise Imbert-Bismut, Luninita Bonyhay, Mohamed Tahiri, Mona Munteanu, Dominique Thabut, Jean François Cadranel, Brigitte Le Bail, Victor de Ledinghen, Thierry Poynard (2006)  Diagnostic value of biochemical markers (FibroTest-FibroSURE) for the prediction of liver fibrosis in patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.   BMC Gastroenterol 6: 02  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Liver biopsy is considered as the gold standard for assessing non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) histologic lesions. The aim of this study was to determine the diagnostic utility of non-invasive markers of fibrosis, validated in chronic viral hepatitis and alcoholic liver disease (FibroTest, FT), in patients with NAFLD. METHODS: 170 patients with suspected NAFLD were prospectively included in a reference center (Group 1), 97 in a multicenter study (Group 2) and 954 blood donors as controls. Fibrosis was assessed on a 5 stage histological scale validated by Kleiner et al from F0 = none, F1 = perisinusoidal or periportal, F2 = perisinusoidal and portal/periportal, F3 = bridging and F4 = cirrhosis. Histology and the biochemical measurements were blinded to any other characteristics. The area under the ROC curves (AUROC), sensitivity (Se), specificity (Sp), positive and negative predictive values (PPV, NPV) were assessed. RESULTS: In both groups FT has elevated and not different AUROCs for the diagnosis of advanced fibrosis (F2F3F4): 0.86 (95%CI 0.77-0.91) versus 0.75 (95%CI 0.61-0.83; P = 0.10), and for F3F4: 0.92 (95%CI 0.83-0.96) versus 0.81 (95%CI 0.64-0.91; P = 0.12) in Group 1 and Group 2 respectively. When the 2 groups were pooled together a FT cutoff of 0.30 had a 90% NPV for advanced fibrosis (Se 77%); a FT cutoff of 0.70 had a 73% PPV for advanced fibrosis (Sp 98%). CONCLUSION: In patients with NAFLD, FibroTest, a simple and non-invasive quantitative estimate of liver fibrosis reliably predicts advanced fibrosis.
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PMID 
Dominique Thabut, Sylvie Naveau, Frederic Charlotte, Julien Massard, Vlad Ratziu, Françoise Imbert-Bismut, Dominique Cazals-Hatem, Annie Abella, Djamila Messous, Fabienne Beuzen, Mona Munteanu, Julien Taieb, Richard Moreau, Didier Lebrec, Thierry Poynard (2006)  The diagnostic value of biomarkers (AshTest) for the prediction of alcoholic steato-hepatitis in patients with chronic alcoholic liver disease.   J Hepatol 44: 6. 1175-1185 Jun  
Abstract: BACKGROUND/AIMS: The aim was to identify a panel of biomarkers (AshTest) for the diagnosis of alcoholic steato-hepatitis (ASH), in patients with chronic alcoholic liver disease. METHODS: Biomarkers were assessed in patients with an alcohol intake>50 g/d, in a training group, and in two validation groups. Diagnosis of ASH (polymorphonuclear infiltrate and hepatocellular necrosis) and its histological severity (four classes: none, mild, moderate and severe) were assessed blindly. RESULTS: Two hundred and twenty-five patients were included, 70 in the training group, 155 in the validation groups, and 299 controls. AshTest was constructed using a combination of the six components of FibroTest-ActiTest plus aspartate aminotransferase. The AshTest area under the ROC curves for moderate-severe ASH was 0.90 in the training group, 0.88 and 0.89 in the validation groups. The median AshTest value was 0.005 in controls, 0.05 in patients without or with mild ASH, 0.64 in moderate, and 0.84 in severe ASH grade 3, (P<0.05 between all groups). At a 0.50 cut-off, the sensitivity of AshTest was 0.80 and the specificity was 0.84. CONCLUSIONS: In heavy drinkers, AshTest is a simple and non-invasive quantitative estimate of alcoholic hepatitis. The use of AshTest may reduce the need for liver biopsy, and therefore allow an earlier treatment of alcoholic hepatitis.
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Aurélie Trenado, Muriel Sudres, Qizhi Tang, Sébastien Maury, Frédéric Charlotte, Sylvie Grégoire, Mark Bonyhadi, David Klatzmann, Benoît L Salomon, José L Cohen (2006)  Ex vivo-expanded CD4+CD25+ immunoregulatory T cells prevent graft-versus-host-disease by inhibiting activation/differentiation of pathogenic T cells.   J Immunol 176: 2. 1266-1273 Jan  
Abstract: CD4+CD25+ immunoregulatory T cells (Tregs) can be administered to inhibit graft-vs-host disease (GVHD) while preserving graft-vs-leukemia activity after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation in mice. Preclinical studies suggest that it is necessary to infuse as many Tregs as conventional donor T cells to achieve a clinical effect on GVHD. Thus, it would be necessary to expand Tregs ex vivo before transplantation. Two strategies have been proposed: expansion of Tregs stimulated by anti-CD3/CD28-coated microbeads for polyclonal activation or by host-type allogeneic APCs for selecting Tregs specific for host Ags. In this study, we describe the mechanisms by which ex vivo-expanded Tregs act on donor T cells to prevent GVHD in mice. We demonstrate that expanded Tregs strongly inhibited the division, expansion, and differentiation of donor T cells, with a more pronounced effect with Tregs specific for host Ags. These latter cells permit the efficient and durable control of GVHD and favor immune reconstitution.
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D Bonnefont-Rousselot, V Ratziu, P Giral, F Charlotte, I Beucler, T Poynard (2006)  Blood oxidative stress markers are unreliable markers of hepatic steatosis.   Aliment Pharmacol Ther 23: 1. 91-98 Jan  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and viral hepatitis are associated with hepatic oxidative stress, which is partially dependent on the amount of hepatic fat. AIM: To determine whether the circulating lipid and oxidative stress parameters could be non-invasive markers of hepatic steatosis. METHODS: Sixty-four patients with NAFLD or viral hepatitis were tested for lipid peroxidation products and antioxidant defence systems, lipid parameters and liver function tests. RESULTS: Hepatic steatosis was correlated with lipids, gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase, thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances, superoxide dismutase and superoxide dismutase/erythrocyte glutathione peroxidase ratio. gamma-Glutamyltranspeptidase, triglycerides and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol were significantly higher in the presence of steatosis. No difference in blood oxidative stress markers was observed according to the presence or absence of steatosis except for the superoxide dismutase/erythrocyte glutathione peroxidase ratio. Total cholesterol, triglycerides and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol were significantly higher in the NAFLD group (n = 17, 60% mean steatosis grade) than in the viral hepatitis group (n = 20, 13% mean steatosis grade). Only superoxide dismutase was lower and vitamin E higher in NAFLD than in viral hepatitis patients. CONCLUSIONS: Standard blood oxidative stress markers do not predict the extent of hepatic steatosis as they probably do not accurately reflect intrahepatic oxidative stress. Serum lipid levels were best correlated with hepatic steatosis.
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Frédéric Charlotte, Kamal Doghmi, Nathalie Cassoux, Hongtao Ye, Ming-Qing Du, Michèle Kujas, Annette Lesot, George Mansour, Phuc Lehoang, Nicole Vignot, Frédérique Capron, Véronique Leblond (2006)  Ocular adnexal marginal zone B cell lymphoma: a clinical and pathologic study of 23 cases.   Virchows Arch 448: 4. 506-516 Apr  
Abstract: To better characterize ocular adnexal marginal zone lymphoma of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MZL-MALT), we analyzed the clinical and pathologic features of 23 patients (11 men, 12 women, median age 66 years). The tumor was confined to one ocular structure in 18 cases (conjunctiva, n=8; orbit, n=8; or lacrimal gland, n=2). Concurrent extraorbital disease was detected by the staging procedure in five patients, and preferentially involved other MALT sites. Histogenetic B cell marker studies, available in 13 cases, showed an early post-germinal center (GC) phenotype (BCL-6(-)/IRF4(+)/CD138(-)) (n=5) or a late post-GC phenotype (BCL-6(-)/IRF4(+)/CD138(+)) (n=8), which could be helpful for discrimination from other types of small-B cell lymphoma. BCL10 was positive in 12 of 13 patients tested, with nuclear (n=4) or cytoplasmic (n=8) immunoreactivity. These staining patterns ruled out t(1;14)(p22;q32) translocation. T(11;18)(q21;q21), another MZL-MALT-specific translocation, was detected by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction in four of 15 patients tested. Clinical outcome was excellent but the overall relapse rate was 26.1% with a median follow-up of 39 months (range 6-132 months). Regardless of the disease stage at diagnosis, combined chemotherapy and radiotherapy seemed to be more effective than chemotherapy alone in ocular adnexal MZL-MALT, as persistent complete remission was achieved in nine patients receiving combination therapy, while six of 14 patients treated with chemotherapy alone relapsed.
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David Saadoun, Tarik Asselah, Mathieu Resche-Rigon, Frédéric Charlotte, Pierre Bedossa, Dominique Valla, Jean-Charles Piette, Patrick Marcellin, Patrice Cacoub (2006)  Cryoglobulinemia is associated with steatosis and fibrosis in chronic hepatitis C.   Hepatology 43: 6. 1337-1345 Jun  
Abstract: The relationship between cryoglobulin and severity of liver lesions is debated. No study has focused on the relationship between cryoglobulin, liver steatosis, and fibrosis. The aim of this study was to determine the relationship between cryoglobulins and liver lesions (necroinflammation, fibrosis, and steatosis) in patients with hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. Four hundred and thirty-seven consecutive patients with untreated chronic hepatitis C who had been admitted for liver biopsy were included in the study. Risk factors for fibrosis and steatosis were assessed. The mean age was 50.9 +/- 13.8 years, and 49% were male. Cryoglobulin was present in 286 patients, 103 of whom had vasculitis. One hundred and eighty-six patients (43%) had steatosis greater than 10%, and 110 (25%) had advanced fibrosis (Metavir score F3-F4). On multivariate analysis, cryoglobulin increased by nearly threefold the risk of having advanced fibrosis and steatosis greater than 10%. Steatosis greater than 10% was associated with a higher body mass index (P < .001), HCV genotype 3 (P < .001), cryoglobulin (P = .002), and advanced liver fibrosis (P = .009). Advanced fibrosis (F3-F4) was associated with a higher level of gamma-glutamyltransferase (P = .04), cryoglobulin (P < .001), a high grade of necroinflammation (Metavir score A2-A3) (P < .001), and steatosis higher than 10% (P = .04). In conclusion, our study shows an independent association between cryoglobulin and steatosis as well as advanced fibrosis.
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Guillaume Darrasse-Jèze, Guillaume Darasse-Jèze, David Klatzmann, Frédéric Charlotte, Benoît L Salomon, José L Cohen (2006)  CD4+CD25+ regulatory/suppressor T cells prevent allogeneic fetus rejection in mice.   Immunol Lett 102: 1. 106-109 Jan  
Abstract: Recent evidences indicate that naturally occurring CD4+CD25+ regulatory/suppressor T cells (T(reg)) regulate not only autoimmunity, but also alloreactivity. In mice, they notably control tolerance to allogeneic transplants and graft-versus-host disease after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Here, we studied the role of T(reg) in maternal tolerance to fetuses, i.e. natural semi-allogeneic grafts. We show that semi-allogeneic pregnancies in mice induce an expansion of T(reg), but not of activated CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, in para-aortic lymph nodes draining fetal antigens. The treatment of female mice with an anti-CD25 antibody before mating results in depletion of T(reg) and expansion of activated CD4+ and CD8+ T cells solely in the draining lymph nodes, ultimately leading to fetus rejection. These observations were not made in the context of syngeneic pregnancies. Thus, T(reg) play a major role in maternal-fetal tolerance.
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Anthony J Demetris, Oyedele Adeyi, Chris O C Bellamy, Andrew Clouston, Frederic Charlotte, Albert Czaja, Ierachmiel Daskal, Magda S El-Monayeri, Paulo Fontes, John Fung, Bruno Gridelli, Maria Guido, Hironori Haga, John Hart, Eva Honsova, Stefan Hubscher, Tomoo Itoh, Nirag Jhala, Patricia Jungmann, Urmila Khettry, Charles Lassman, Saverio Ligato, John G Lunz, Amadeo Marcos, Marta Ida Minervini, Johan Mölne, Mike Nalesnik, Imad Nasser, Desley Neil, Erin Ochoa, Orit Pappo, Parmjeet Randhawa, Finn P Reinholt, Phil Ruiz, Mylène Sebagh, Marco Spada, Aurelio Sonzogni, Athanassios C Tsamandas, Annika Wernerson, Tong Wu, Funda Yilmaz (2006)  Liver biopsy interpretation for causes of late liver allograft dysfunction.   Hepatology 44: 2. 489-501 Aug  
Abstract: Evaluation of needle biopsies and extensive clinicopathological correlation play an important role in the determination of liver allograft dysfunction occurring more than 1 year after transplantation. Interpretation of these biopsies can be quite difficult because of the high incidence of recurrent diseases that show histopathological, clinical, and serological features that overlap with each other and with rejection. Also, more than one insult can contribute to allograft injury. In an attempt to enable centers to compare and pool results, improve therapy, and better understand pathophysiological disease mechanisms, the Banff Working Group on Liver Allograft Pathology herein proposes a set of consensus criteria for the most common and problematic causes of late liver allograft dysfunction, including late-onset acute and chronic rejection, recurrent and new-onset viral and autoimmune hepatitis, biliary strictures, and recurrent primary biliary cirrhosis and primary sclerosing cholangitis. A discussion of differential diagnosis is also presented.
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Muriel Sudres, Françoise Norol, Aurélie Trenado, Sylvie Grégoire, Frédéric Charlotte, Béatrice Levacher, Jean-Jacques Lataillade, Philippe Bourin, Xavier Holy, Jean-Paul Vernant, David Klatzmann, José L Cohen (2006)  Bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells suppress lymphocyte proliferation in vitro but fail to prevent graft-versus-host disease in mice.   J Immunol 176: 12. 7761-7767 Jun  
Abstract: Several reports have suggested that mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) could exert a potent immunosuppressive effect in vitro, and thus may have a therapeutic potential for T cell-dependent pathologies. We aimed to establish whether MSCs could be used to control graft-vs-host disease (GVHD), a major cause of morbidity and mortality after allogeneic hemopoietic stem cell transplantation. From C57BL/6 and BALB/c mouse bone marrow cells, we purified and expanded MSCs characterized by the lack of expression of CD45 and CD11b molecules, their typical spindle-shaped morphology, together with their ability to differentiate into osteogenic, chondrogenic, and adipogenic cells. These MSCs suppressed alloantigen-induced T cell proliferation in vitro in a dose-dependent manner, independently of their MHC haplotype. However, when MSCs were added to a bone marrow transplant at a MSCs:T cells ratio that provided a strong inhibition of the allogeneic responses in vitro, they yielded no clinical benefit on the incidence or severity of GVHD. The absence of clinical effect was not due to MSC rejection because they still could be detected in grafted animals, but rather to an absence of suppressive effect on donor T cell division in vivo. Thus, in these murine models, experimental data do not support a significant immunosuppressive effect of MSCs in vivo for the treatment of GVHD.
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Parissa Vaghefi, Antoine Martin, Sophie Prévot, Frédéric Charlotte, Sophie Camilleri-Broët, Elisabeth Barli, Frédéric Davi, Jean Gabarre, Martine Raphael, Hélène A Poirel (2006)  Genomic imbalances in AIDS-related lymphomas: relation with tumoral Epstein-Barr virus status.   AIDS 20: 18. 2285-2291 Nov  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The pathologic heterogeneity of AIDS related lymphomas (ARL) reflects several pathogenic mechanisms: chronic antigenic stimulation, Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection, and genomic abnormalities. Genetic abnormalities, known to play a major role in lymphomas of non-immunocompromised patients, are not well characterized in ARL. OBJECTIVE: Characterization of the DNA copy number change (CNC) in ARL and comparison of our findings with tumoral EBV and immune status. DESIGN AND METHODS: We have studied by comparative genomic hybridization (CGH), 28 ARL well characterized for histopathologic, clonality and EBV findings. RESULTS: DNA-CNC were detected in 50% of cases. Gains of chromosomal material were much more frequent than losses and involved chromosomes 9p, 11q, 12q, 17q, and 19q recurrently. DNA-CNC tended to be more frequent in EBV-positive lymphomas with latency type II/III than in EBV-positive latency I or EBV-negative lymphomas. Most chromosomal regions affected in HIV-related lymphoma were similar to those already reported in HIV-negative lymphomas. CONCLUSION: This CGH study allowed the identification of non-random chromosomal alterations in ARL. The results suggested an inverse relationship between EBV infection (latency II/III), associated with deep acquired immune suppression, and the number of chromosomal alterations which may be explained by a direct role of viral proteins in lymphomagenesis by activation of signalling pathways without needing several genomic alterations.
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Michal Abel, Damien Sène, Stanislas Pol, Marc Bourlière, Thierry Poynard, Frédéric Charlotte, Patrice Cacoub, Sophie Caillat-Zucman (2006)  Intrahepatic virus-specific IL-10-producing CD8 T cells prevent liver damage during chronic hepatitis C virus infection.   Hepatology 44: 6. 1607-1616 Dec  
Abstract: CD8 T cell killing of hepatitis C virus (HCV)-infected hepatocytes is thought to contribute to liver damage during chronic HCV infection, whereas the participation of HCV-nonspecific immune cells is unclear. To visualize the spatial relationship of HCV-specific CD8 T cells with parenchymal target cells, and to examine their local functional activity in relation to hepatocellular necrosis and fibrosis, we used HLA tetramers and confocal microscopy in biopsies from 23 HLA-A2 or HLA-B7 patients with chronic HCV infection. Intrahepatic tetramer+ (HCV-specific) CD8 T cells protected from hepatic necroinflammatory disease activity, independently of age, gender, viral load, and viral genotype. Indeed, tetramer+ cells were scattered in the liver within regions of weak fibrosis (low laminin expression) and low hepatocellular apoptosis (TUNEL method), and expressed IL-10 but not IFNgamma. By contrast, tetramer-negative CD8 T cells were associated with active necroinflammatory liver disease, colocalized with strong laminin expression and hepatocellular apoptosis, and expressed more frequently IFNgamma than IL-10. Overall, liver regions harboring HCV-specific CD8 T cells tended to be healthier than areas containing only inflammatory cells of undefined specificity. In conclusion, HCV-specific IL-10-producing CD8 T cells, although not cytotoxic and unable to control viral replication, can attenuate hepatocellular necrosis, liver fibrosis, and inflammation mediated by bystander T cells, and may thus represent antigen-induced regulatory CD8 T cells. Therapeutic modulation of the intrahepatic balance between specific and bystander CD8 T cells might be beneficial in patients with chronic hepatitis C.
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Yen Ngo, Mona Munteanu, Djamila Messous, Frederic Charlotte, Françoise Imbert-Bismut, Dominique Thabut, Pascal Lebray, Vincent Thibault, Yves Benhamou, Joseph Moussalli, Vlad Ratziu, Thierry Poynard (2006)  A prospective analysis of the prognostic value of biomarkers (FibroTest) in patients with chronic hepatitis C.   Clin Chem 52: 10. 1887-1896 Oct  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: FibroTest, a noninvasive method of measuring biomarkers of liver fibrosis, is an alternative to liver biopsy for determining the severity of chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. We compared the 5-year prognostic value of the FibroTest with biopsy staging for predicting cirrhosis decompensation and survival in patients with chronic HCV infection. METHODS: Fibrosis stage was assessed on the same day by FibroTest and biopsy in a prospective cohort of 537 patients. Disease classification at baseline was 157 patients with severe fibrosis (FibroTest >0.58), 137 with moderate fibrosis (FibroTest 0.32-0.58), and 243 with no or minimal fibrosis (FibroTest <0.32). RESULTS: In 64 untreated patients with severe fibrosis, survival without HCV complications was 73% [95% confidence interval (CI), 59%-086%; 13 complications], and survival without HCV-related death was 85% (95% CI, 73%-96%; 7 HCV deaths). Survival rates were higher in patients with moderate fibrosis, [99% (95% CI, 97%-100%; 1 complication; P <0.001) and 100% (no HCV death; P <0.001) for patients with and without HCV-related complications, respectively], and in patients with minimal fibrosis [100% (no complication; P <0.001 vs severe) and 100% (no HCV death; P <0.001 vs severe), respectively]. FibroTest was a better predictor than biopsy staging for HCV complications, with area under the ROC curves (AUROC) = 0.96 (95% CI, 0.93%-0.97%) vs 0.91 (95% CI, 0.85%-0.94%; P = 0.01), respectively; it was also a better predictor for HCV deaths: AUROC = 0.96 (95% CI, 0.93%-0.98%) vs 0.87 (95% CI, 0.70%-0.94%; P = 0.046), respectively. The prognostic value of FibroTest was still significant (P <0.001) in multivariate analyses after taking into account histology, treatment, alcohol consumption, and HIV coinfection. CONCLUSION: The FibroTest measurement of HCV biomarkers has a 5-year prognostic value similar to that of liver biopsy.
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Thierry Poynard, Vlad Ratziu, Frederic Charlotte, Djamila Messous, Mona Munteanu, Françoise Imbert-Bismut, Julien Massard, Luninita Bonyhay, Mohamed Tahiri, Dominique Thabut, Jean François Cadranel, Brigitte Le Bail, Victor de Ledinghen (2006)  Diagnostic value of biochemical markers (NashTest) for the prediction of non alcoholo steato hepatitis in patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.   BMC Gastroenterol 6: 11  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Liver biopsy is considered the gold standard for assessing histologic lesions of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). The aim was to develop and validate a new biomarker of non alcoholic steato hepatitis (NASH) the NashTest (NT) in patients with NAFLD. METHODS: 160 patients with NAFLD were prospectively included in a training group, 97 were included in a multicenter validation group and 383 controls. Histological diagnoses used Kleiner et al's scoring system, with 3 classes for NASH: "Not NASH", "Borderline", "NASH"). The area under the ROC curves (AUROC), sensitivity (Se), specificity (Sp), and positive and negative predictive values (PPV, NPV) were assessed. RESULTS: NT was developed using patented algorithms combining 13 parameters: age, sex, height, weight, and serum levels of triglycerides, cholesterol, alpha2macroglobulin, apolipoprotein A1, haptoglobin, gamma-glutamyl-transpeptidase, transaminases ALT, AST, and total bilirubin. AUROCs of NT for the diagnosis of NASH in the training and validation groups were, respectively, 0.79 (95%C I 0.69-0.86) and 0.79 (95% CI 0.67-0.87; P = 0.94); for the diagnosis of borderline NASH they were: 0.69 (95% CI 0.60-0.77) and 0.69 (95% CI 0.57-0.78; P = 0.98) and for the diagnosis of no NASH, 0.77 (95% CI 0.68-0.84) and 0.83 (95% CI 0.67-0.90; P = 0.34). When the two groups were pooled together the NashTest Sp for NASH = 94% (PPV = 66%), and Se = 33% (NPV = 81%); for borderline NASH or NASH Sp = 50% (PPV = 74%) and Se = 88% (NPV = 72%). CONCLUSION: In patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, NashTest, a simple and non-invasive biomarker reliably predicts the presence or absence of NASH.
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Damien Sène, Nicholas Limal, Djamila Messous, Pascale Ghillani-Dalbin, Frédéric Charlotte, Jean-Marie Thiollière, Jean-Charles Piette, Françoise Imbert-Bismut, Philippe Halfon, Thierry Poynard, Patrice Cacoub (2006)  Biological markers of liver fibrosis and activity as non-invasive alternatives to liver biopsy in patients with chronic hepatitis C and associated mixed cryoglobulinemia vasculitis.   Clin Biochem 39: 7. 715-721 Jul  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE AND METHODS: We assessed the reliability of non-invasive biological scoring indexes (Fibrotest-Actitest [FT-AT], Forns, APRI, age-platelet, platelet, hyaluronic acid) as non-invasive alternatives to liver biopsy (LB) in 138 HCV-infected patients. RESULTS: Thirty-six of 138 (26%) patients had systemic vasculitis, 27% significant serum inflammation, 47% fibrosis (F2F3F4) on LB. The diagnostic value of FT (F2F3F4 vs. F0F1) was assessed by an AUC of 0.83, without difference regarding to systemic vasculitis or serum inflammation. A discordance between FT-AT and the Metavir scoring indexes, present in 29% of patients, was associated with serum hemolysis and male but not with systemic vasculitis or serum inflammation. The other non-invasive biological tests were not influenced by serum inflammation or systemic vasculitis but were less reliable than FT (P <or= 0.05). CONCLUSION: The FT-AT is a reliable non-invasive biochemical alternative to LB in HCV-infected patients with systemic vasculitis and is more reliable than other non-invasive biological indexes.
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Karim Maloum, Frédéric Charlotte, Marine Divine, Bruno Cazin, Claude Lesty, Hélène Merle-Béral (2006)  A comparison of the sensitivity of flow cytometry and bone marrow biopsy in the detection of minimal residual disease in chronic lymphocytic leukemia.   Haematologica 91: 6. 860-861 Jun  
Abstract: We compared the sensitivity of bone marrow biopsy to blood flow cytometry in detecting minimal residual disease (MRD) in 29 patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) in clinical remission after treatment. These results demonstrate that flow cytometry is more sensitive than bone marrow biopsy in detecting MRD and in predicting relapse in CLL.
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2005
 
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Sarah E Coupland, Frederic Charlotte, George Mansour, Karim Maloum, Michael Hummel, Harald Stein (2005)  HHV-8-associated T-cell lymphoma in a lymph node with concurrent peritoneal effusion in an HIV-positive man.   Am J Surg Pathol 29: 5. 647-652 May  
Abstract: Primary effusion lymphoma (PEL) is an uncommon large cell lymphoma, usually seen in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients. PEL is characterized by various clinical, histomorphologic, and immunophenotypical features, and is associated with the human herpes virus 8 (HHV-8). PEL may present as either a body cavity-based lymphomatous effusion or a solid tumor mass. Most so-called "solid PEL" usually have an extranodal location; exceptionally rarely, they occur in lymph nodes. The majority of PEL consist of malignant cells of B-cell genotype; seldom they are of T-cell origin. We report a rare case of HHV-8-associated "solid PEL" of T-cell type in a 41-year-old HIV-seropositive man with a concomitant peritoneal effusion. The T-cell lymphoma was diagnosed on the basis of morphologic, immunophenotypic, and molecular findings of a lymph node biopsy. The tumor cells strongly expressed CD45R0, CD7, CD43, MUM1/IRF4, CD30, HHV-8, and EBER, and demonstrated a clonal rearrangement of T-cell receptor-gamma chain gene. The following case provides another example of a lymph node-based "solid" PEL, demonstrating the variety within the spectrum of HHV-8-associated lymphoma.
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Vlad Ratziu, Frédéric Charlotte, Agnès Heurtier, Sophie Gombert, Philippe Giral, Eric Bruckert, André Grimaldi, Frédérique Capron, Thierry Poynard (2005)  Sampling variability of liver biopsy in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease.   Gastroenterology 128: 7. 1898-1906 Jun  
Abstract: BACKGROUND & AIMS: In nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), the distinction between steatosis and steatohepatitis (NASH) and the assessment of the severity of the disease rely on liver histology alone. The aim of this study was to assess the sampling error of liver biopsy and its impact on the diagnosis and staging of NASH. METHODS: Fifty-one patients with NAFLD underwent percutaneous liver biopsy with 2 samples collected. The agreement between paired biopsy specimens was assessed by the percentage of discordant results and by the kappa reliability test. RESULTS: No features displayed high agreement; substantial agreement was only seen for steatosis grade; moderate agreement for hepatocyte ballooning and perisinusoidal fibrosis; fair agreement for Mallory bodies; acidophilic bodies and lobular inflammation displayed only slight agreement. Overall, the discordance rate for the presence of hepatocyte ballooning was 18%, and ballooning would have been missed in 24% of patients had only 1 biopsy been performed. The negative predictive value of a single biopsy for the diagnosis of NASH was at best 0.74. Discordance of 1 stage or more was 41%. Six of 17 patients with bridging fibrosis (35%) on 1 sample had only mild or no fibrosis on the other and therefore could have been under staged with only 1 biopsy. Intraobserver variability was systematically lower than sampling variability and therefore could not account for most of the sampling error. CONCLUSIONS: Histologic lesions of NASH are unevenly distributed throughout the liver parenchyma; therefore, sampling error of liver biopsy can result in substantial misdiagnosis and staging inaccuracies.
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Nathalie Cassoux, Fréderic Charlotte, Narsing A Rao, Bahram Bodaghi, Hélène Merle-Beral, Phuc Lehoang (2005)  Endoretinal biopsy in establishing the diagnosis of uveitis: a clinicopathologic report of three cases.   Ocul Immunol Inflamm 13: 1. 79-83 Feb  
Abstract: PURPOSE: To report the value of endoretinal biopsy in establishing the diagnosis of severe posterior uveitis. METHODS: A clinicopathologic report of three patients with severe posterior uveitis unresponsive to corticosteroids and with a negative systemic workup. These patients subsequently underwent vitrectomy and endoretinal biopsy. RESULTS: Endoretinal biopsy provided an accurate diagnosis in the three cases, leading to appropriate treatment. Histopathologic examination of the three retinal samples confirmed the diagnosis of sarcoidosis, tuberculosis, and lymphoma. Targeted treatment improved the ocular conditions in all three cases. CONCLUSIONS: In selected cases of severe bilateral vision-threatening uveitis, retinal biopsy may be indicated as a last resort to confirm a suspected diagnosis of infectious disease or malignancy.
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D Gaucher, B Bodaghi, F Charlotte, C Schneider, N Cassoux, C Lemaitre, V Leblond, N Rao, P LeHoang (2005)  MALT-type B-cell lymphoma masquerading as scleritis or posterior uveitis   J Fr Ophtalmol 28: 1. 31-38 Jan  
Abstract: PURPOSE: Diagnostic and therapeutic management of masquerade syndromes associated with MALT-type lymphoma. PATIENTS AND METHOD: We report the cases of three patients referred for acute or chronic severe loss of visual acuity. All of them suffered from uveitis or scleritis resistant to corticoid treatment. Each one had posterior uveitis associated with retinochoroidal infiltration, anterior scleritis associated with uveal effusion syndrome, or bilateral pan-uveitis associated with serous retinal detachment. Two patients had medical records of systemic malignancies. They underwent an extensive work-up. Search for an infectious, immune or malignant disease was negative but orbital imaging showed a posterior scleral thickening in all cases. RESULTS: Diagnosis of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) ocular lymphoma was assessed in all cases after scleral biopsy. Immunohistochemical analysis showed CD20(+) and CD5(-) scleral lymphocyte infiltrates. The three patients underwent chemotherapy associated with radiotherapy. Lesions were stabilized in the first case, whereas six lines of visual acuity improvement was noted in the second one, and full recovery was achieved after treatment in the third case. DISCUSSION: Clinical manifestations of this ocular lesion seem to be multiple, masquerading as different types of posterior uveitis or scleritis. In the three cases, we did found other systemic locations of MALT-type lymphoma. Diagnosis was mainly based on pathological analysis. Fast visual recovery in two cases demonstrated the importance of an early diagnosis and a specific treatment. All cases of chronic and corticoid-resistant posterior uveitis require a specialized radiological evaluation followed, if necessary, by multiple orbital biopsies.
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Hélène A Poirel, Alain Bernheim, Anouck Schneider, Mounira Meddeb, Sylvain Choquet, Véronique Leblond, Frédéric Charlotte, Frédéric Davi, Danielle Canioni, Elizabeth Macintyre, Marie-France Mamzer-Bruneel, Isabelle Hirsch, Olivier Hermine, Antoine Martin, Pascale Cornillet-Lefebvre, Martine Patey, Olivier Toupance, Jean-Louis Kémény, Patrice Deteix, Martine Raphaël (2005)  Characteristic pattern of chromosomal imbalances in posttransplantation lymphoproliferative disorders: correlation with histopathological subcategories and EBV status.   Transplantation 80: 2. 176-184 Jul  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Posttransplantation lymphoproliferative disorders (PTLDs) are a spectrum of lymphoid proliferations, occurring in immunosuppressed organ transplant recipients. They comprise early lesions, polymorphic (P-PTLD), monomorphic (M-PTLD), and Hodgkin/Hodgkin-like lymphoma PTLD (HL-PTLD) lesions. Most of them are associated with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). Little is known about their genetic changes. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We have studied 35 PTLDs[7 P-PTLDs (3/7 polyclonal IgH), 26 M-PTLDs (22 B-cell PTLD, 4 T-cell PTLD), 2 HL-PTLDs], using comparative genomic hybridization (CGH), a DNA-based technique allowing a screening of chromosomal imbalances without needing cultured cells. RESULTS.: Overall incidence of chromosomal imbalances: 51.5 %. The most frequent gains involved 8q24, 3q27 [4 cases each]; 2p24p25, 5p, 9q22q34, 11, 12q22q24, 14q32, 17q, 18q21 [2 cases each]. Nonrandom losses were 17p13 [4 cases]; 1p36, 4q [3 cases each]; 17q23q25, Xp [2 cases each]. Three high-level amplifications were detected: 4p16, 9p22p24, 18q21q23. In this latter imbalance, involvement of Bcl2 has been confirmed by FISH. The nonrandom CGH imbalances occurring in M-PTLD are usually described in lymphomas of immunocompetent patients and contain genes known to be involved in lymphomagenesis, while genomic abnormalities detected in half cases of EBV positive P-PTLD are mostly unknown. CONCLUSION: This study reported nonrandom chromosomal imbalances in PTLD and also identified early genomic alterations in EBV positive P-PTLD. These results raise two questions: the role of such lesions in the development and progression of those EBV induced-lymphoproliferations and their clinical significance especially in P-PTLD.
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Thierry Poynard, Vlad Ratziu, Sylvie Naveau, Dominique Thabut, Frederic Charlotte, Djamila Messous, Dominique Capron, Annie Abella, Julien Massard, Yen Ngo, Mona Munteanu, Anne Mercadier, Michael Manns, Janice Albrecht (2005)  The diagnostic value of biomarkers (SteatoTest) for the prediction of liver steatosis.   Comp Hepatol 4: 12  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Biopsy is the usual gold standard for liver steatosis assessment. The aim of this study was to identify a panel of biomarkers (SteatoTest), with sufficient predictive values, for the non-invasive diagnosis of steatosis in patients with or without chronic liver disease. Biomarkers and panels were assessed in a training group of consecutive patients with chronic hepatitis C and B, alcoholic liver disease, and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, and were validated in two independent groups including a prospective one. Steatosis was blindly assessed by using a previously validated scoring system. RESULTS: 310 patients were included in the training group; 434 in three validation groups; and 140 in a control group. SteatoTest was constructed using a combination of the 6 components of FibroTest-ActiTest plus body mass index, serum cholesterol, triglycerides, and glucose adjusted for age and gender. SteatoTest area under the ROC curves was 0.79 (SE = 0.03) in the training group; 0.80 (0.04) in validation group 1; 0.86 (0.03) in validation group 2; and 0.72 (0.05) in the validation group 3 - all significantly higher than the standard markers: gamma-glutamyl-transpeptidase or alanine aminotransferase. The median SteatoTest value was 0.13 in fasting controls; 0.16 in non-fasting controls; 0.31 in patients without steatosis; 0.39 in grade 1 steatosis (0-5%); 0.58 in grade 2 (6-32%); and 0.74 in grade 3-4 (33-100%). For the diagnosis of grade 2-4 steatosis, the sensitivity of SteatoTest at the 0.30 cut-off was 0.91, 0.98, 1.00 and 0.85 and the specificity at the 0.70 cut-off was 0.89, 0.83, 0.92, 1.00, for the training and three validation groups, respectively. CONCLUSION: SteatoTest is a simple and non-invasive quantitative estimate of liver steatosis and may reduce the need for liver biopsy, particularly in patients with metabolic risk factor.
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Sarah E Coupland, Christoph Loddenkemper, Justine R Smith, Rita M Braziel, Frederic Charlotte, Ioannis Anagnostopoulos, Harald Stein (2005)  Expression of immunoglobulin transcription factors in primary intraocular lymphoma and primary central nervous system lymphoma.   Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 46: 11. 3957-3964 Nov  
Abstract: PURPOSE: Several B-cell-associated transcription factors and their coactivators, including BCL-6, BSAP/PAX5, BOB.1/OBF.1, Oct.2, MUM1/IRF4, and PU.1, have been detected in peripheral B-cell lymphomas. There are limited data on their expression in centrally located lymphoid neoplasms, such as primary intraocular lymphoma (PIOL) or primary central nervous system lymphoma (PCNSL). PIOL is a rare non-Hodgkin lymphoma, considered a subtype of PCNSL. Both are usually diffuse, large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), rarely manifest outside the CNS, and carry a poor prognosis. METHODS: Tissue biopsy specimens were examined from eight cases of PIOL and 42 cases of HIV-negative PCNSL, as well as 50 cases of peripheral DLBCL, for the above-mentioned transcription factors and for immunoglobulin heavy and light chains, using immunohistochemistry. RESULTS: Immunoglobulin expression was demonstrated in 46 (92%) of 50 cases of PIOL/PCNSL but in only 27 (54%) of 50 cases of peripheral DLBCL. Positivity for BOB.1/OBF.1 and Oct.2 was observed in all immunoglobulin-expressing PIOL and PCNSL. BSAP/PAX5 expression occurred in 98% of PIOL/PCNSL, and MUM1/IRF4 immunoreactivity in 45 (90%) of 50 of these cases. PU.1 expression was observed in only 10% of the PIOL/PCNSL group in contrast to 23 (46%) of 50 peripheral DLBCLs. Aberrant coexpression of MUM1/IRF4, PAX5, MUM1/IRF4, and BCL-6 was observed in most PIOLs/PCNSLs. CONCLUSIONS: These data provide further support to the notion that peripheral and centrally located DLBCLs differ in clinical, immunophenotypic, and genotypic features, despite their similar morphologic characteristics. PIOL and PCNSL tumor cells are most likely to be derived from mature B-cells that have undergone the germinal center reaction.
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Emmanuelle Brasnu, Bertrand Wechsler, Alain Bron, Frederic Charlotte, Philippe Bliefeld, Phuc Lehoang, Anne-Genevieve Marcelin, Bahram Bodaghi (2005)  Efficacy of interferon-alpha for the treatment of Kaposi's sarcoma herpesvirus-associated uveitis.   Am J Ophthalmol 140: 4. 746-748 Oct  
Abstract: PURPOSE: To report cases of uveitis that are associated with human herpesvirus-8 (HHV-8) and the impact of interferon-alpha therapy on their visual outcome. DESIGN: Interventional case reports. METHODS: Extensive examination was performed in patients with chronic and severe uveitis to exclude a viral cause that requires specific therapy. After histopathologic, molecular, and/or serologic confirmation of HHV-8 uveitis, interferon-alpha2a therapy (3 millions IU/d, 3 days per week, subcutaneously) was initiated. RESULTS: Two patients of Mediterranean origin were included. HHV-8 serologic result was positive in both cases. Histopathologic examination of conjunctival biopsy specimens confirmed Kaposi's sarcoma in the second case, and quantitative polymerase chain reaction identified HHV-8 DNA in the biopsy specimen. Disease was controlled by interferon-alpha2a in both cases, but maintenance therapy was mandatory to prevent relapses. CONCLUSION: HHV-8-associated uveitis is a rare condition in immunocompetent hosts. Severe and chronic conditions may require antiviral and immunomodulatory therapies. Interferon alpha seems to be a good candidate and may be proposed in these cases.
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2004
 
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Alex Duval, Martine Raphael, Caroline Brennetot, Helene Poirel, Olivier Buhard, Alban Aubry, Antoine Martin, Amor Krimi, Veronique Leblond, Jean Gabarre, Frederic Davi, Frederic Charlotte, Francoise Berger, Gianluca Gaidano, Daniela Capello, Danielle Canioni, Dominique Bordessoule, Jean Feuillard, Philippe Gaulard, Marie Helene Delfau, Sophie Ferlicot, Virginie Eclache, Sophie Prevot, Catherine Guettier, Pascale Cornillet Lefevre, Francoise Adotti, Richard Hamelin (2004)  The mutator pathway is a feature of immunodeficiency-related lymphomas.   Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 101: 14. 5002-5007 Apr  
Abstract: The mutator phenotype caused by defects in the mismatch repair system is observed in a subset of solid neoplasms characterized by widespread microsatellite instability-high (MSI-H). It is known to be very rare in non-Hodgkin lymphomas (NHL), whereas mutator NHL is the most frequent tumor subtype in mismatch repair-deficient mice. By screening a series of 603 human NHL with specific markers of the mutator phenotype, we found here 12 MSI-H cases (12/603, 2%). Of interest, we demonstrated that this phenotype was specifically associated with immunodeficiency-related lymphomas (ID-RL), because it was observed in both posttransplant lymphoproliferative disorders (9/111, 8.1%) and HIV infection-related lymphomas (3/128, 2.3%) but not in a large series of NHL arising in the general population (0/364) (P < 0.0001). The MSI pathway is known to lead to the production of hundreds of abnormal protein neoantigens that are generated in MSI-H neoplasms by frameshift mutations of a number of genes containing coding microsatellite sequences. As expected, MSI-H ID-RL were found to harbor such genetic alterations in 12 target genes with a putative role in lymphomagenesis. The observation that the MSI-H phenotype was restricted to HIV infection-related lymphomas and posttransplant lymphoproliferative disorders suggests the existence of the highly immunogenic mutator pathway as a novel oncogenic process in lymphomagenesis whose role is favored when host immunosurveillance is reduced. Because MSI-H-positive cases were found to be either Epstein-Barr virus-positive or -negative, the mutator pathway should act synergistically or not with this other oncogenic factor, playing an important role in ID-RL.
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Thierry Poynard, Mona Munteanu, Françoise Imbert-Bismut, Frederic Charlotte, Dominique Thabut, Sophie Le Calvez, Djamila Messous, Vincent Thibault, Yves Benhamou, Joseph Moussalli, Vlad Ratziu (2004)  Prospective analysis of discordant results between biochemical markers and biopsy in patients with chronic hepatitis C.   Clin Chem 50: 8. 1344-1355 Aug  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The FibroTest and ActiTest are noninvasive biochemical markers of liver injury that are intended for use as alternatives to liver biopsy in patients with chronic hepatitis C. The aims of this study were to assess the quality of biopsy and the prevalence of discordances between biopsy and markers, to identify factors associated with discordances, and to attribute these discordances to either markers or biopsy failure. METHODS: Fibrosis stage and activity grade were prospectively assessed on the same day by a liver biopsy and by markers. On the basis of risk factors for failure and independent endpoints, discordance was classified as being attributable to biopsy or to markers. RESULTS: Only 74 of 537 patients (14%) had a biopsy size > or =25 mm. Discordance was observed in 154 of 537 patients (29%), including 16% for fibrosis staging and 17% for activity grading. Steatosis, an inflammatory profile, and biopsy size were associated with discordance. Discordance was attributable to failure of markers in 13 patients (2.4%) and to biopsy failure in 97 (18%; P <0.001 vs Fibrotest and Actitest), and was nonattributable in 44 patients (8.2%). The most frequent failures attributable to markers were false negatives (1.3%) attributable to inflammation. The most frequent failures attributable to biopsy were false negatives of activity grading (10.1%) and of fibrosis staging (4.5%), both associated with smaller biopsy size and steatosis. False positives of fibrosis staging (3.5%) were associated with fragmented biopsies. CONCLUSION: In this series, the size of liver biopsy is adequate in only a minor proportion (approximately 14%) of patients with chronic hepatitis C. When biopsy and marker results are discordant, a reason can be identified in more than two-thirds of cases and, in those cases, biopsy failure is >7 times more common than diagnostic failure of markers.
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Lidove, Piette, Charlotte, Cassoux, Correas, Papo (2004)  Lymphocytic hypophysitis with lachrymal, salivary and thyroid gland involvement.   Eur J Intern Med 15: 2. 121-124 Apr  
Abstract: We report on hypophysitis associated with a prominent lymphoid infiltration of salivary and lachrymal glands in a 35-year-old woman with a dramatic response to steroids. Four years later, overt Graves' disease developed. To our knowledge, pseudotumoral lymphocytic infiltration of both lachrymal and salivary glands has never been described in association with hypophysitis. Benign lymphocytic hypophysitis may belong to a spectrum that extends from low-grade lymphoid proliferation to autoimmune disease. Such a process may follow a regional tissue distribution including pituitary, thyroid, lachrymal and salivary glands.
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Vincent Di Martino, Pascal Lebray, Robert P Myers, Emmanuelle Pannier, Valérie Paradis, Frédéric Charlotte, Joseph Moussalli, Dominique Thabut, Catherine Buffet, Thierry Poynard (2004)  Progression of liver fibrosis in women infected with hepatitis C: long-term benefit of estrogen exposure.   Hepatology 40: 6. 1426-1433 Dec  
Abstract: Female sex is a protective factor for the progression of fibrosis in patients with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. Experimental data suggest that estrogens may have an antifibrotic effect. The objective of this study was to evaluate the influence of past pregnancies, oral contraceptives, menopause, and hormone replacement therapy (HRT) on liver fibrosis progression in HCV-infected women. Four hundred seventy-two HCV-infected women received a survey regarding prior pregnancies, menopause, and the use of oral contraceptives and HRT. The impact of these variables on liver fibrosis and its progression were evaluated using multivariate analyses considering all putative confounding factors. Two hundred one women completed the survey (43% response rate), 157 of whom had an estimated date of HCV infection (96 postmenopausal women, 96 women with previous pregnancies, and 105 women with past use of oral contraceptives). Through multivariate analyses, the estimated rate of fibrosis progression was higher in postmenopausal (P < .05) and nulliparous (P = .02) women and was associated with greater histological activity (P < .001). Prior use of oral contraceptives had no significant influence. Among postmenopausal women, the estimated rate of fibrosis progression (+/-SE) was lower in women who received HRT compared with untreated patients (0.099 +/- 0.016 vs. 0.133 +/- 0.006 METAVIR units/yr; P = .02) and was similar to that of premenopausal women (0.093 +/- 0.012 METAVIR units/yr; P value not significant). In conclusion, menopause appears to be associated with accelerated liver fibrosis progression in HCV-infected women, an effect that may be prevented by HRT. Pregnancies may have a beneficial impact on the long-term progression of liver fibrosis.
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Laurent Vallat, Yves Benhamou, Maya Gutierrez, Pascale Ghillani, Christel Hercher, Vincent Thibault, Frédéric Charlotte, Jean-Charles Piette, Thierry Poynard, Hélène Merle-Béral, Frédéric Davi, Patrice Cacoub (2004)  Clonal B cell populations in the blood and liver of patients with chronic hepatitis C virus infection.   Arthritis Rheum 50: 11. 3668-3678 Nov  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The association of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection with type II mixed cryoglobulinemia is well established, but the role of HCV in B cell lymphoma remains controversial. The objective of this study was to determine the frequency of circulating and liver-infiltrating monoclonal B cells in patients with HCV infection. METHODS: One hundred sixty patients were studied prospectively, including 115 HCV-positive patients and 45 HCV-negative patients with other nonimmune chronic liver disease(s). B cell clonality was determined by DNA amplification of the IgH rearrangements, followed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. RESULTS: A clonal B cell population was detected in the blood of 21 (26%) of 81 HCV-positive patients whose cryoglobulin status was known, including 12 of 25 patients with type II cryoglobulinemia, 2 of 12 patients with type III cryoglobulinemia, and 7 of 44 patients without cryoglobulins. A clonal IgH rearrangement was detected in 26 (32%) of 81 liver biopsy specimens from HCV- infected patients, including 16 patients with a circulating clonal population. A clonal B cell population was not observed in the blood of 40 patients with non-HCV liver diseases and was present in only 1 (3%) of 30 liver biopsy specimens. Logistic regression analysis showed that HCV-infected patients with clonal B cell proliferation in both the blood and liver were older (P = 0.004) and had longer duration of HCV infection (P = 0.009), higher serum cryoglobulin levels (P = 0.001) that were more frequently symptomatic (P < 0.03), and liver disease that was more severe than that in patients without a clonal B cell population in the blood or liver (P = 0.05). In 4 of 16 patients with a clonal B cell population in both the blood and liver, a definite B cell malignancy was finally diagnosed. CONCLUSION: Clonal B lymphocytes are frequently detected in the blood and liver of patients with chronic HCV infection, in the absence of overt B cell malignancy. These clones are usually, but not always, associated with the presence of type II cryoglobulins. A high percentage of patients with B cell clonality in both the blood and liver were finally diagnosed as having a definite B cell malignancy.
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PMID 
Jean Gabarre, Anne-Geneviève Marcelin, Nabih Azar, Sylvain Choquet, Vincent Lévy, Yves Lévy, Roland Tubiana, Frédéric Charlotte, Françoise Norol, Vincent Calvez, Michele Spina, Jean-Paul Vernant, Brigitte Autran, Véronique Leblond (2004)  High-dose therapy plus autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-related lymphoma: results and impact on HIV disease.   Haematologica 89: 9. 1100-1108 Sep  
Abstract: BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to assess the feasibility of high-dose chemotherapy plus autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HDC/AHSCT) in AIDS-related lymphoma (ARL), and its long-term impact in patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) treated with highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART). DESIGN AND METHODS: Fourteen patients with relapsed or resistant ARL (8 with nonHodgkin's lymphoma and 6 with Hodgkin's disease) were treated with HDC/AHSCT while on HAART. HIV-1 proviral DNA load was quantified in 11 grafts. RESULTS: Hematologic reconstitution was good. No toxic deaths occurred. Despite the large number of cells harboring HIV-1 proviral DNA (105 to 109) re-infused with the graft, HAART controlled HIV replication and led to CD4 cell reconstitution in 7 of the 8 patients who were still alive six months after AHSCT. Only two patients had opportunistic infections after AHSCT. There were no significant changes in viral load (VL) or CD4+ cell counts in most patients. One month after AHSCT, 10 patients were in complete remission (CR). Seven patients died from lymphoma between 1 and 10 months after AHSCT, and a further two patients died in CR (one from AIDS at 16 months, one from another tumor at 28 months). Five patients are alive: four are in CR, 14, 19, 32 and 49 months after AHSCT (median CD4+ cell count= 445/mL; undetectable VL in 3 patients), and one is being treated for relapsed lymphoma 36 months after AHSCT. INTERPRETATION AND CONCLUSIONS: HDC/AHSCT is feasible in AIDS-related lymphoma, in terms of harvesting, engraftment, adverse events and HIV control. It should be proposed to patients with poor-prognosis chemosensitive lymphoma.
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2003
 
DOI   
PMID 
Robert P Myers, Yves Benhamou, Françoise Imbert-Bismut, Vincent Thibault, Marie Bochet, Frédéric Charlotte, Vlad Ratziu, François Bricaire, Christine Katlama, Thierry Poynard (2003)  Serum biochemical markers accurately predict liver fibrosis in HIV and hepatitis C virus co-infected patients.   AIDS 17: 5. 721-725 Mar  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Liver biopsy, the gold standard for assessing hepatitis C virus (HCV)-related fibrosis, is invasive and prone to complications. Our aim was to determine the operating characteristics of a non-invasive index of biochemical markers for the prediction of fibrosis in patients with HIV/HCV co-infection. DESIGN: In a cross-sectional, cohort study in a French tertiary-care hospital 130 HIV/HCV-co-infected patients with a liver biopsy and serum were tested for markers of liver fibrosis. METHODS: An index incorporating age, sex, alpha(2)-macroglobulin, apolipoprotein A1, haptoglobin, bilirubin, and gamma-glutamyl-transpeptidase (GGT), derived using multivariate logistic regression, was compared with liver histology. HIV-specific indices including the CD4 cell count and HIV-RNA load were also constructed. The diagnostic values of the indices were compared using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Septal fibrosis (F2-F4) by the METAVIR classification. RESULTS: By multivariate analysis, the most informative markers were alpha(2)-macroglobulin, apolipoprotein A1, GGT, and sex. The area under the ROC curve of the five-marker index was 0.856 +/- 0.035; not significantly different from the HIV-specific indices. On a scale from zero to 1.00, the five-marker index had a positive predictive value of 86% for scores greater than 0.60, and a negative predictive value of 93% for scores of 0.20 or less. These thresholds could reduce the necessity for liver biopsy by 55% while maintaining an accuracy of 89%. CONCLUSION: An index including five biochemical markers accurately predicts significant fibrosis in patients with HIV/HCV co-infection, and may substantially reduce the necessity for liver biopsy.
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PMID 
Robert P Myers, Mercedes De Torres, Françoise Imbert-Bismut, Vlad Ratziu, Frédéric Charlotte, Thierry Poynard (2003)  Biochemical markers of fibrosis in patients with chronic hepatitis C: a comparison with prothrombin time, platelet count, and age-platelet index.   Dig Dis Sci 48: 1. 146-153 Jan  
Abstract: As an alternative to liver biopsy, an index of five biochemical markers (alpha2-macroglobulin, apolipoprotein A1, haptoglobin, total bilirubin, gamma-glutamyl-transpeptidase) has been shown to predict the severity of hepatitis C-related fibrosis. The objective of this study was to compare this index with other markers frequently used for this purpose (prothrombin time, platelets, age-platelet index). In 323 hepatitis C-infected patients, the discriminative values of these markers for F2-F4 fibrosis (by the METAVIR classification) were compared. By multiple logistic regression analysis, only the five-marker index (P < 0.0001) and prothrombin time (P = 0.02) were independently predictive of F2-F4 fibrosis. For this outcome, the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve was significantly higher for the five-marker index (0.836 +/- 0.024) than the age-platelet index (P = 0.002), and the platelet count and prothrombin time (P < 0.001), indicating greater diagnostic value. The addition of the latter markers to the five-marker index proved unhelpful for increasing its accuracy. In conclusion, an index of five biochemical markers accurately predicts significant hepatitis C-related fibrosis and is superior to traditional markers.
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PMID 
P Cacoub, M Bourlière, P Hausfater, F Charlotte, H Khiri, S Toci, J C Piette, T Poynard, P Halfon (2003)  Lower expression of CD81 B-cell receptor in lymphoproliferative diseases associated with hepatitis C virus infection.   J Viral Hepat 10: 1. 10-15 Jan  
Abstract: Chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is frequently associated with type II mixed cryoglobulinaemia (MC), a benign lymphoproliferative disease (LPD). More recently, HCV has been implicated as a possible aetiologic factor of B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma (B-NHL). CD81, a B-cell surface receptor, has been proposed as a receptor for HCV binding and entry in circulating B cells. The stimulation of CD81 complex enables B cells to respond to lower concentrations of antigen and finally induces B-cell proliferation. We studied the phenotypic expression of CD81, CD19 and CD5 on circulating B cells in HCV patients LPD-positive or LPD-negative. Sixty-two patients were anti-HCV antibody positive. Among HCV positive patients, 44 were HCV RNA positive with an histologically proven chronic active hepatitis of whom 10 had a B-NHL, 14 an MC and 24 no extrahepatic manifestation. Eighteen patients were HCV RNA negative with evidence of resolved infection. A control group included 40 healthy subjects. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were stained for surface expression of CD81, CD19 and CD5 using monoclonal antibodies, and were analyzed by flow cytometry. The percentage of PBMC expressing CD81, CD19 and CD5 receptors were compared between the groups by univariate analysis. Logistic regression model variables were then evaluated to correlate the presence of an LPD with HCV infection characteristics (i.e. age, gender, genotype, duration of infection, HCV RNA positivity, liver histological lesions), or phenotypic expression of CD81, CD19 and CD5 receptors on PBMC. HCV antibody-positive compared with HCV-negative subjects had a higher expression of CD19 receptor (23 +/- 13 vs 13 +/- 1%, P = 0.003). Among HCV RNA positive-patients, LPD+ compared with LPD- patients had a lower expression of CD81 (58 +/- 28 vs 82 +/- 18%, P = 0.001) and CD5 receptor (66 +/- 16 vs 74 +/- 13%, P = 0.04). In multivariate analysis, the expression of CD81 receptor was a negative (OR = 0.15, 95% CI = 0.04-0.64, P = 0.01) and CD19 receptor a positive (OR = 4.81, 95% CI =1.29-17.88, P = 0.02) predictive factor for an LPD. We found two negative predictive factors for HCV RNA positivity, i.e. age (OR = 0.23, 95% CI. = 0.08-0.62, P = 0.003) and the expression of CD81 receptor (OR = 0.34, 95% CI = 0.13-0.89, P = 0.02). In patients with a chronic active HCV infection, the presence of a lymphoproliferative disease, either MC or B-NHL, is associated with lower expression of CD81 and higher expression of CD19 receptor on peripheral B cells.
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PMID 
Frederic Charlotte, Shinji Ito, Guey Wu, Takashi Kimoto, Narsing Rao (2003)  Highly selective inhibitor of inducible nitric oxide synthase enhances S-antigen-induced uveitis.   Curr Eye Res 26: 1. 1-7 Jan  
Abstract: PURPOSE: Investigated the effect of N-3-aminomethylbenzylacetamidine (1400 W), a highly selective inhibitor of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS), on the effector phase of EAU. METHODS: Sixteen Lewis rats were sensitized with bovine retinal S-antigen; ten of them injected subcutaneously with 1400 W (20 mg/kg) three times a day, from day 11 through day 13 following the injection of S-antigen. Five of the ten rats were also injected intraperitoneally with polyethylene-glycol-modified superoxide dismutase (SOD 1000 IU) twice a day from day 7 through day 13. Six rats received intraperitoneal and/or subcutaneous injections of normal saline from day 7 through day 13. The eyes were enucleated on day 14. The intensity of the inflammatory lesion was assessed by a histological score. The thickness of the choroidal and photoreceptor layers was measured. RESULTS: The histological score was higher in the 1400 W-treated rats (26 +/- 2.1) than in the saline- (20.5 +/- 8; p < 0.0001) or 1400 W/SOD-treated rats (20.5 +/- 4.9; p < 0.005). The choroid was thicker in the 1400 W-treated rats (60.7 +/- 16.8 microm) than in the saline- (19.2 +/- 9.4 microm, p < 0.0005) or the 1400 W/SOD-treated rats (29.6 +/- 19.3 microm, p < 0.05). The photoreceptor layer was thinner in the 1400 W-treated rats (8.4 +/- 32.1 microm) than in the saline- (40 +/- 26.7 microm; p < 0.05) or 1400 W/SOD-treated rats (60.8 +/- 38.1 microm; p < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: The data suggests that 1400 W exacerbates choroidal inflammation and photoreceptor damage at the effector phase of S-antigen-induced uveitis. This implies that iNOS expressed in the outer retina may have a protective role in EAU.
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DOI   
PMID 
Olivier Lucidarme, Florence Baleston, Mehdi Cadi, Marie-France Bellin, Frédéric Charlotte, Vlad Ratziu, Philippe A Grenier (2003)  Non-invasive detection of liver fibrosis: Is superparamagnetic iron oxide particle-enhanced MR imaging a contributive technique?   Eur Radiol 13: 3. 467-474 Mar  
Abstract: The purpose of our study was to evaluate the ability of superparamagnetic iron oxide (SPIO)-enhanced MR imaging to detect liver fibrosis in patients with chronic liver disease and to compare the findings with histopathological data. Sixty-seven patients with chronic hepatitis ( n=58) or focal nodular hyperplasia (FNH; n=9) were studied using a 1.5-T MR system. The protocol included proton density-weighted, T2-weighted spin-echo (SE) and fast SE (FSE) sequences before and after SPIO administration and T2*-weighted gradient-recalled-echo (GRE) sequences after SPIO. Pre- and post-contrast T2-weighted and T2*-weighted sequences were retrospectively evaluated by three independent observers for evidence of non-tumor hypersignal intensities. Three liver patterns were considered: thick reticulations; thin reticulations; and/or multiple areas of hypersignal intensities. Unenhanced or enhanced patterns were compared with histopathological specimens, which had been obtained by percutaneous biopsy of the right lobe within a maximum of 12 months of MR examination. Liver fibrosis was histologically graded using a five-level scale (F0-F4), according to the METAVIR classification. Histopathology demonstrated significant fibrosis (F2-F4) in 57 patients, non-significant fibrosis in 1 patient (F1), and normal liver surrounding FNH in 9 patients (F0). After SPIO administration, at least one pattern of non-tumor hypersignal intensities was seen in 43 (76%) of the 57 patients with F>/=2 with good agreement (kappa=0.68) compared with 2 (20%) of the 10 F0/1 patients ( p<0.01). Attenuated non-homogeneous liver-signal intensities with persistent thick reticulations, thin reticulations, or multiple areas of hypersignals were observed in, respectively, 30, 52, and 56% of patients with F>/=2 with moderate agreement (kappa=0.51). Before SPIO, MR images were positive in 21 of 57 (37%) F>/=2 and zero F0/1 patients. Post-contrast proton-density-weighted and T2*-weighted GRE were the most sensitive sequences for detecting non-tumor hypersignal intensities. In patients with chronic liver diseases, SPIO-enhanced MR imaging exhibits non-tumor hypersignal intensities indicative of liver fibrosis by decreasing the signal from the non-fibrotic areas where Kupffer cells are present.
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DOI   
PMID 
Hongtao Ye, Hongxiang Liu, Ayoma Attygalle, Andrew C Wotherspoon, Andrew G Nicholson, Frederic Charlotte, Veronique Leblond, Paul Speight, John Goodlad, Anne Lavergne-Slove, Jose Ignacio Martin-Subero, Reiner Siebert, Ahmet Dogan, Peter G Isaacson, Ming-Qing Du (2003)  Variable frequencies of t(11;18)(q21;q21) in MALT lymphomas of different sites: significant association with CagA strains of H pylori in gastric MALT lymphoma.   Blood 102: 3. 1012-1018 Aug  
Abstract: t(11;18)(q21;q21) is a specific chromosomal translocation associated with mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma. It fuses the amino terminal of the API2 gene to the carboxyl terminal of the MALT1 gene and generates a chimeric fusion product. Although the translocation is frequently detected in gastric and pulmonary MALT lymphoma, its incidence in MALT lymphomas from other sites is largely unknown. It also remains unknown whether the occurrence of the translocation is influenced by the nature of preceding diseases associated with MALT lymphomas. We screened for t(11; 18)(q21;q21) in 417 cases of MALT lymphoma from 8 major sites by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction. t(11;18)(q21;q21) was found at highest frequencies in MALT lymphomas from the lung (38%) and stomach (24%), and at moderate frequencies in those from the conjunctiva (19%) and orbit (14%). However, the translocation was found only rarely in MALT lymphomas from the salivary gland (1%) and was absent in those from the thyroid, skin, liver, and other rare sites, and in immunoproliferative small intestinal disease (IPSID). In gastric MALT lymphoma, t(11;18)(q21;q21) was significantly associated with infection by CagA-positive strains of Helicobacter pylori. As CagA-positive strains of H pylori are much more potent in induction of host inflammatory responses, including activation of neutrophils, which release highly genotoxic oxygen reactive species, we therefore examined neutrophil infiltration in recognized precursors of MALT lymphoma including H pylori-associated gastritis, lymphoepithelial sialadenitis, and Hashimoto thyroiditis. Neutrophil infiltration was prominent in H pylori-associated gastritis but not in lymphoepithelial sialadenitis and Hashimoto thyroiditis. Our results demonstrate that t(11;18)(q21; q21) occurs at markedly variable frequencies in MALT lymphoma of different sites and suggest that the occurrence of the translocation is influenced by the nature of premalignant diseases associated with MALT lymphoma. Oxidative damage might play a role in development of t(11;18)(q21; q21).
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PMID 
Aurélie Trenado, Frédéric Charlotte, Sylvain Fisson, Micael Yagello, David Klatzmann, Benoit L Salomon, José L Cohen (2003)  Recipient-type specific CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells favor immune reconstitution and control graft-versus-host disease while maintaining graft-versus-leukemia.   J Clin Invest 112: 11. 1688-1696 Dec  
Abstract: CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells (Treg's) play a pivotal role in preventing organ-specific autoimmune diseases and in inducing tolerance to allogeneic organ transplants. We and others recently demonstrated that high numbers of Treg's can also modulate graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) if administered in conjunction with allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation in mice. In a clinical setting, it would be impossible to obtain enough freshly purified Treg's from a single donor to have a therapeutic effect. Thus, we performed regulatory T cell expansion ex vivo by stimulation with allogeneic APCs, which has the additional effect of producing alloantigen-specific regulatory T cells. Here we show that regulatory T cells specific for recipient-type alloantigens control GVHD while favoring immune reconstitution. Irrelevant regulatory T cells only mediate a partial protection from GVHD. Preferential survival of specific regulatory T cells, but not of irrelevant regulatory T cells, was observed in grafted animals. Additionally, the use of specific regulatory T cells was compatible with some form of graft-versus-tumor activity. These data suggest that recipient-type specific Treg's could be preferentially used in the control of GVHD in future clinical trials.
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PMID 
Ehud Zamir, Bahram Bodaghi, Ilknur Tugal-Tutkun, Robert F See, Frederic Charlotte, Robert C Wang, Bertrand Wechsler, Phuc LeHoang, Irene Anteby, Narsing A Rao (2003)  Conjunctival ulcers in Behçet's disease.   Ophthalmology 110: 6. 1137-1141 Jun  
Abstract: PURPOSE: To describe the occurrence of conjunctival ulcers as a manifestation of Behçet's disease. DESIGN: Retrospective, noncomparative, interventional case series with histopathologic correlation. METHODS: Six patients who fulfilled the diagnostic criteria for Behçet's disease and presented with painful conjunctival ulcers were included in the study. Three of these ulcers were biopsied and studied histologically and immunohistochemically. The lesions were treated with topical or subconjunctival injection of corticosteroids and, in one case, with oral indomethacin. RESULTS: Although all six patients fulfilled the diagnostic criteria for Behçet's disease, two developed uveitis and other signs of Behçet's disease only months to years after the appearance of the conjunctival ulcers. The 3- to 5-mm, round to oval ulcers were located in the limbal and/or bulbar conjunctiva. Histopathology revealed disrupted epithelium, infiltration of both acute and chronic inflammatory cells, and high endothelial venules. Immunohistochemical analysis of the infiltrating lymphocytes revealed primarily T-cell populations admixed with several B cells and CD68-positive histiocytes. After treatment, the conjunctival lesions invariably healed without scarring. CONCLUSIONS: In addition to the oral and genital ulceration, ulcers can also be found in the conjunctiva of patients with Behçet's disease. Although this is a rare clinical sign, when accompanied by uveitis or orogenital ulcers, it may suggest a diagnosis of Behçet's disease.
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PMID 
Françoise Norol, Pascal Merlet, Richard Isnard, Pascale Sebillon, Nicolas Bonnet, Christian Cailliot, Claire Carrion, Maria Ribeiro, Frédéric Charlotte, Pascal Pradeau, Jean-François Mayol, André Peinnequin, Michel Drouet, Karima Safsafi, Jean-Paul Vernant, Francis Herodin (2003)  Influence of mobilized stem cells on myocardial infarct repair in a nonhuman primate model.   Blood 102: 13. 4361-4368 Dec  
Abstract: Although previous findings have suggested that some adult stem cells are pluripotent and could differentiate in an appropriate microenvironment, the fate conversion of adult stem cells is currently being debated. Here, we studied the ability of mobilized stem cells to repair cardiac tissue injury in a nonhuman primate model of acute myocardial infarction. Mobilization was carried out with stem cell factor, 25 mcg/Kg/d (D), and granulocyte-colony-stimulating factor, 100 mcg/Kg/D administered 5 days before (D - 5 group; n = 3) or 4 hours after (H + 4 group; n = 4) circumflex coronary artery ligation; no growth factor was administered to 3 baboons of the control group. No adverse effect relating to growth factor administration was observed. Flk-1 and transcription factors of cardiac lineages could be detected in peripheral blood only by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. When comparing positron emission tomography (PET) with [11C]-acetate between examinations from D2 and D30, a relative increase (perfusion ratio between infarct and noninfarct regions) of 26% (P =.01) in myocardial blood flow was found in the H + 4 group; the relative rate of oxidative metabolism remained unaltered in the 3 groups. No change was observed in the echographic indices of the left ventricular enlargement or systolic function in the 3 animal groups during the 2-month follow-up. The PET findings concurred with the immunohistochemistry analysis of left ventricular myocardial sections with evidence of endothelial cells but no myocyte differentiation; few cycling cells were observed at this time. Thus, the present data suggest that, in nonhuman primates submitted to coronary artery ligation, mobilization by hematopoietic growth factors could promote angiogenesis in the infarcted myocardium, without detectable myocardial repair.
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PMID 
Vlad Ratziu, Mona Munteanu, Fréderic Charlotte, Luminita Bonyhay, Thierry Poynard (2003)  Fibrogenic impact of high serum glucose in chronic hepatitis C.   J Hepatol 39: 6. 1049-1055 Dec  
Abstract: BACKGROUND/AIMS: There is considerable variability in the rate of fibrosis progression in patients with chronic hepatitis C, most of which is related to factors so far unknown. We tested the hypothesis that high serum glucose and overweight might contribute to this variability. METHODS: Seven hundred and ten patients with chronic hepatitis C with a known duration of infection and no hepatitis B virus or human immunodeficiency virus coinfection were studied. Significant fibrosis was defined as bridging fibrosis including cirrhosis. Variables were tested for their association with significant fibrosis. RESULTS: In univariate analyses both serum glucose and body mass index were associated with fibrosis. In multivariate analyses, age at infection, duration of infection, serum glucose and daily alcohol intake but not body mass index were independently associated with significant fibrosis. Patients with high serum glucose had been contaminated at an older age and had features of the metabolic syndrome, including steatosis more frequently, as well as faster fibrosis progression rates. High serum glucose was associated with intermediate and advanced, but not with early, fibrosis stages. A high serum glucose was associated with a higher relative risk for significant fibrosis than overweight. CONCLUSIONS: High serum glucose, is an independent co-factor of fibrosis in chronic hepatitis C with a higher pro-fibrogenic impact than overweight.
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PMID 
Robert P Myers, Marie Hélène Tainturier, Vlad Ratziu, Annie Piton, Vincent Thibault, Françoise Imbert-Bismut, Djamila Messous, Frederic Charlotte, Vincent Di Martino, Yves Benhamou, Thierry Poynard (2003)  Prediction of liver histological lesions with biochemical markers in patients with chronic hepatitis B.   J Hepatol 39: 2. 222-230 Aug  
Abstract: BACKGROUND AIMS: Liver biopsy is the gold standard for assessing hepatitis B virus (HBV)-related histology. The aim was to determine the diagnostic utility of noninvasive serum markers in patients with chronic hepatitis B. METHODS: The aminotransferases and indices including alpha(2)-macroglobulin, apolipoprotein A1, haptoglobin, gamma-glutamyl-transpeptidase (GGT), and total bilirubin (Fibrotest), and ALT (Actitest) were compared with liver histology. The primary outcomes were A2-A3 activity and F2-F4 fibrosis (METAVIR). RESULTS: Two hundred and nine patients were included. Forty-one patients (20%) had A2-A3 activity and 61 (29%) had F2-F4 fibrosis. AST and GGT (P<0.001) were independently associated with A2-A3 activity. AST, ALT, and Actitest accurately predicted activity ((areas under receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves (AUROC), 0.81-0.82+/-0.04)); an AST or ALT< or =30IU/l excluded significant activity with 96% certainty. Fibrotest accurately predicted F2-F4 fibrosis (AUROC, 0.78+/-0.04). Fibrotest scores (range, 0-1.0) < or =0.20 and >0.80 had negative and positive predictive values of 92%, respectively. Restricting biopsy to patients with intermediate scores (>0.20 and < or =0.80) may prevent liver biopsies in 46% of patients while maintaining 92% accuracy. CONCLUSIONS: The aminotransferases and an index including five biochemical markers are accurate noninvasive markers of HBV-related activity and fibrosis, respectively.
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PMID 
Karim Belhadj, Felix Reyes, Jean-Pierre Farcet, Herve Tilly, Christian Bastard, Regis Angonin, Eric Deconinck, Frederic Charlotte, Veronique Leblond, Eric Labouyrie, Pierre Lederlin, Jean-Francois Emile, Beatrice Delmas-Marsalet, Bertrand Arnulf, Elie-Serge Zafrani, Philippe Gaulard (2003)  Hepatosplenic gammadelta T-cell lymphoma is a rare clinicopathologic entity with poor outcome: report on a series of 21 patients.   Blood 102: 13. 4261-4269 Dec  
Abstract: We report on the characteristics of 21 patients with hepatosplenic gammadelta T-cell lymphoma (HSgammadeltaTCL), an entity recognized since 1994 in the Revised European American Lymphoma (REAL) classification. Median age was 34 years. Patients had splenomegaly (n = 21), hepatomegaly (n = 15), and thrombocytopenia (n = 20). Histopathologic findings were homogeneous and showed the presence of medium-sized lymphoma cells within the sinusoids of splenic red pulp, liver, and bone marrow. Marrow involvement was usually mild but could be demonstrated by phenotyping in all patients. Cells were CD3+CD5-, expressed the gammadelta T-cell receptor, and had a nonactivated cytotoxic cell phenotype (TIA-1+, granzyme B-). Most patients were CD4-/CD8- (16 of 18); CD56+ (15 of 18), expressed the Vdelta1epitope (Vd1+/Vd2-/Vd3-) (9 of 12); and were negative for Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) (18 of 20). Isochromosome arm 7q was documented in 9 of 13 patients. Eight patients had previously undergone kidney transplantation or had a history of systemic lupus, Hodgkin disease, or malaria. Prognosis was poor; median survival time was 16 months, and all but 2 patients ultimately died despite consolidative or salvage high-dose therapy. In conclusion, HSgammadeltaTCL is a disease with distinctive clinical, histopathologic, and phenotypic characteristics. Bone marrow biopsy with combined phenotyping is sufficient for diagnosis, and splenectomy is therefore unwarranted. Current treatment modalities appear to be ineffective in most patients.
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2002
 
DOI   
PMID 
Vlad Ratziu, Luminita Bonyhay, Vincent Di Martino, Frederic Charlotte, Lucas Cavallaro, Marie-Hélène Sayegh-Tainturier, Philippe Giral, André Grimaldi, Pierre Opolon, Thierry Poynard (2002)  Survival, liver failure, and hepatocellular carcinoma in obesity-related cryptogenic cirrhosis.   Hepatology 35: 6. 1485-1493 Jun  
Abstract: Despite the rising incidence of obesity and diabetes, there is little emphasis on morbidity and mortality from obesity-related cirrhosis, usually considered a rare and asymptomatic condition. Our aim was to assess survival and the occurrence of hepatocellular carcinoma and complications of hepatic insufficiency in obesity-related cryptogenic cirrhosis compared with cirrhosis of other origins. We analyzed retrospectively 27 overweight patients with cryptogenic cirrhosis (CC-O), 10 lean patients with cryptogenic cirrhosis (CC-L) and 391 patients with hepatitis C virus-related cirrhosis (C-HCV). In CC-O patients, cirrhosis was detected later in life than in C-HCV and CC-L patients. Severe liver disease was as frequent in CC-O as in C-HCV patients as indicated by the proportion of Child B or C or of episodes of hepatic decompensation. Survival of CC-O patients was lower than that of untreated, age- and sex-matched C-HCV controls (P <.02 at 30 months), with a higher mortality of Child B or C patients. Hepatocellular carcinoma was detected in 8 of 27 (27%) CC-O patients versus 21% of matched C-HCV controls with a similar age cumulated incidence, suggesting a comparable carcinogenic potential. In conclusion, obesity-related cirrhosis should now be recognized as a distinct entity that can cause severe liver disease and death. Increased awareness of and better diagnostic strategies for nonalcoholic steatohepatitis in overweight patients are urgently needed.
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PMID 
Sylvain Choquet, Bruneel Marie-France Mamzer, Olivier Hermine, Raphaël Porcher, Quoc Stephanie Nguyen, Frederic Davi, Frédéric Charlotte, Richard Dorent, Benoit Barrou, Jean-Paul Vernant, Martine Raphael, Vincent Levy, Véronique Leblond (2002)  Identification of prognostic factors in post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorders.   Recent Results Cancer Res 159: 67-80  
Abstract: Organ transplantations can lead to post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorders (PT-LPDs) as a result of immunosuppressive therapy. PT-LPDs clearly differ from non-Hodgkin's lymphomas occurring in immunocompetent patients, in terms of clinical presentation, pathological findings and treatment response. Several studies have tried to establish some prognostic factors but the small number of patients hinders the analysis. We studied 61 patients from two transplant centers who developed a PT-LPD after kidney (34 patients), heart (19 patients), lung (4 patients) or liver (3 patients) transplantation. Treatment consisted of modification of the immunosuppressive regimen, chemotherapy and/or monoclonal antibody infusions. Analyzing potential prognostic factors, we found that factors predictive of failure to achieve a complete remission were, in univariate analysis, a performance status (PS) > or =2 and negativity of the tumor for the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), and in multivariate analysis, only the PS. Factors predictive of lower survival were, in univariate analysis, a PS > or =2, number of sites > 1, primary central nervous system (CNS) location, T-cell phenotype, monoclonality of the tumor, tumor negativity for EBV and chemotherapy as a first treatment; in multivariate analysis, only PS and the number of sites were statistically significant. The International Prognostic Index (IPI) failed to identify a patient subgroup with a lower survival or treatment response, whereas a simple index using PS and number of sites clearly identified three different groups. The median survival has not yet been reached in the lower-risk group, whereas it is 34 months in the intermediate-risk patients and 1 month in the high-risk group. Studies on larger cohorts of patients need to be performed to confirm these data.
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PMID 
T Poynard, P Cacoub, V Ratziu, R P Myers, M H Dezailles, A Mercadier, P Ghillani, F Charlotte, J C Piette, J Moussalli (2002)  Fatigue in patients with chronic hepatitis C.   J Viral Hepat 9: 4. 295-303 Jul  
Abstract: In numerous studies of symptoms in patients with chronic hepatitis C there has been no systematic assessment of both fatigue and extrahepatic manifestations. Our objective was to assess the prevalence of fatigue in patients with hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection, and to identify associations between fatigue and clinical and biological hepatic and extrahepatic manifestations. We studied 1614 patients. Data were prospectively recorded during the first visit of patients infected with HCV and the prevalence of fatigue and its association with dermatological, rheumatological, neurological and nephrological manifestations; diabetes; arterial hypertension; auto-antibodies, and cryoglobulinaemia were assessed. Then, using multivariate analysis, we identified demographic, biochemical, immunological, virological, and histological factors associated with the presence of fatigue. Fatigue was present in 53% of patients (95% confidence interval 51-56). In 17% of patients (95% confidence interval 15-19) fatigue was severe, impairing activity. Five other extrahepatic manifestations had a prevalence above 10% including, in decreasing order: arthralgia, paresthesia, myalgia, pruritus, and sicca syndrome. In univariate and multivariate analyses, fatigue, in comparison with the absence of fatigue, was associated with female gender, age over 50 years, cirrhosis, depression and purpura. Independent of these associations, fatigue was associated with arthralgia, myalgia, paresthesia, sicca syndrome and pruritus. The prevalence of fibromyalgia (as defined by the association of fatigue with arthralgia or myalgia) was 19% (95% confidence interval 17-21). There was no significant association between fatigue and the following characteristics: viral load or genotype, alcohol consumption, abnormal thyroid function, and type and level of cryoglobulinaemia. Hence, fatigue is the most frequent extrahepatic manifestation in patients infected with HCV. Fatigue is independently associated with female gender, age over 50 years, cirrhosis, depression and purpura.
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PMID 
Robert P Myers, Vlad Ratziu, Françoise Imbert-Bismut, Frédéric Charlotte, Thierry Poynard (2002)  Biochemical markers of liver fibrosis: a comparison with historical features in patients with chronic hepatitis C.   Am J Gastroenterol 97: 9. 2419-2425 Sep  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: Liver fibrosis in chronic hepatitis C is related to sex, age at infection, duration of infection, and alcohol consumption. Several noninvasive biochemical markers are highly predictive for the discrimination of significant fibrosis. The aims of this study were: 1) to compare an index of five biochemical markers with historical features; and 2) to determine the utility of combining these features with the five-marker index for the prediction of significant fibrosis. METHODS: Untreated patients with chronic hepatitis C and a known duration of infection had a liver biopsy and serum tested for markers of fibrosis. The discriminative values of the markers and an index of historical features for the diagnosis of clinically significant fibrosis (F2-F4 by the Metavir system) were compared using areas under receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves. A modified index was constructed combining the five-marker index and historical features. RESULTS: A total of 211 patients were included. Of these, 52% were male, and 19% consumed > or = 50 g of alcohol daily. The median age at infection was 28 +/- 13 yr and the median duration of infection was 17 +/- 8 yr (range 1-48 yr). By multivariate logistic regression analysis, sex (p = 0.003), age at biopsy (p = 0.004), and alcohol consumption (p = 0.042) were independently predictive of F2-F4 fibrosis. For the discrimination of F2-F4 fibrosis, the areas under the ROC curves were 0.796 +/- 0.033 for the five-marker index versus 0.709 +/- 0.037 for the historical index (p = 0.079). For diagnosis of advanced fibrosis (F3 and F4), the areas under the curves were 0.920 +/- 0.032 and 0.762 +/- 0.049 (p = 0.007), respectively. The discriminative value of the combined biochemical and historical index was not statistically significantly different from that of the five-marker index alone (p = ns). CONCLUSIONS: A simple index including age, sex, and five biochemical markers accurately predicts significant hepatitis C-related fibrosis. This index is more accurate than an index of historical features, the addition of which to the existing index was not helpful.
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PMID 
Sophie Hüe, Patrice Cacoub, Christophe Renou, Philippe Halfon, Vincent Thibault, Frédéric Charlotte, Magali Picon, Hervé Rifflet, Jean Charles Piette, Stanislas Pol, Sophie Caillat-Zucman (2002)  Human leukocyte antigen class II alleles may contribute to the severity of hepatitis C virus-related liver disease.   J Infect Dis 186: 1. 106-109 Jul  
Abstract: Whether the host's immune response genes influence the severity of hepatitis C virus (HCV) liver disease is controversial. Human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class II alleles were analyzed in 233 HCV RNA-positive patients with chronic active hepatitis (197 patients with Knodell index of fibrosis F0-F3 and 36 patients with index of F4). The 2 groups did not differ by sex, duration of infection, mode of contamination, alcohol consumption, or HCV genotype. Patients with cirrhosis were older than those without (56+/-12 vs. 46+/-14 years; P<10-4) and had a lower DRB1*11 allele frequency (5.6% vs. 14.5%; P=.037), whereas DRB1*03 and DQB1*0201 frequencies appeared to be higher (DRB1*03, 18.1% vs. 9.6%; DQB1*0201, 37.5% vs. 23.4%; P=.04, corrected P value is not significant). Mean index of fibrosis was higher in DR3-positive than in DR11-positive patients (2.14 vs. 1.58; P=.05). By multivariate analysis, cirrhosis was associated with male sex and age >50 years. HLA class II alleles may weakly contribute to the severity of HCV liver disease. Of persons infected with HCV, only 15%-20% spontaneously clear the virus, and the rest become chronically infected.
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PMID 
P Fouret, S Temam, F Charlotte, J Lacau-St-Guily (2002)  Tumour stage, node stage, p53 gene status, and bcl-2 protein expression as predictors of tumour response to platin-fluorouracil chemotherapy in patients with squamous-cell carcinoma of the head and neck.   Br J Cancer 87: 12. 1390-1395 Dec  
Abstract: The purpose of this study was to establish the relative contribution of tumour stage, node stage, p53 gene status, p53 expression, and bcl-2 protein expression to tumour response to platin-fluorouracil chemotherapy in 141 patients with squamous-cell carcinomas of the head and neck. Tumour response was measured at the primary site after three cycles of chemotherapy. Exons 2-10 and the coding part of exon 11 were sequenced on both strands. Bcl-2 or p53 expression was detected by immunohistochemistry. Predictor variables of objective response (reduction of at least 50% of tumour size) were tested in univariate and multivariate analyses. P53 mutations were found in 52 patients (37%). Tumour cells expressed p53 in 84 cases (59%) and bcl-2 in 25 cases (18%). T1 or T2 stage (adjusted odds ratio, 3.3; 95% confidence interval 1.3-8.7; P=0.01), N0 node stage (adjusted odds ratio, 2.7; 95% confidence interval 1.1-6.4; P=0.03), p53 wild-type gene (adjusted odds ratio, 4.0; 95% confidence interval 1.7-9.5; P=0.002), and bcl-2 protein expression (adjusted odds ratio, 20; 95% confidence interval 2.3-170; P=0.006), were positively associated with tumour response. P53 protein expression was not predictive of response. In conclusion, tumour stage, node stage, p53 gene status, and bcl-2 expression are independent predictors of tumour response to platin-fluorouracil in patients with squamous-cell carcinomas of the head and neck.
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Magali Colombat, Frédéric Charlotte, Vlad Ratziu, Thierry Poynard (2002)  Portal lymphocytic infiltrate in alcoholic liver disease.   Hum Pathol 33: 12. 1170-1174 Dec  
Abstract: The aim of this study was to estimate the frequency of lymphocytic portal infiltrate in human alcoholic liver disease and to determine whether it was correlated with liver injury. This retrospective study included 200 consecutive patients referred between February 1996 and March 2001 to the Service Central d'Hépato-Gastroentérologie at Groupe Hospitalier Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital, Paris, France. The inclusions criteria were as follows: (1) daily alcohol consumption greater than 40 g; (2) appropriate serological exclusion of B and C viral hepatitis; and (3) available liver biopsy specimen. Autoimmune hepatitis was excluded in all patients with the aid of a consensus scoring system. Forty percent of the patients had a predominantly lymphocytic portal infiltrate. On stepwise logistic regression of the predictive value of the 5 variables (gender, age, daily alcohol consumption, steatosis, and portal and septal fibrosis index), only 2 statistically independent predictors of predominant lymphocytic portal infiltrate were identified: portal and septal fibrosis index (P <.05) and age (P <.05). In conclusion, predominantly portal lymphocytic infiltrate occurs frequently in alcoholic liver disease, even in patients without serological markers of B and C viral hepatitis. Moreover, after adjustment for age, portal and septal fibrosis index remains significantly associated with the presence of a predominantly lymphocytic portal infiltrate. These results suggest that lymphocytes may play a role in the pathogenesis of alcohol-induced liver fibrosis.
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PMID 
Laurent Alric, Vincent Di-Martino, Janik Selves, Patrice Cacoub, Frédéric Charlotte, Didier Reynaud, Jean-Charles Piette, Jean-Marie Péron, Jean-Pierre Vinel, Dominique Durand, Jacques Izopet, Thierry Poynard, Michel Duffaut, Lionel Rostaing (2002)  Long-term impact of renal transplantation on liver fibrosis during hepatitis C virus infection.   Gastroenterology 123: 5. 1494-1499 Nov  
Abstract: BACKGROUND & AIMS: During hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection, liver fibrosis progression after renal transplantation remains controversial. The aim of this cohort study with controls was to compare liver histopathologic features during HCV infection between renal transplant recipients and matched groups of hemodialyzed patients or controls without renal disease and untreated for HCV. METHODS: Each renal transplant recipient (group 1, n = 30) was matched at first liver biopsy (LB) using the main factors known to influence progression of fibrosis with one HCV hemodialyzed patient (group 2, n = 30) and one HCV-infected patient (nonhemodialyzed, nontransplanted; group 3, n = 30). Patients from group 1 were also matched with those of group 3 on the time between 2 consecutive LBs performed 37 months apart. LBs were evaluated according to the Knodell index, METAVIR score, and rate of fibrosis progression per year (fibrosis unit). RESULTS: The rate of fibrosis progression per year between the first and second LBs was significantly lower (P = 0.03) in group 1 (0.067; 95% confidence interval: -0.05, 0.18) than group 3 (0.20; 95% confidence interval: 0.13, 0.26). At the second LB, the Knodell index and activity or fibrosis in METAVIR were lower in group 1 than group 3 (4.2 +/- 0.4 vs. 7.5 +/- 0.6, 0.5 +/- 0.1 vs. 1.3 +/- 0.2, and 1.4 +/- 0.2 vs. 2.3 +/- 0.2 respectively, P < 0.01). CONCLUSIONS: Our study suggests that liver fibrosis progression is low in most HCV-infected renal transplant recipients with moderate liver disease at baseline.
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2001
 
PMID 
R Laraki, B Wechsler, B Bourgeon, J Wechsler, F Charlotte, J C Piette (2001)  Pulmonary hyalinising granuloma: report of 2 original cases with cervicofacial and orbital involvement   Rev Med Interne 22: 3. 284-291 Mar  
Abstract: INTRODUCTION: Pulmonary hyalinizing granuloma is a rare fibrosing nodular disease of the lung characterized by its histological appearance, which includes at the center of the lesion a dense network of concentric hyalinized collagen lamella surrounded by perivascular lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate that rarefies in the center of the nodule. EXEGESIS: We report two new cases: the first with laryngeal (endoluminal tumor-like), orbital (subeyelid nodule) and mesenteric (9 x 6 cm mass) location of hyalinizing granuloma; the second with cervical, facial (trismus), orbital (pseudotumor) and limb (ankylosing elbow) fibrosis. CONCLUSION: The extrapulmonary diffusion of the disease is extremely rare. In one of the cases, with corticosteroids and after a follow-up of 12 months, the pulmonary tumors vanished but the fibrosis resolved only partially.
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PMID 
V Leblond, N Dhedin, M F Mamzer Bruneel, S Choquet, O Hermine, R Porcher, S Nguyen Quoc, F Davi, F Charlotte, R Dorent, B Barrou, J P Vernant, M Raphael, V Levy (2001)  Identification of prognostic factors in 61 patients with posttransplantation lymphoproliferative disorders.   J Clin Oncol 19: 3. 772-778 Feb  
Abstract: PURPOSE: Prognostic studies of posttransplantation lymphoproliferative disorders (PTLDs) are hindered by the small number of cases at each transplant center. We analyzed prognostic factors and long-term outcome according to clinical manifestations, pathologic features, and treatment and investigated the prognostic value of the non-Hodgkin's lymphoma International Prognostic Index (IPI) in 61 patients with PTLD. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We studied 61 patients in two institutions who developed PTLD and analyzed factors influencing the complete remission and survival rates. RESULTS: In univariate analysis, factors predictive of failure to achieve complete remission were performance status (PS) > or = (P =.0001) and nondetection of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) in the tumor (P =.01). Only a negative link with PS > or = 2 was observed in multivariate analysis. In univariate analysis, factors predictive of lower survival were PS > or = 2, the number of sites (one v > one), primary CNS localization, T-cell origin, monoclonality, nondetection of EBV, and treatment with chemotherapy. The IPI failed to identify a patient subgroup with better survival and was less predictive of the response rate than was a specific index using two risk factors (PS and number of involved sites), which defined three groups of patients: low-risk patients whose median survival time has not yet been reached, intermediate-risk patients with a median survival time of 34 months, and high-risk patients with a median survival time of 1 month. CONCLUSION: PS and the number of involved sites defined three risk groups in our population. The value of these prognostic factors needs to be confirmed in larger cohorts of patients treated in prospective multicenter studies.
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F Imbert-Bismut, V Ratziu, L Pieroni, F Charlotte, Y Benhamou, T Poynard (2001)  Biochemical markers of liver fibrosis in patients with hepatitis C virus infection: a prospective study.   Lancet 357: 9262. 1069-1075 Apr  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Liver biopsy is thought mandatory for management of patients with hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection, especially for staging fibrosis. We aimed, in our prospective study, to assess the predictive value of a combination of basic serum biochemical markers for diagnosis of clinically significant fibrosis (including early stages). METHODS: We assessed liver-biopsy patients with detectable HCV by PCR, for eligibility, and took a blood sample on the day of the procedure. The analysis was done in a first-year period for 205 patients and then tested in a second period on 134 patients. We devised a fibrosis index that included the most informative markers (combined with age and sex) for the first-year group. 11 serum markers were assessed as well as fibrosis stage: F0=no fibrosis and F1=portal fibrosis; and for clinically significant fibrosis, F2=few septa, F3=many septa, and F4=cirrhosis. Statistical analysis was by logistic regression, neural connection, and receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) curves. FINDINGS: First-year and second-year patient-group characteristics and biochemical markers did not differ. The overall frequency of clinically significant fibrosis was 40% (138 patients). The most informative markers were: alpha2 macroglobulin, alpha2 globulin (or haptoglobin), gamma globulin, apolipoprotein A1, gamma glutamyltranspeptidase, and total bilirubin. The areas (SD) under the ROC curves for the first-year (0.836 [0.430]) and second-year groups (0.870 [0.340]) did not differ (p=0.44). With the best index, a high negative predictive value (100% certainty of absence of F2, F3, or F4) was obtained for scores ranging from zero to 0.10 (12% [41] of all patients), and high positive predictive value (>90% certainty of presence of F2, F3, or F4) for scores ranging from 0.60 to 1.00 (34% [115] of all patients). INTERPRETATION: A combination of basic serum markers could be used to substantially reduce the number of liver biopsies done in patients with chronic HCV infection.
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PMID 
Y Allory, D Challine, C Haioun, C Copie-Bergman, M H Delfau-Larue, E Boucher, F Charlotte, M Fabre, M Michel, P Gaulard (2001)  Bone marrow involvement in lymphomas with hemophagocytic syndrome at presentation: a clinicopathologic study of 11 patients in a Western institution.   Am J Surg Pathol 25: 7. 865-874 Jul  
Abstract: Hemophagocytic syndrome (HPS) is a clinicopathologic syndrome that can reveal a non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. The pathologic features of lymphoma associated with HPS remain ill defined. We studied 11 lymphomas associated with HPS on initial bone marrow biopsies, consecutively diagnosed during a 6-year period in a Western institution. There were seven diffuse large B-cell lymphomas (DLBCLs), three T-cell lymphomas (one peripheral T-cell lymphoma unspecified, two hepatosplenic gammadelta T-cell lymphomas [HS gammadeltaTLs]), and one aggressive NK-cell lymphoma/leukemia (NKL). These lymphomas shared common clinicopathologic features with a systemic presentation, a poor outcome (nine patients died within 2 years), and a mild interstitial lymphoid infiltrate of the bone marrow at presentation in nine patients. This equivocal lymphoma infiltrate was blending with normal hematopoietic cells, and CD20 and CD3 immunolabelings were essential for its detection. A high number of reactive T (CD3+) cells, most often with a predominant cytotoxic (CD8+ TiA1+) phenotype, was present in all DLBCLs. By in situ hybridization, Epstein-Barr virus was detected in neoplastic cells of three cases (one DLBCL, one HS gammadeltaTL, and one NKL), which also showed serum viral DNA. Polymerase chain reaction studies disclosed HHV6 DNA sequences in tumor tissues of two DLBCLs, whereas HHV8 DNA was not detected. Because tumor mass indicative of lymphoma was not striking in most patients, bone marrow biopsy appears to be of great value for the diagnosis of an HPS-associated lymphoma, which may be, in Western patients, of B- as well as T- or NK-cell type. Immunostaining for CD3 and CD20 is essential to identify the common subtle lymphoma involvement. Together with a better understanding of the pathogenic processes, an early diagnosis may improve the prognosis of HPS-associated lymphoma.
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P Cacoub, C Renou, G Kerr, S Hüe, E Rosenthal, P Cohen, G Kaplanski, F Charlotte, V Thibault, P Ghillani, J C Piette, S Caillat-Zucman (2001)  Influence of HLA-DR phenotype on the risk of hepatitis C virus-associated mixed cryoglobulinemia.   Arthritis Rheum 44: 9. 2118-2124 Sep  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Circumstances predisposing hepatitis C virus (HCV)-infected patients to develop mixed cryoglobulinemia (MC), which may manifest as a small-vessel systemic vasculitis (MC vasculitis), remain unclear. Previous studies have failed to demonstrate a clear role of either viral factors (genotype, viral load) or host factors (lymphocytes or immunoglobulin subsets). This study was undertaken to examine a possible role of HLA class II alleles in HCV-associated MC. METHODS: One hundred fifty-eight HCV-infected patients, of whom 76 had MC (56 with type II MC and 20 with type III MC) and 82 did not have MC, were studied prospectively. MC vasculitis was noted in 35 HCV-infected patients with type II IgMkappa-containing cryoglobulins. HLA-DRB1 and HLA-DQB1 polymorphism was analyzed by hybridization using allele-specific oligonucleotides, after gene amplification. The odds ratio (OR) was calculated with Woolf's method. Then, using multivariate analysis, demographic, biologic, immunologic, virologic, and liver histologic factors associated with the presence of MC and MC vasculitis were investigated. RESULTS: HLA-DR11 was significantly more frequent in patients with type II MC than in those without MC (41.1% versus 17.1%; OR 3.4, corrected P [Pcorr] = 0.017), regardless of the presence of vasculitis accompanying the MC (37.1% of those with MC vasculitis, 34.1% of those with MC but no vasculitis). HLA-DR7 was less frequent in HCV-infected patients with MC than in those without MC (13.2% versus 30.5%; OR 0.34, P = 0.012, Pcorr not significant), with a particularly lower frequency in those with type II MC and those with MC vasculitis (12.5% and 8.6%, respectively). There was no significant difference in HLA-DQB1 distribution between the different patient groups. By univariate and multivariate analysis, HLA-DR11 was the only positive predictive factor, besides female sex and advanced age, for the presence of MC and HCV-associated MC vasculitis (OR 2.58). CONCLUSION: Our results indicate that the presence of the DR11 phenotype is associated with a significantly increased risk for the development of type II MC in patients with chronic HCV infection. In contrast, HLA-DR7 appears to protect against the production of type II MC. These results suggest that the host's immune response genes may play a role in the pathogenesis of HCV-associated MC.
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PMID 
C Besson, A Goubar, J Gabarre, W Rozenbaum, G Pialoux, F P Châtelet, C Katlama, F Charlotte, B Dupont, N Brousse, M Huerre, J Mikol, P Camparo, K Mokhtari, M Tulliez, D Salmon-Céron, F Boué, D Costagliola, M Raphaël (2001)  Changes in AIDS-related lymphoma since the era of highly active antiretroviral therapy.   Blood 98: 8. 2339-2344 Oct  
Abstract: HIV infection is associated with a high incidence of AIDS-related lymphomas (ARLs). Since the use of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), the incidence of AIDS-defining illnesses has decreased, leading to a significant improvement in survival of HIV-infected patients. The consequences of HAART use on ARL are under debate. This study compared the incidence and the characteristics of ARL before and after the use of HAART in a large population of HIV-infected patients in the French Hospital Database on HIV (FHDH) and particularly in 3 centers including 145 patients with proven lymphoma. Within the FHDH, the incidence of systemic ARL has decreased between 1993-1994 and 1997-1998, from 86.0 per 10 000 to 42.9 per 10 000 person-years (P < 10(-30)). The incidence of primary brain lymphoma has also fallen dramatically between the periods, from 27.8 per 10 000 to 9.7 per 10 000 person-years (P < 10(-11)). The analysis of 145 cases of ARL in 3 hospitals showed that known HIV history was longer in the second period than in the first period among patients with systemic ARL (98 versus 75 months; P <.01). Patients had a higher number of CD4 cells at diagnosis during the second period (191 versus 63/microL, P = 10(-3)). Survival of patients with systemic ARL also increased between the periods (from 6 to 20 months; P =.004). Therefore, the profile of ARL has changed since the era of HAART, with a lower incidence of systemic and brain ARL. The prognosis of systemic ARL has improved.
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PMID 
T Poynard, V Ratziu, F Charlotte, Z Goodman, J McHutchison, J Albrecht (2001)  Rates and risk factors of liver fibrosis progression in patients with chronic hepatitis c.   J Hepatol 34: 5. 730-739 May  
Abstract: BACKGROUND AIMS: In hepatitis C there is controversy over the linearity of the rate of progression and the significance of gender, mode of infection and viral factors. METHODS: 2313 untreated patients with a reliable estimated duration of infection and liver fibrosis were included. Fibrosis progression was calculated using the Kaplan-Meier method and the rate of fibrosis progression using the hazard function. Seven risk factors were assessed: age at biopsy, gender, alcohol consumption, mode of infection, activity grade, hepatitis C virus genotype and RNA level. RESULTS: The percentage of patients without cirrhosis was 91% after 20 years of infection (95% CI:90-92%) and 56% after 40 years (95% CI:48-64%). Three independent factors were associated (P < 0.001) with a faster progression rate: age at infection, alcohol consumption of 50 g or more per day, and male gender. The mode of infection, histologic activity, genotype and viral load were not independently associated with fibrosis. Fibrosis progression was mainly dependent on age and the duration of infection and can be divided into four successive periods with very slow, slow, intermediate and rapid progression rates. CONCLUSION: In patients infected with hepatitis C, the majority of fibrosis progression occurred in those aged fifty years or older.
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2000
 
PMID 
Y Allory, F Charlotte, Y Benhamou, P Opolon, Y Le Charpentier, T Poynard (2000)  Impact of human immunodeficiency virus infection on the histological features of chronic hepatitis C: a case-control study. The MULTIVIRC group.   Hum Pathol 31: 1. 69-74 Jan  
Abstract: Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is frequently encountered in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients because of common routes of transmission. Previous studies suggested that HIV infection impaired the natural course of chronic hepatitis C, with a more rapid progression to cirrhosis. However, these studies did not assess the HIV infection impact on chronic hepatitis C by taking into account the risk factors for liver fibrosis progression: alcohol, sex, age at the contamination, and duration of HCV infection. We studied liver biopsy specimens of 2 groups of 58 patients that were infected by both HCV and HIV or by HCV alone. The 2 groups were matched according those risk factors, and liver biopsy responses were evaluated with the METAVIR items. The METAVIR activity was higher in HIV-positive than HIV-negative patients. Cirrhosis was more frequent: (1) in HIV-positive patients with CD4 < or = 200 cells/microL (45%) than in HIV-negative patients (10%) (P = .003), (2) in HIV-positive patients with CD4 < or = 200 cells/microL (45%) than in HIV-positive patients with CD4 > 200 cells/microL (17%) (P = .04). These differences, which were linked to HIV status, might be related to the enhanced HCV replication during HIV infection or other immune mechanisms that need further studies.
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PMID 
P Mathurin, V Thibault, K Kadidja, N Ganne-Carrié, J Moussalli, M El Younsi, V Di Martino, F Lunel, F Charlotte, M Vidaud, P Opolon, T Poynard (2000)  Replication status and histological features of patients with triple (B, C, D) and dual (B, C) hepatic infections.   J Viral Hepat 7: 1. 15-22 Jan  
Abstract: In patients with multiple hepatotropic viral infections (B and C, or B, C and D), the reciprocal influence of each virus remains controversial. The aims of this study were twofold: first, to determine the impact of multiple infection on the replication status of B, C and D viruses and on histological features; and second, to compare patients with multiple infection to patients infected only with the hepatitis C virus (HCV). We retrospectively included 50 patients with multiple infection and 50 control HCV patients, who were matched on independent factors associated with fibrosis, such as age, gender, alcohol consumption and duration of infection. The replication status of hepatitis B virus (HBV), HCV and hepatitis D virus (HDV), and histological lesions, were determined. In patients with multiple infection, HCV RNA was present less frequently (44% vs 98%, P < 0.001) and the prevalence of cirrhosis was higher (35% vs 8%, P < 0.001). Among patients with triple infection (n = 16), HBV replication was observed in 25%, HCV RNA was detectable in only two (P < 0.0001) and HCV viremia was significantly lower than in the matched HCV patients (0 vs 54.7, P < 0.0001). Among patients with dual infection (n = 34), HCV RNA was present less frequently in those with serological markers of active HBV infection than in those without (30% vs 79%, P = 0.01). Hence, multiple infection is associated with a decrease of HCV replication. Cirrhosis seems to be more frequently observed in patients with multiple infection. In patients with triple infection, serum HCV RNA and markers of HBV replication were absent in 80%, suggesting that HDV acts as a dominant virus. In patients with dual infection, HBV and HCV exert an alternative, dominant replication.
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PMID 
E Aslangul-Castier, T Papo, Z Amoura, O Baud, V Leblond, F Charlotte, F Bricaire, L Degos, J C Piette (2000)  Systemic vasculitis with bilateral perirenal haemorrhage in chronic myelomonocytic leukaemia.   Ann Rheum Dis 59: 5. 390-393 May  
Abstract: The cases of two patients with chronic myelomonocytic leukaemia associated with periarteritis nodosa-like, antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody negative, systemic vasculitis, are reported. A 61 year old man was admitted with fever, diffuse myalgia, and abdominal pain. Blood and bone marrow examination showed chronic myelomonocytic leukaemia. Vasculitis of the gall bladder was responsible for acalculous cholecystitis. A massive spontaneous bilateral perirenal haemorrhage occurred. A 73 year old woman with chronic myelomonocytic leukaemia had been followed up for one year when unexplained fever occurred. Two months after the onset of fever, sudden abdominal pain was ascribed to spontaneous bilateral renal haematoma related to bilateral renal arterial aneurysms. Neuromuscular biopsy showed non-necrotising periarteriolar inflammation. To our knowledge, systemic vasculitis has never been reported in chronic myelomonocytic leukaemia. In our two cases a non-random association is suggested because (a) chronic myelomonocytic leukaemia is a rare myelodysplastic syndrome, (b) spontaneous bilateral perirenal haematoma is not a usual feature of periarteritis nodosa.
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PMID 
V Ratziu, P Giral, F Charlotte, E Bruckert, V Thibault, I Theodorou, L Khalil, G Turpin, P Opolon, T Poynard (2000)  Liver fibrosis in overweight patients.   Gastroenterology 118: 6. 1117-1123 Jun  
Abstract: BACKGROUND & AIMS: A common clinical issue is whether overweight patients with abnormal liver function test results should undergo liver biopsy. Although serious liver injury can occur, its prevalence and risk factors are not well known. METHODS: Ninety-three consecutive patients with abnormal liver function tests (but without overt liver disease), body mass index (BMI) > 25 kg/m(2), and no alcoholic, viral, autoimmune, drug-induced, or genetic liver disease were retrospectively studied. Clinical, biological, and histological variables were tested for association with septal fibrosis or cirrhosis. RESULTS: Septal fibrosis was present in 28 patients (30%) including cirrhosis in 10 (11%). Age >/= 50 years (odds ratio [OR], 14.1), BMI >/= 28 kg/m(2) (OR, 5.7), triglycerides >/= 1.7 mmol/L (OR, 5), and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) >/= 2N (OR, 4.6) were independently associated with septal fibrosis. Among histological features, septal fibrosis was strongly associated with necroinflammatory activity (OR, 44). A score combining age, BMI, triglycerides, and ALT had 100% negative predictive value for septal fibrosis when scoring 0 or 1 (100% sensitivity for a specificity of 47%). CONCLUSIONS: Septal fibrosis occurs frequently in overweight patients with abnormal liver function tests. A clinicobiological score combining BMI, age, ALT, and triglycerides could improve selection of patients for liver biopsy.
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J L Cohen, M F Saron, O Boyer, V Thomas-Vaslin, B Bellier, L Lejeune, F Charlotte, D Klatzmann (2000)  Preservation of graft-versus-infection effects after suicide gene therapy for prevention of graft-versus-host disease.   Hum Gene Ther 11: 18. 2473-2481 Dec  
Abstract: The main complications following allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation are graft-versus-host disease and poor immune reconstitution leading to severe infections. Mature donor T cells present in the transplant facilitate T cell reconstitution in adults, but also induce graft-versus-host disease, which itself impairs immune reconstitution. Thus, infusing a large number of donor T cells with a diverse repertoire should accelerate functional immune reconstitution after transplantation, only if graft-versus-host disease can be controlled. We previously demonstrated that preventive treatment with ganciclovir could control graft-versus-host disease in mice if donor T cells are made to express viral thymidine kinase as a "suicide" gene. Here we evaluated the recovery of functional antiviral immune responses in such mice. Irradiated mice received an allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation with thymidine kinase-expressing T cells and were protected from graft-versus-host disease by ganciclovir treatment, and then challenged with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus. Grafted mice could mount efficient antilymphocytic choriomeningitis virus immune responses leading to viral elimination. Furthermore, when transplanted cells were obtained from mice previously immunized against lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus, grafted mice developed memory-type accelerated responses against the virus. We conclude that efficient graft-versus-infection effects can be mediated by naive T cells and memory donor T cells that persist after suicide gene therapy for prevention of graft-versus-host disease.
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PMID 
A Martin, F Baran-Marzak, S El Mansouri, C Legendre, V Leblond, F Charlotte, F Davi, D Canioni, M Raphaël (2000)  Expression of p16/INK4a in posttransplantation lymphoproliferative disorders.   Am J Pathol 156: 5. 1573-1579 May  
Abstract: It was recently demonstrated that classification of posttransplantation lymphoproliferative disorders (PT-LPDs) into morphological and molecular categories is clinically relevant. It was also reported that PT-LPD not associated with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) had a more aggressive course than most lesions associated with EBV. Because the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p16/INK4a has been reported to be frequently inactivated in high-grade lymphomas, we evaluated 17 PT-LPD to determine whether p16/INK4a expression could be correlated to morphology, EBV detection, and a Ki-67 labeling index. We demonstrated that tumors with no p16/INK4a expression (n = 8) had a predominantly monomorphic appearance, and most were EBV negative (respectively, 7/8 and 5/8), whereas lesions with p16/INK4a expression (n = 9) were mostly polymorphic PT-LPD (6/9) (P = 0.049) and associated with EBV (9/9) (P = 0.015). In particular, strong p16/INK4a expression was observed in atypical immunoblasts and Reed-Sternberg-like cells. Furthermore, the proliferation index was significantly higher in tumors lacking p16/INK4a expression than in other lesions (P = 0.0008). In conclusion, down-regulation of p16/INK4a was mostly observed in PT-LPD lesions known to follow more aggressive courses: monomorphic tumors and EBV-negative PT-neoplasms. Conversely, overexpression of p16/INK4a was associated with EBV-positive PT-LPD. While p16/INK4a might play a role in the proliferative rate of LP-LPD, further investigations are needed to assess the clinical relevance of p16/INK4a expression in predicting the evolution of tumors and to explain how EBV could favor p16/INK4a protein accumulation in lesions.
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1999
 
DOI   
PMID 
L Stuyver, S De Gendt, J F Cadranel, C Van Geyt, G Van Reybroeck, R Dorent, I Gandjbachkh, M Rosenheim, F Charlotte, P Opolon, J M Huraux, F Lunel (1999)  Three cases of severe subfulminant hepatitis in heart-transplanted patients after nosocomial transmission of a mutant hepatitis B virus.   Hepatology 29: 6. 1876-1883 Jun  
Abstract: Fulminant and severe viral hepatitis are frequently associated with mutant hepatitis B virus (HBV) strains. In this study, the genetic background of a viral strain causing severe subfulminant outcome in heart-transplanted patients was studied and compared with viral hepatitis B strains that were not linked to severe liver disease in the same setting. A total of 46 patients infected nosocomially with HBV genotype A were studied. Five different viral strains were detected, infecting 3, 9, 5, 24, and 5 patients, respectively. Only one viral strain was found to be associated with the subfulminant outcome and 3 patient deaths as a consequence of severe liver disease. The remaining 43 patients with posttransplantation HBV infection did not show this fatal outcome. Instead, symptoms of hepatitis were generally mild or clinically undiagnosed. Comparison of this virus genome with the four other strains showed an accumulation of mutations in the basic core promoter, a region that influences viral replication, but also in hepatitis B X protein (HBX) (7 mutant motifs), core (10 mutant motifs), the preS1 region (5 mutant motifs), and the HBpolymerase open reading frame (17 motifs). Some of these variations, such as those in the core region, were located on the tip of the protruding spike of the viral capsid (codons 60 to 90), also known in part as an important HLA class II-restricted epitope region. These mutations might therefore influence the immune-mediated response. The viral strain causing subfulminant hepatitis was, in addition, the only strain with a preCore stop codon mutation and, thus, hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) expression was never observed. The combination of these specific viral factors is thought to be responsible for the fatal outcome in these immune-suppressed heart-transplant recipients.
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PMID 
C Soussain, B Souleau, J Gabarre, H Zouabi, L Sutton, C Boccaccio, N Albin, F Charlotte, H Merle-Béral, J Delort, J L Binet, V Leblond (1999)  Intensive chemotherapy with hematopoietic cell transplantation after ESHAP therapy for relapsed or refractory non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Results of a single-centre study of 65 patients.   Leuk Lymphoma 33: 5-6. 543-550 May  
Abstract: This study was designed to assess the results of protracted courses of ESHAP (etoposide, cytarabine, cisplatin, methylprednisolone) therapy followed by intensive chemotherapy and hematopoietic cell transplantation (IC+HCT) for relapsed or refractory non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL). Treatment consisted of 3 cycles of ESHAP; responsive patients (pts) then received 3 more cycles, and IC+HCT was used for pts in maintained partial (PR) or complete (CR) remission after the sixth ESHAP. Sixty-five pts entered the study. At enrollment, 27 pts had bone marrow (BM) and/or central nervous system (CNS) lymphomatous infiltration. Disease status was primary refractory lymphoma in 41 pts (63 %), and relapse in 24 pts (37 %). Results showed that two pts were not evaluable for the therapeutic response because of early treatment-related death. Thirty-nine (62 %) pts entered PR or CR after 3 cycles of ESHAP. Eleven pts subsequently had disease progression. Twenty-eight pts were in persistent CR or PR after 6 cycles of ESHAP. Refractory pts did not show a different response rate to relapsing pts (chi2= 1.73). Five pts were excluded from IC+HCT because of an inadequate graft or treatment-related toxicity. Twenty-three (35 %) pts completed the procedure. Five pts (22 %) relapsed after IC+HCT. The overall survival rate of the 39 responsive pts is 45 % at 60 months, with a median survival time of 30 months. Median survival among the 35 pts in whom second-line chemotherapy failed is 7.1 months, with a 4-year survival rate of 3 %. Despite the poor prognostic features of this group, 45% of pts responding to the first 3 cycles of chemotherapy are in prolonged remission, suggesting that rather than to transplant after just 2 cycles of salvage therapy, pursuing second-line chemotherapy may better discriminate between patients more likely to benefit from a subsequent transplant.
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PMID 
R Sobesky, P Mathurin, F Charlotte, J Moussalli, M Olivi, M Vidaud, V Ratziu, P Opolon, T Poynard (1999)  Modeling the impact of interferon alfa treatment on liver fibrosis progression in chronic hepatitis C: a dynamic view. The Multivirc Group.   Gastroenterology 116: 2. 378-386 Feb  
Abstract: BACKGROUND & AIMS: Impact of hepatitis C treatment has never taken into account the dynamics of fibrosis progression. This study assessed the impact of interferon on liver fibrosis progression in patients with chronic hepatitis C according to 3-month aminotransferase activity response. METHODS: We recruited 287 patients, 185 treated and 102 control, with paired biopsy specimens. Before follow-up, the fibrosis progression rate per year was estimated as the ratio between fibrosis stage in METAVIR units (1 U, 1 stage; 4 U, cirrhosis) and the duration of infection. During follow-up, fibrosis progression was assessed by the observed difference between stages divided by duration between biopsies. RESULTS: The median fibrosis progression rate in treated patients decreased compared with the rate before treatment from 0.103 F METAVIR U/yr (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.087-0.120) to 0.000 (95% CI, 0.000-0.000; P </= 0.0001). Among 91 treated responders, fibrosis stage worsened in 19 (22%), compared with 21 (22%) of 94 treated nonresponders and 57 of 102 controls (56%; P </= 0.0001 compared with treated patients), and improved in 26 (29%), 17 (18%), and 8 (8%; P = 0.0002 compared with 29% and P = 0.03 compared with 18%), respectively. These observed differences persisted after genotype, viremia, sex, age at infection, duration of infection, and alcohol consumption were taken into account. CONCLUSIONS: Interferon treatment changes the natural fibrosis progression rate in patients with chronic hepatitis C independently of genotype and early response.
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DOI   
PMID 
Y Benhamou, M Bochet, V Di Martino, F Charlotte, F Azria, A Coutellier, M Vidaud, F Bricaire, P Opolon, C Katlama, T Poynard (1999)  Liver fibrosis progression in human immunodeficiency virus and hepatitis C virus coinfected patients. The Multivirc Group.   Hepatology 30: 4. 1054-1058 Oct  
Abstract: The natural history of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients has never been studied according to the concept of liver fibrosis progression. The aim of this work was to assess the fibrosis progression rate in HIV-HCV coinfected patients and in patients infected by HCV only. A cohort of 122 HIV-HCV coinfected patients was compared with a control group of 122 HIV-negative HCV-infected patients. Groups were matched according to age, sex, daily alcohol consumption, age at HCV infection, and duration and route of HCV infection. The fibrosis progression rate was defined as the ratio between fibrosis stage (METAVIR scoring system) and the HCV duration. The prevalence of extensive liver fibrosis (METAVIR fibrosis scores 2, 3, and 4) and moderate or severe activity were higher in HIV-infected patients (60% and 54%, respectively) than in control patients (47% and 30%, respectively; P <.05 and P <.001, respectively). The median fibrosis progression rate in coinfected patients and in control patients was 0.153 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.117-0.181) and 0.106 (95% CI, 0.084-0.125) fibrosis units per year, respectively (P <.0001). HIV seropositivity (P <.0001), alcohol consumption (>50 g/d, P =.0002), age at HCV infection (<25 years old, P <.0001), and severe immunosuppression (CD4 count </=200 cells/microL, P <.0001) were associated with an increase in the fibrosis progression rate. In coinfected patients, alcohol consumption (>50 g/d), CD4 count (</=200 cells/microL), and age at HCV infection (<25 years old) (P <. 0001, respectively) were associated with a higher fibrosis progression rate. HIV seropositivity accelerates HCV-related liver fibrosis progression. In coinfected patients, a low CD4 count, alcohol consumption rate, and age at HCV infection are associated with a higher liver fibrosis progression rate.
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PMID 
F Imbert-Bismut, F Charlotte, B Turlin, L Khalil, A Piton, P Brissot, Y Le Charpentier, J Delattre, P Opolon, Y Deugnier, T Poynard (1999)  Low hepatic iron concentration: evaluation of two complementary methods, colorimetric assay and iron histological scoring.   J Clin Pathol 52: 6. 430-434 Jun  
Abstract: AIMS: To validate a method of assessment of low hepatic iron concentration based on a biochemical colorimetric assay plus histological scoring. METHODS: The within-day and day to day precision of the iron colorimetric assay was determined on frozen rat liver. The coefficient of variation (CV) of iron measurement in two separate samples from the same liver was determined for 21 deparaffinised human biopsies. The intra- and interlaboratory variability of the colorimetric assay and histological scoring were assessed on 38 deparaffinised liver biopsies. RESULTS: For the within-day test, the CV was 11% (5.1 (0.6) mumol/g dry weight (dw), mean (SD) iron concentration). For the day to day test, the CV was 19.5% (8.2 (1.6) mumol/g dw). The CV was 14.7% for iron concentration determined in two separate samples from the same liver. By correlation and kappa concordance tests, the intra- and interlaboratory variability of the hepatic iron colorimetric assay and iron histological scoring was slight. Absence of stainable iron corresponded to a liver iron concentration < or = 20 mumol/g dw. CONCLUSIONS: A combination of two complementary methods, colorimetric measurement and histological scoring, is an accurate and reliable way of determining low iron concentrations in deparaffinised human liver biopsies. In secondary haemosiderosis, such methods would be essential for investigating the role of low iron overload in fibrogenesis and during the response to antiviral treatment in chronic viral hepatitis.
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PMID 
P Cacoub, T Poynard, P Ghillani, F Charlotte, M Olivi, J C Piette, P Opolon (1999)  Extrahepatic manifestations of chronic hepatitis C. MULTIVIRC Group. Multidepartment Virus C.   Arthritis Rheum 42: 10. 2204-2212 Oct  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To assess the prevalence of clinical and biologic extrahepatic manifestations of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection and to identify associations between clinical and biologic manifestations. METHODS: To analyze the natural history of extrahepatic manifestations of HCV infection, we reviewed only the data recorded prospectively during the first visit of 1,614 patients with chronic HCV infection, coming from a single monocenter cohort. Exclusion criteria were positivity for hepatitis B surface antigen or human immunodeficiency virus. The prevalence of dermatologic, rheumatologic, neurologic, and nephrologic manifestations; diabetes; arterial hypertension; autoantibodies; and cryoglobulins were assessed. Then, using multivariate analysis, we identified demographic, biochemical, immunologic, virologic, and liver histologic factors associated with the presence of extrahepatic manifestations. RESULTS: At least 1 clinical extrahepatic manifestation was observed in each of 1,202 patients (74%). Five manifestations had a prevalence >10%: arthralgia (23%), paresthesia (17%), myalgia (15%), pruritus (15%), and sicca syndrome (11%). Four biologic abnormalities had a prevalence >5%: cryoglobulins (40%), antinuclear antibodies (10%), low thyroxine level (10%), and anti-smooth muscle antibodies (7%). Only vasculitis, arterial hypertension, purpura, lichen planus, arthralgia, and low thyroxine level were associated with cryoglobulin positivity. By univariate and multivariate analyses, the most frequent risk factors for the presence of clinical and biologic extrahepatic manifestations were age, female sex, and extensive liver fibrosis. CONCLUSION: Extrahepatic clinical manifestations are frequently observed in HCV patients and involve primarily the joints, muscles, and skin. The most frequent immunologic abnormalities include mixed cryoglobulins, antinuclear antibodies, and anti-smooth muscle antibodies. The most frequent risk factors for the presence of clinical and biologic extrahepatic manifestations are advanced age, female sex, and extensive liver fibrosis.
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PMID 
J L Cohen, S Lacroix-Desmazes, F Charlotte, L Lejeune, P J Martin, D Klatzmann, O Boyer (1999)  Immunological defects after suicide gene therapy of experimental graft-versus-host disease.   Hum Gene Ther 10: 16. 2701-2707 Nov  
Abstract: Donor T cells are beneficial for engraftment, immune reconstitution, and antileukemic effects after allogeneic marrow transplantation, but they also cause graft-versus-host disease. Treatment with ganciclovir can control graft-versus-host disease if donor T cells are genetically engineered to express viral thymidine kinase. Clinical protocols with thymidine kinase-expressing T cells currently prescribe the curative use of ganciclovir for genetic immunosuppression only after clinical manifestations of graft-versus-host disease have appeared. The aim of this work was to compare early/preventive versus delayed/curative treatment of GVHD. Here, we found that ganciclovir administered early after experimental marrow transplantation was highly effective in preventing graft-versus-host disease caused by thymidine kinase-expressing T cells, and surviving recipient mice were able to mount a T cell-dependent B cell response. In contrast, curative ganciclovir administration later after transplantation was much less effective in treating graft-versus-host disease and surviving recipients had markedly impaired immune function. These findings should be considered in the development of future clinical trials using thymidine kinase-expressing T cells; to date, such trials have envisaged the use of GCV to treat only declared graft-versus-host disease. The use of thymidine kinase-expressing T cells for conditional elimination of activated T cells after allogeneic marrow transplantation offers a promising new approach for the control of graft-versus-host disease. The versatility of the thymidine kinase/ganciclovir system offers clinical options depending on whether thymidine kinase-expressing T cells are infused at the time of bone marrow transplantation or in a delayed manner, and depending on whether GCV is administered in an early/preventive or delayed/curative manner. The rationale underlying these options is more complex than it may appear and is likely to have a profound impact on the efficacy of such treatments. In the present work, we analyze the immunological impact when GCV is administered in an early/preventive or delayed/curative manner. Our results demonstrate that the delayed/curative strategy is clearly associated with severe immunological defects. To our knowledge, this is the first report of immunodeficiency subsequent to suicide gene therapy for GVHD.
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PMID 
J L Kémény, M André, F Charlotte, J C Piette, J Amouroux, O Aumaître (1999)  Aseptic abscesses in eight patients with cryptogenic inflammatory bowel disease   Ann Pathol 19: 4. 294-298 Sep  
Abstract: The aim of this study was to describe aseptic abscess related pathologic changes observed in eight patients with inflammatory bowel disease. Patients were 3 men and 5 women whose age ranged from 15 to 60. Seven had Crohn's disease and one had ulcerative colitis. Diagnosis preceded abscess onset in two cases. Bacteriological investigations were performed in all cases and were negative. In all biopsy specimens, Hematoxylin and Eosin, PAS, Grocott, Whartin-Starry, Gram and Ziehl-Nielsen stains were negative. Histological changes were comparable and could be divided into early and older lesions. After discussion of the differential diagnoses, the hypothesis of a new clinico-pathological entity is suggested.
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PMID 
P Cacoub, P Ghillani, R Revelen, V Thibault, V Calvez, F Charlotte, L Musset, P Youinou, J C Piette (1999)  Anti-endothelial cell auto-antibodies in hepatitis C virus mixed cryoglobulinemia.   J Hepatol 31: 4. 598-603 Oct  
Abstract: BACKGROUND/AIM: Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is often associated with mixed cryoglobulins (MC) and may manifest as small-vessel vasculitis. It has been suggested that antibody (Ab) or sensitized T cells to HCV-containing endothelial cells may initiate the vasculitis process. Anti-endothelial cell antibodies (AECA) have been found in various connective tissue disorders, with a high prevalence in systemic vasculitis. The aim of the study was to determine the prevalence of AECA in HCV patients with or without MC-associated vasculitis, and to identify associations with clinical, immunological, virological and liver characteristics. METHODS: Sixty-nine HCV patients (Group 1), 46 of whom had MC (type II=30, type III=16), and 23 without MC, were prospectively studied. HCV-MC-associated vasculitis was noted in 25 patients who had at least one of the following clinical features: peripheral neuropathy, glomerulonephritis, skin purpura, cerebral vasculitis. Group 2 included 20 patients with non-HCV viral diseases: HHV8 (10), miscellaneous (10). Group 3 included 25 patients with biopsy-proven non-HCV chronic liver diseases: hepatitis B virus (10), miscellaneous (15). Controls were 100 blood donors (Group 4). Sera were adsorbed onto a pellet of A549/8 epithelial cells before being evaluated. AECA were then searched using a cellular ELISA, with a permanent cell line (EA.hy 926) as the substrate. All sera were also examined for the presence of cryoglobulin, antinuclear Ab, anticardiolipin Ab, and rheumatoid factor. RESULTS: AECA were more frequently found in HCV patients than in blood donors (41% vs 5%, p=0.0001). The prevalence of AECA was lower in non-HCV than in group 1 patients [group 2=15%, p=0.03; group 3=16%, p=0.01]. There was no significant difference in AECA prevalence between groups 2, 3 and 4. In HCV patients, AECA were associated with age (p<0.001), the presence of MC (p=0.008), cryoglobulin level (p=0.016), HCV-associated vasculitis (p=0.04), genotype 1b (p=0.005) and severity of liver histologic damage. AECA isotypes were not different in the 4 groups. AECA were not associated with antinuclear Ab, anticardiolipin Ab, rheumatoid factor or interferon alpha treatment. CONCLUSION: AECA are a common finding in HCV patients (41%), but not in other viral diseases or in non-HCV chronic liver diseases. In HCV patients, AECA are associated with MC-vasculitis, suggesting that AECA may be a marker for HCV-induced vasculitis.
Notes:
1998
 
PMID 
K Maloum, C Magnac, Z Azgui, C Cau, F Charlotte, J L Binet, H Merle-Béral, G Dighiero (1998)  VH gene expression in hairy cell leukaemia.   Br J Haematol 101: 1. 171-178 Apr  
Abstract: Hairy cells are characterized by their typical morphology and expression of specific surface antigens. Although their B-cell origin is now confirmed, their exact position in B-cell development remains unclear. To better define the origin of hairy cells, we analysed the immunophenotype and the Ig VH nucleotide sequence of seven cases of hairy cell leukaemia (HCL). Six of them were typical HCL and the remaining case corresponded to a variant HCL. Analysis of sequenced VH genes revealed that the VH1 family was used in one case, VH2 in one, VH3 in two, VH4 in two and VH5 in one. No preferential usage of VH genes was observed in this small series. In five cases high rates of somatic mutations were observed, with a predominance of mutations and replacements in CDR regions for three. indicating that these cells originate from cells that have been exposed to the hypermutation mechanism. The distribution of mutations in our small series provides some evidence of a selective mutational process.
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PMID 
F Charlotte, B Sriha, G Mansour, J Gabarre (1998)  An unusual case associating ileal Crohn's disease and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma of an adjacent mesenteric lymph node.   Arch Pathol Lab Med 122: 6. 559-561 Jun  
Abstract: Intestinal non-Hodgkin's lymphomas are a rare complication of long-standing Crohn's disease and generally arise in sites of active inflammatory disease. To our knowledge, we report the first case of an unusual association between ileal Crohn's disease and a diffuse large B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma involving an adjacent mesenteric lymph node but not the intestinal tract. A 22-year-old man was seen for intermittent abdominal pain, vomiting, and severe weight loss that were suggestive of intestinal obstruction. A segmental ileocolonic resection was performed. Gross examination revealed a terminal ileal inflammatory stenosis and enlarged mesenteric lymph nodes. Histologically, terminal ileal Crohn's disease was associated with a diffuse large cell lymphoma localized within one mesenteric lymph node without intestinal involvement. Immunophenotyping performed on deparaffinized sections demonstrated the B phenotype of this lymphoma.
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PMID 
M André, O Aumaître, T Papo, J L Kemeny, D Vital-Durand, H Rousset, J Ninet, P Pointud, F Charlotte, B Godeau, J Schmidt, J C Marcheix, J C Piette (1998)  Disseminated aseptic abscesses associated with Crohn's disease: a new entity?   Dig Dis Sci 43: 2. 420-428 Feb  
Abstract: Our purpose is to describe seven cases of disseminated aseptic abscesses with regard to clinical, biological, radiological, and histological information, treatment, and outcome. Data were collected on seven Caucasian patients who had proven sterile deep abscesses diagnosed in French university hospitals. The onset of the disease related to abscesses began at times from June 1988 to August 1994. Follow-up periods were 1 year, 7 months to 8 years, 2 months. The age of the patients ranged from 15 to 26 years old. At onset, all had fever and six had abdominal pain. Abscesses involved spleen and abdominal lymph nodes in six cases; liver in three; pancreas, brain, and chest in one. All had polymorphonuclear leukocytosis. Pathological examination showed granulomatous abscesses. Direct and indirect investigations failed to identify any causal microorganism. On six occasions, Crohn's disease was revealed 1 to 41 months later and in one case, it preceded the onset of abscesses. One subsequently developed Sweet's syndrome. Various antibiotic regimes were inefficient. Steroids, associated in three cases with immunosuppressive agents, resulted in a rapid improvement in six patients. In one case, splenectomy followed by 5-ASA therapy was used successfully. The dramatic effectiveness of steroids and immunosuppressive agents as well as follow-up suggest that disseminated aseptic abscesses might be an extraintestinal manifestation of Crohn's disease. Although the pathogenesis of this condition remains unknown, this entity may be related to neutrophilic dermatosis in which sterile deep abscesses have been reported.
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PMID 
P Mathurin, J Moussalli, J F Cadranel, V Thibault, F Charlotte, P Dumouchel, A Cazier, J M Huraux, B Devergie, M Vidaud, P Opolon, T Poynard (1998)  Slow progression rate of fibrosis in hepatitis C virus patients with persistently normal alanine transaminase activity.   Hepatology 27: 3. 868-872 Mar  
Abstract: In hepatitis C virus (HCV) patients with persistently normal alanine transaminase (ALT), the progression rate of fibrosis is unknown. The aims of this study were: 1) to compare HCV patients with normal ALT (group I) with HCV patients with elevated ALT (group II) matched on independent factors associated with fibrosis; and 2) to assess the progression rate of fibrosis. One hundred two HCV patients were included in each group. Histological lesions were staged using the METAVIR score. We defined fibrosis progression per year as the ratio of the fibrosis stage in METAVIR units to the duration of infection. In group I, ALT values were normal, and lower than in group II (25 vs. 127 IU/L; P < .0001). HCV RNA was present less frequently in group I (66% vs. 97%; P < .0001). There were no significant differences for viremia and genotypes. Histological activities were lower in group I (0.6 vs. 1.38; P < .0001). The stage of fibrosis was lower in group I (0.95 vs. 1.8; P < .001). The median progression rate of fibrosis was lower in group I (0.05 vs. 0.13; P < .001). In group I, after exclusion of negative HCV-RNA patients, the median progression rate of positives remained lower (0.05 vs. 0.13; P < .001). In group I, all cirrhotic patients (n = 3) were heavy drinkers. HCV patients with normal ALT showed weaker histological activity and lower fibrosis scores, and the progression rate of fibrosis was twice as slow as in HCV patients with elevated ALT. In these patients, severe fibrosis was associated with high alcohol consumption.
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PMID 
V Leblond, F Davi, F Charlotte, R Dorent, M O Bitker, L Sutton, I Gandjbakhch, J L Binet, M Raphael (1998)  Posttransplant lymphoproliferative disorders not associated with Epstein-Barr virus: a distinct entity?   J Clin Oncol 16: 6. 2052-2059 Jun  
Abstract: PURPOSE: Organ recipients are at a high risk of posttransplant lymphoproliferative disorders (PTLD) as a result of immunosuppressive therapy. Most B-cell lymphomas are associated with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection. We describe a morphologically and clinically distinct group of PTLD in 11 patients that occurred late after organ transplantation and were not associated with EBV. PATIENTS AND METHODS: There were seven kidney, three heart, and one liver transplant recipients (group I). The clinical manifestations, pathologic findings, treatment, and outcome were compared with those in 21 patients with EBV-associated PTLD treated in our institution (group II). EBV was detected with at least two techniques: Epstein-Barr-encoded RNA (EBER) in situ hybridization with EBER 1 + 2 probes, Southern blotting, and detection of latent membrane protein 1 (LMP1) expression by immunohistochemistry. RESULTS: The time between transplantation and the diagnosis of lymphoma ranged from 180 to 10,220 days in group I (mean, 2,234; median, 1,800) and from 60 to 2,100 days in group II (mean, 546; median, 180), and was significantly shorter in group II (P = .02). Among 19 tumors diagnosed within 2 years after the graft, 16 were associated with EBV; among 13 tumors diagnosed after more than 2 years, only five were associated with EBV. All of the B-cell PTLDs in group I were classified as monomorphic, meeting the criteria of B diffuse large-cell lymphoma (B-DLCL) with a component of immunoblasts, and genotyping confirmed their monoclonality. Three tumors were T-cell pleomorphic lymphomas. Tumor sites were mainly bone marrow and lymph nodes. Overall median survival was 1 month in group I and 37 months in group II, with two patients still alive in group I and nine in group II. The survival time was significantly longer in group II (P < .01). CONCLUSION: EBV-negative PTLD may be a late serious complication of organ transplantation. Half the tumors observed after kidney transplantation in our center were not associated with EBV and emerged after more than 5 years, which suggests the number of EBV-negative PTLDs in organ recipients might increase with time.
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PMID 
G Mansour, F Charlotte, V Calvez, F Davi, H Merle-Béral (1998)  AIDS-related primary lymphoma of the pleural cavity. A case report.   Acta Cytol 42: 2. 371-373 Mar/Apr  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Pleural effusions are common in patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Their most frequent causes are Kaposi's sarcoma and mycobacterial infections. We report cytologic, immunophenotypic and molecular features of a primary pleural non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) that represent an uncommon cause of isolated pleural effusion in patients with AIDS. CASE: A 66-year-old, human immunodeficiency virus-positive male presented with chest pain and dyspnea. He had no history of opportunistic infections or Kaposi's sarcoma. A chest radiography displayed a right-sided pleural effusion. Cytology of pleural fluid revealed lymphomatous cells with markedly irregular nuclei. Their immunophenotype was indeterminate. Computed tomography of the thorax and abdomen did not show any tumor mass. Molecular analysis demonstrated that the lymphomatous cells had a B-cell genotype and contained Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV) and Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) DNA sequences. CONCLUSION: This case belongs to a new subgroup of AIDS-related NHL that is characterized by unusual morphology, null immunophenotype, B-cell genotype and association with both KSHV and EBV.
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PMID 
J L Cohen, O Boyer, B Salomon, R Onclerco, D Depetris, L Lejeune, V Dubus-Bonnet, S Bruel, F Charlotte, M G Mattéï, D Klatzmann (1998)  Fertile homozygous transgenic mice expressing a functional truncated herpes simplex thymidine kinase delta TK gene.   Transgenic Res 7: 5. 321-330 Sep  
Abstract: Dividing cells expressing the Herpes simplex type 1 thymidine kinase (TK) can be killed upon ganciclovir treatment. Likewise, conditional cell knock-out can be obtained in transgenic mice expressing a TK gene placed under the control of tissue-specific regulatory sequences. Such animals provide powerful experimental systems for assessing the functional role of specific cell populations through their time-controlled ablation. However, whatever the regulatory sequences used, a leaky toxic overexpression of TK in testis renders male TK-transgenic mice sterile and prevents the generation of homozygous TK-expressing animals. To solve this problem, we designed a truncated TK variant (delta TK) not expressed in the testis. We generated transgenic mice expressing delta TK under the control of lymphocyte-specific regulatory sequences derived from the CD4 gene. The delta TK protein expressed in T-lymphocytes allowed the conditional ablation of activated T-cells in vitro and in vivo. Importantly, for one transgenic line we could generate fertile homozygous mice harboring a functional delta TK transgene. delta TK should thus dramatically facilitate the development of transgenic mice expressing a conditional suicide gene.
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PMID 
D Klatzmann, P Chérin, G Bensimon, O Boyer, A Coutellier, F Charlotte, C Boccaccio, J L Salzmann, S Herson (1998)  A phase I/II dose-escalation study of herpes simplex virus type 1 thymidine kinase "suicide" gene therapy for metastatic melanoma. Study Group on Gene Therapy of Metastatic Melanoma.   Hum Gene Ther 9: 17. 2585-2594 Nov  
Abstract: We performed a dose-escalating phase I/II study of retrovirus-mediated herpes simplex virus type 1 thymidine kinase (HSV-1-TK) suicide gene therapy for metastatic melanoma. HSV-1 TK expression, which specifically sensitizes transduced and bystander cancer cells to ganciclovir (GCV) toxicity, was mediated by one (four patients, first dose step) to three (four patients, second dose step) injections of "M11" retrovirus vector-producing cells in melanoma cutaneous nodules. After a 7-day period allowed for cancer cell transduction, GCV was administered for 14 days. Safety was assessed by clinical and laboratory evaluations, and efficacy was assessed by tumor measurements and histology. M11 doses ranged from 76 to 1247 x 10(6) cells. Treatment-related adverse events were mild and transient, limited to inflammatory skin reactions at injection and fever on repeated injections. Plasma GCV was in the active range (>0.2 microg/ml); transgene was detected by polymerase chain reaction in three of six patients; treated tumor size was moderately affected under GCV as compared with untreated tumors, although 2 weeks after GCV administration important (>50%) treated-tumor necrosis was evidenced on histology in three of eight patients. All patients showed disease progression on long-term follow-up. Thus, M11-mediated HSV-1 TK gene therapy was well tolerated over a wide dose range. The limited tumor response is likely to be related to poor gene transfer efficiency. However, necrosis following GCV administration in transduced tumors indicates a potential for treatment efficacy.
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PMID 
L Sutton, K Maloum, H Gonzalez, H Zouabi, N Azar, C Boccaccio, F Charlotte, J M Cosset, J Gabarre, V Leblond, H Merle-Beral, J L Binet (1998)  Autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation as salvage treatment for advanced B cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia.   Leukemia 12: 11. 1699-1707 Nov  
Abstract: Given the generally poor outcome of advanced B cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia, experimental approaches are warranted, especially for younger patients in whom classical treatments have failed. We therefore conducted a prospective single-center study, using polychemotherapy (ESHAP) to prepare patients for hematopoietic stem cell collection and autologous stem cell transplantation as consolidation therapy. Twenty patients entered the study. An adequate response to ESHAP was obtained in 13 patients, and sufficient stem cells for grafting were obtained in eight of the 12 patients who underwent the collection procedure. Six of these grafted patients are alive in complete clinical remission a median of 30 months after transplantation. It should be noted that we were only able to graft 40% of the patients enrolled in this study, either because a new remission could not be obtained or because not enough hematopoietic stem cells could be collected. This argues for stem cell collection as soon as a first remission is obtained, even if the autograft is done later in the course of the disease.
Notes:
 
PMID 
P Cacoub, L Musset, P Hausfater, P Ghillani, F L Fabiani, F Charlotte, E Angevin, P Opolon, T Poynard, J C Piette, B Autran (1998)  No evidence for abnormal immune activation in peripheral blood T cells in patients with hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection with or without cryoglobulinaemia. Multivirc Group.   Clin Exp Immunol 113: 1. 48-54 Jul  
Abstract: The aim of this study was to investigate the peripheral blood lymphocyte (PBL) phenotypes and T cell repertoire in patients with HCV infection, with or without mixed cryoglobulinaemia (MC). The patients were: Group 1, 23 patients with HCV infection and MC; Group 2, 14 patients with HCV infection but without MC; Group 3, 10 patients with symptomatic essential MC. Twenty healthy blood donors were used as controls. Blood lymphocyte counts were determined, and flow cytometry was used to measure proportions of B cells (CD19+), natural killer (NK) cells (CD16+CD56+), T cells (CD3+), CD4+ T cell subsets (memory CD4+CD45RO+; naive CD4+CD45RO-; Th0/Th2CD4+CD7-; activated CD4+CD25+), and CD8+ T cell subsets (immunoregulatory CD8+CD57+; cytotoxic CD8+S6F1+, activated CD8+CD25+). Bias in the usage of T cell receptor (TCR) Vbeta chains was studied in a subgroup of 10 representative patients of Group 1 using a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis of the Vbeta segments with a series of 20 oligonucleotides specific for the Vbeta families. The three groups were comparable for blood lymphocyte counts, and we observed no abnormal repartition of the following PBL subsets: T cells (CD3+), CD4+ and CD8+ subpopulations, B cells (CD19+), and the NK cells (CD16+56+). In none of the groups could we observe lymphocyte ex vivo activation as assessed by the normal expression of the activation cell markers: CD25 on CD4+ or CD8+ T cells, or CD5 on B cells. The repartition of naive and memory (CD45RO-/RO+) CD4+ T cells was normal and we did not observe any amplification of the CD4+CD7- T cell subset differentiated in vivo in Th0/Th2 cells. There was no significant amplification of cytotoxic (SF6+) and immunoregulatory (CD57+) CD8+ T cells in HCV patients with or without MC. Finally, the usage of Vbeta families in the TCR repertoire was normal in the patients tested. In patients with chronic HCV infection, with or without MC, we did not find any significant expansion or abnormal activation of T, B and NK cell subsets, dysbalance of the naive/memory subsets, or expansion of the Th0/Th2 subpopulation. These findings differ from the profound immune alterations that are observed in other chronic infections such as HIV or Epstein-Barr virus. Although this study was restricted to the peripheral blood, it suggests that in chronic HCV infection, MC is not the consequence of a chronic activation or dysregulation of the peripheral blood immune cells.
Notes:
 
PMID 
M Koulibaly, S B Diallo, A R Wann, M B Diallo, F Charlotte, Y Le Charpentier (1998)  Apparently isolated case of African Burkitt lymphoma localized in the breast   Ann Pathol 18: 3. 237-238 Jul  
Abstract: We report a case of unilateral primary Burkitt lymphoma of the breast. It occurred in a young woman with a history of recent abortion, as a painful mass confused with an abscess. The diagnostic was suggested after fine needle aspiration. Biopsy allowed confirmation, by revealing a B-phenotype lymphoma with intranuclear Epstein-virus small RNA (EBER) in all cells. Additional investigations (clinical and radiographic) were negative (no lymphadenopathy). Chemotherapy induced rapid and complete remission. Patient is in good health (no local recurrence) 5 years later.
Notes:
1997
 
PMID 
B Philippe, L J Couderc, D Droz, F Charlotte, G Choukroun, B Epardeau, O Bletry, I Caubarrere, B Varet, O Hermine (1997)  Systemic vasculitis and myelodysplastic syndromes. A report of two cases.   Arthritis Rheum 40: 1. 179-182 Jan  
Abstract: Two cases of systemic vasculitis associated with myelodysplastic syndromes are reported. Vasculitis may develop either before or after the diagnosis of a hematologic disorder, and it responds to treatment with high-dose corticosteroids.
Notes:
 
PMID 
V Paradis, P Mathurin, M Kollinger, F Imbert-Bismut, F Charlotte, A Piton, P Opolon, A Holstege, T Poynard, P Bedossa (1997)  In situ detection of lipid peroxidation in chronic hepatitis C: correlation with pathological features.   J Clin Pathol 50: 5. 401-406 May  
Abstract: AIMS: To assess the occurrence of lipid peroxidation in chronic hepatitis C and to evaluate its relation to pathological features and liver iron concentrations. METHODS: Liver biopsy samples of 43 patients with untreated chronic hepatitis C were studied by immunohistochemistry using specific antibodies directed against two major aldehyde metabolites of lipid peroxidation, malondialdehyde (MDA), and 4-hydroxynonenal (HNE). RESULTS: MDA and HNE adducts (aldehydes covalently linked to another molecule) were detected in the liver samples in 77% and 30% of cases, respectively. MDA adducts were detected both in the extracellular matrix and sinusoidal cells localised in areas of periportal and lobular necrosis. HNE adducts appeared in the cytoplasm of only a few hepatocytes. Comparison of the semiquantitative assessment of adducts (MDA and HNE indexes) with the grading and the staging of chronic hepatitis showed that the MDA index was correlated with fibrosis score (p < 0.001) and the grade of activity (p < 0.01). There was also a tendency to correlation with liver iron concentration (p = 0.09). No correlation was observed between the HNE index and pathological features or liver iron concentration. CONCLUSION: Lipid peroxidation products are detectable in the liver of chronic hepatitis C patients. The presence of MDA adducts in areas of active fibrogenesis and the correlation between the MDA index and fibrosis score suggest a role for lipid peroxidation in liver fibrosis.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J L Cohen, O Boyer, B Salomon, R Onclercq, F Charlotte, S Bruel, G Boisserie, D Klatzmann (1997)  Prevention of graft-versus-host disease in mice using a suicide gene expressed in T lymphocytes.   Blood 89: 12. 4636-4645 Jun  
Abstract: Alloreactive T cells present in a bone marrow transplant are responsible for graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), but their depletion is associated with impaired engraftment, immunosuppression, and loss of the graft-versus-leukemia effect. We developed a therapeutic strategy against GVHD based on the selective destruction of these alloreactive T cells, while preserving a competent T-cell pool of donor origin. We generated transgenic mice expressing in their T lymphocytes the Herpes simplex type 1 thymidine kinase (TK) suicide gene that allows the destruction of dividing T cells by a ganciclovir treatment. T cells expressing the TK transgene were used to generate GVHD in irradiated bone marrow grafted mice. We show that a short 7-day ganciclovir treatment, initiated at the time of bone marrow transplantation, efficiently prevented GVHD in mice receiving TK-expressing T cells. These mice were healthy and had a normal survival. They maintained a T-cell pool of donor origin that responded normally to in vitro stimulation with mitogens or third party alloantigens, but were tolerant to recipient alloantigens. Our experimental system provides the proof of concept for a therapeutic strategy of GVHD prevention using genetically engineered T cells.
Notes:
1996
 
PMID 
P Cacoub, C Ginsburg, Z Tazi, H Beaufils, F Charlotte, F Davi, P Carde, P Godeau (1996)  Sjögren's syndrome with acute renal failure caused by renal pseudolymphoma.   Am J Kidney Dis 28: 5. 762-766 Nov  
Abstract: A 56-year-old man with Sjögren's syndrome was found to have acute renal failure. Immunopathologic analysis of renal biopsy specimens showed polyclonal lymphocytic interstitial infiltration. DNA analysis of the T-cell receptor and the heavy chain immunoglobulin genes showed a polyclonal pattern of gene rearrangements. Renal failure caused by this pseudolymphoma regressed dramatically with steroid therapy. This is the first reported case of proven renal pseudolymphoma that regressed with steroid therapy.
Notes:
 
PMID 
A Achbarou, C Ombrouck, T Gneragbe, F Charlotte, L Rénia, I Desportes-Livage, D Mazier (1996)  Experimental model for human intestinal microsporidiosis in interferon gamma receptor knockout mice infected by Encephalitozoon intestinalis.   Parasite Immunol 18: 8. 387-392 Aug  
Abstract: Interferon gamma receptor knockout mice developed a chronic infection when inoculated with spores of Encephalitozoon intestinalis which is a cause of intestinal microsporidiosis in AIDS patients. The infection was evaluated by enumeration of the spores of the parasite shed in the stools, histological examination and follow up over a period of six months. A dose-response was demonstrated since higher numbers of spores were excreted and more infection sites were found in mice which were given an increased quantity of parasites. In infected wild type mice, the number of excreted spores decreased until day 16 post-inoculation, then spores were detected sporadically in low numbers. These data confirmed the role of IFN-gamma in the control of E. intestinalis infection. The infection was not lethal suggesting that other factors are involved in regulation of the parasite infection. This model, with the long survival time of the animals together with the measurable quantity of spores shed in the stools will be useful for testing potential therapeutical agents.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J Gabarre, V Leblond, L Sutton, N Azar, M Jouan, C Boccaccio, H Gonzalez, F Charlotte, M Gentilini, J L Binet (1996)  Autologous bone marrow transplantation in relapsed HIV-related non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.   Bone Marrow Transplant 18: 6. 1195-1197 Dec  
Abstract: There are few reports of salvage chemotherapy for HIV-related non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL). We report a relapsed HIV-related high-grade NHL which was treated successfully with ESHAP chemotherapy followed by high-dose chemotherapy and autologous bone marrow transplantation (ABMT). ABMT may later have triggered opportunistic infections in this patient.
Notes:
 
PMID 
V Paradis, P Mathurin, A Laurent, F Charlotte, M Vidaud, T Poynard, C Hoang, P Opolon, P Bedossa (1996)  Histological features predictive of liver fibrosis in chronic hepatitis C infection.   J Clin Pathol 49: 12. 998-1004 Dec  
Abstract: AIMS: To assess which pathological features are associated with a sensitive marker of liver fibrogenesis and thus of the potential development of fibrosis in hepatitis C. METHODS: The degree of liver fibrogenesis was evaluated by quantification of type I collagen mRNA and transforming growth factor (TGF) beta 1 mRNA (a major profibrogenic cytokine) in liver biopsy specimens from 28 patients with chronic hepatitis C and five controls, using a quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) assay. Results of mRNA quantification were correlated with histological lesions scored semiquantitatively in the same specimens. RESULTS: Type I collagen mRNA was more strongly expressed in patients than in controls and correlated with the degree of fibrosis, but not with any of the necro-inflammatory lesions (portal inflammation, piecemeal necrosis, and lobular necrosis). TGF beta 1 mRNA concentration was higher in patients than in controls and correlated with histological grade of activity and lobular necrosis. This result was confirmed by in situ hybridisation experiments which showed that TGF beta 1 mRNA was mainly expressed in areas of focal lobular necrosis in chronic hepatitis C. CONCLUSION: This study shows that fibrosis, rather than necro-inflammatory lesions or activity scores, is associated with fibrogenesis and thus with potential aggravation of the fibrous deposit in chronic hepatitis C. Lobular necrosis is an important predictor of prognosis in chronic hepatitis C, as shown by its strong association with TGF beta 1 mRNA expression.
Notes:
1995
 
PMID 
F Charlotte (1995)  Hodgkin disease: recent histological and biological data   Rev Med Interne 16: 5. 336-343  
Abstract: Recent histologic, immunophenotypic and genotypic data have restricted the concept of Hodgkin's disease (HD) to the type 2 and 3 of Rye classification. This classification should be revised since the lymphocyte-predominance type has been shown to include the nodular paragranuloma which is a B-cell lymphoma, cases which have been confused with T-cell-rich large B-cell non Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) and cases which should be reclassified among the mixed cellularity group. Further more, most types 4 are now regarded as anaplastic large cell NHL. Immunophenotypic and genotypic studies support the heterogeneous nature of Reed-Sternberg and Hodgkin's (RSH) cells since they could be derived from B, T or null lymphocytes. In 50% of cases, RSH cells harbour the Epstein-Barr virus genome and express a viral protein, the latent membrane protein, which could play an oncogenic role in HD. Finally, RSH cells produce a wide range of cytokines that could stimulate their proliferation and explain the marked cellular reaction that is observed in HD.
Notes:
 
PMID 
F Charlotte, D Bachir, M Nénert, P Mavier, F Galactéros, D Dhumeaux, E S Zafrani (1995)  Vascular lesions of the liver in sickle cell disease. A clinicopathological study in 26 living patients.   Arch Pathol Lab Med 119: 1. 46-52 Jan  
Abstract: BACKGROUND--Hepatic lesions in sickle cell disease have been studied essentially in autopsy series. Previous reports on living patients are rare and concern a limited number of cases. The aim of the present study is to report the clinical, biochemical, and hepatic histological findings in 26 living patients with sickle cell disease and hepatobiliary disease. PATIENTS AND METHODS--Twenty-six of 510 patients with sickle cell disease, in whom liver tissue was available for histological analysis, were selected. In 21 patients, biopsy was obtained during laparotomy for cholecystectomy; 5 patients underwent needle biopsy for hepatomegaly and/or liver test abnormalities. RESULTS--Twenty of the 21 cholecystectomized patients, as well as the 5 other patients, had liver vascular lesions consisting of sinusoidal dilatation (23 cases), perisinusoidal fibrosis (19 cases), and acute ischemic necrosis (5 cases). It is of interest that the 21 cholecystectomized patients had clinical signs of complicated cholelithiasis, and that 20 of them had gallbladder stones, with common bile duct lithiasis in only 1 case. In the 25 patients without common bile duct obstruction, symptoms might have been due to vascular lesions, but it must also be noted that in the cholecystectomized patients they did not persist or recur following surgery. In one cirrhotic patient, marked sinusoidal lesions might have favored severe hepatocellular failure that led to liver transplantation. In another patient, fatal hepatocellular insufficiency was possibly due to ischemia. The nonvascular lesions that were observed, ie, chronic persistent or mildly active hepatitis (11 cases) and cirrhosis (2 cases), were always associated with vascular lesions. CONCLUSION--These results suggest that in sickle cell disease: (1) hepatic lesions are mainly vascular; (2) these lesions can be responsible for acute and/or chronic ischemia that may be severe; (3) symptoms suggestive of acute cholecystitis and/or biliary tract obstruction might be, at least in part, explained by vascular lesions; and (4) biliary tract surgery indications should be considered more carefully.
Notes:
 
PMID 
P Kanavaros, P Gaulard, F Charlotte, N Martin, C Ducos, M Lebezu, D Y Mason (1995)  Discordant expression of immunoglobulin and its associated molecule mb-1/CD79a is frequently found in mediastinal large B cell lymphomas.   Am J Pathol 146: 3. 735-741 Mar  
Abstract: Mediastinal large B cell lymphomas are uncommon neoplasms that are thought to originate from thymic B cells. An unusual feature of these neoplasms is that they often lack surface immunoglobulin (Ig), a molecule ubiquitously expressed by most mature B cells. In the present study we have analyzed 12 cases of mediastinal large B cell lymphoma for the expression of the mb-1/CD79a polypeptide. This is a component, together with B29/CD79b, of a heterodimer that is associated with surface Ig on normal B cells. Our aim was to see whether loss of Ig in this type of lymphoma is associated with loss of the accompanying CD79a molecule. We have also evaluated 128 B cell lymphomas of other categories to see whether any of them show discordance between mb-1 and Ig expression and analyzed 30 T cell lymphomas as Ig-negative controls. We found that 5 of the 7 mediastinal large B cell lymphomas with interpretable staining results for both mb-1 and Ig, lack Ig but expressed CD79a (mb-1). This phenotype was very rare in other categories of B cell lymphoma, being found among 110 cases in only 5 cases that were all follicular lymphoma. The remaining 105 B cell lymphomas displayed mb-1+/Ig+ phenotype. All 30 T cell lymphomas were mb-1 negative. We conclude that discordant mb-1/Ig expression occurs commonly in mediastinal large B cell lymphomas. In addition, the finding that 11 of 12 of these neoplasms express a phenotype (CD10-, CD19+, CD20+, CD21-, CD22+, CD23-/+) that is very similar to that described for thymic medullary B cells reinforces the idea that most mediastinal large B cell lymphomas are of thymic B cell origin. The correlation between mb-1 and Ig staining patterns in B cell lymphomas of other categories reveals that in the majority (90%), expression of the antigen receptor complex parallels that of mature B cells. These data therefore confirm that the expression of the mb-1 protein provides independent strong evidence for the B lineage of lymphomas and may be used for their routine phenotypic characterization.
Notes:
 
PMID 
D Cherqui, A Rahmouni, F Charlotte, H Boulahdour, J M Métreau, M Meignan, P L Fagniez, E S Zafrani, D Mathieu, D Dhumeaux (1995)  Management of focal nodular hyperplasia and hepatocellular adenoma in young women: a series of 41 patients with clinical, radiological, and pathological correlations.   Hepatology 22: 6. 1674-1681 Dec  
Abstract: Preoperative distinction between focal nodular hyperplasia (FNH) that should be managed conservatively and hepatocellular adenoma (HA) that should be resected remains difficult. The result is controversial management of these patients. The aims of this study were to report the value of modern imaging procedures for noninvasive diagnosis of these lesions, to assess the value of intraoperative frozen section studies, and to propose a management strategy in those patients. Forty-one consecutive women with FNH (35 cases) or HA (6 cases) treated at our institution between 1985 and 1992 were studied. New imaging techniques, including enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and color Doppler ultrasonography (US), were prospectively appraised in addition to usual techniques. Histological examination of surgical specimens was obtained in all cases. A sixfold increase in the number of patients with FNH was observed during this study, whereas the number of patients with HA did not change. FNHs were incidental US findings in 74% of the cases. The best imaging procedure in the diagnosis of FNH was enhanced MRI with a sensitivity of 70% and a specificity of 98%. Color Doppler US was a useful adjunct. Intraoperative frozen section studies were performed in 16 patients with 19 tumors with a sensitivity of 89% and a specificity of 100%.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Notes:
 
PMID 
V Leblond, L Sutton, R Dorent, F Davi, M O Bitker, J Gabarre, F Charlotte, J J Ghoussoub, C Fourcade, A Fischer (1995)  Lymphoproliferative disorders after organ transplantation: a report of 24 cases observed in a single center.   J Clin Oncol 13: 4. 961-968 Apr  
Abstract: PURPOSE: Organ recipients are at a high risk of post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorders (PTLDs) as a complication of immunosuppressive therapy. We report the incidence, clinical presentation, pathologic findings, treatment, and outcome for 24 cases of PTLD observed at our institution. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Twenty-four (1.7%) of 1,385 organ transplant recipients developed PTLDs. Dosages of immunosuppressive drugs were reduced in 19 patients. Treatment consisted of anti-B-cell monoclonal antibodies (12 patients), and/or chemotherapy (eight patients), or surgery (two patients). RESULTS: The median time between grafting and the onset of PTLD was 210 days. Tumors were classified as monomorphic and polymorphic in nine and 15 cases, respectively. Three of 24 cases were of T-cell origin. Genotypic studies confirmed the monoclonality of the tumors in 11 cases among 14 PTLDs tested. Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection was associated with 70% of B-cell PTLDs tested. The overall survival duration was 5 months. Ten patients are alive and disease-free with a median follow-up time of 37 months; most were treated with anti-B-cell antibodies. Two other patients died in complete remission of unrelated causes at 33 and 38 months. CONCLUSION: Anti-B-cell monoclonal antibody therapy seems to be effective in PTLD, even in monoclonal B-cell forms, but other approaches will be necessary to improve survival further.
Notes:
1994
 
PMID 
D Cherqui, C Duvoux, F Charlotte, R Humeres, J Y Lauzet, J M Métreau, A Salvat, N Rotman, M Julien, P L Fagniez (1994)  Value of a powerful initial immunosuppression after liver transplantation. Prospective study of 60 cases   Gastroenterol Clin Biol 18: 2. 115-122  
Abstract: With usual immunosuppression, the incidence of acute rejection after liver transplantation is higher than 60% in most series. The aim of this prospective study was to assess the value of a powerful initial immunosuppression on acute rejection, mortality and morbidity. REGIMEN. Group 1: patients with normal postoperative renal function (serum creatinaemia < 150 mumol/L) received cyclosporine from day 1 to day 15 by continuous i.v. infusion to reach a whole blood level of 400 to 500 ng/mL; after day 15, cyclosporine was reduced. Group 2: in cases of postoperative renal failure (serum creatinine > or = 150 mumol/L), anti-thymocyte globulins were used for 10 days; cyclosporine was introduced after recovery of renal failure at usual doses. In addition, all patients received steroids and azathioprine according to usual regimens. RESULTS. From January 1989 to June 1992, 60 cases were studied in 59 patients: 45 (75%) entered group 1 and 15 (25%) entered group 2. In group 1, there were 11 acute rejection episodes (24%) and one postoperative death at three months (2.3%). In group 2, two early deaths (within 5 days) were excluded from the study of rejection. Among the 13 remaining cases, there were three episodes of acute rejection (23%) and one hospital death at three months. Overall, there were 14 episodes of acute rejection (24%), 12 of which were steroid-responsive (86%), no chronic rejection, a usual rate of infections (57%), one retransplantation (1.7%) and a hospital mortality of 6.8% (4 of 59 cases). One year survival was 78%, with 5 of 7 late deaths due to recurrent cancer. CONCLUSIONS. Our results suggest that, after liver transplantation, a) high initial cyclosporine dose in patients with normal postoperative renal function is associated with reduced incidence and severity of acute rejection without increased mortality and morbidity, b) antithymocyte globulins are an efficient alternative to cyclosporine in patients with postoperative acute renal failure and saves OKT3 for the treatment of steroid-resistant rejection.
Notes:
 
PMID 
Y Le Charpentier, M Auriol, T H Boutin, G Le Naour, F Charlotte, S Agbo-Godeau, H Szpirglas, P Godeau, F Guilbert (1994)  Histopathologic lesions of the accessory salivary glands in Gougerot-Sjögren syndrome: re-evaluation of the diagnostic criteria of Chisholm and Mason and of Chometter et al   Rev Stomatol Chir Maxillofac 95: 3. 207-212  
Abstract: In a retrospective study, we used a series of 29 patients with Sjögren's Syndrome diagnosed according to the new European criteria (Cl. Vitali, S. Bombardieri, H. M. Moutsopoulos et al.) (8). (Arthritis Rheum 1993; 36:340-7). A labial biopsy technique allowed to classify these patients into the anatomical "scores" formerly related by Chisholm and Mason and Chomette et al. Referring to these criteria, only 45% of patients presented a characteristic histopathological pattern. If another complementary criterium, i.e. ductal tropism of lymphoid infiltrates, was added, that percentage remained low (50% only). Thus, these results would suggest the following considerations: the classical histopathological criteria do not seem sufficiently specific; other histological criteria such as ductal lesions previously noted by Leroy et al. must in addition be looked for; thus it would seem to be of considerable value to use in the future complementary quantitative studies by means of morphometric methods.
Notes:
 
PMID 
F Charlotte, A L'Herminé, N Martin, Y Geleyn, M Nollet, P Gaulard, E S Zafrani (1994)  Immunohistochemical detection of bcl-2 protein in normal and pathological human liver.   Am J Pathol 144: 3. 460-465 Mar  
Abstract: The bcl-2 protein, which prolongs cell survival by blocking apoptosis, is expressed by progenitor cells in several self-renewing tissues and by tumoral cells in some extrahepatic neoplasms. Because the liver is a slow self-renewing tissue, an immunohistochemical study of the cellular distribution of the bcl-2 protein was performed in normal liver (12 cases), nontumoral hepatic lesions (33 cases), and benign or malignant liver tumors (46 cases). In normal liver, bcl-2 was expressed by bile ductules and small bile duct epithelium, but not by hepatocytes or large bile duct epithelium. In cirrhosis and focal nodular hyperplasia, epithelial cells of the ductular proliferation were bcl-2-positive. Eight of 11 cholangiocarcinomas stained positively for bcl-2, whereas all 15 hepatocellular carcinomas were bcl-2-negative. bcl-2 was also expressed in 6 of 14 metastatic adenocarcinomas. These findings suggest that the ductular cells and small bile duct epithelial cells might have a prolonged survival and might be hepatic progenitor cells. In addition, the bcl-2 protein appears to be a marker of cholangiocarcinoma but not of hepatocellular carcinoma and could help in distinguishing between these two primary liver tumors.
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PMID 
F Charlotte, J Wechsler, P Joly, M Bagot, M Lessana-Leibowitch, P Gaulard, E S Zafrani (1994)  Nonepidermotropic cutaneous lymphomas. A histopathological and immunohistological study of 52 cases.   Arch Pathol Lab Med 118: 1. 56-63 Jan  
Abstract: We report the detailed histological and immunohistological findings in 52 cases of nonepidermotropic cutaneous lymphoma, as revealed by cutaneous lesions. The patients presented mainly with cutaneous nodules and, more rarely, with infiltrated plaques, annular erythema, or erythroderma. The staging procedure following the diagnosis revealed lymph node and/or bone marrow involvement in half of the cases. Nearly 60% of the nonepidermotropic cutaneous lymphomas were of the large-cell type. The reticular dermis was involved in all of the cases, and the papillary dermis was involved in only 11 of them. Nonepidermotropic cutaneous lymphomas were of the B-cell, T-cell, and non-B-, non-T-cell type in 38, 13, and 1 case(s), respectively. A monotypic immunoglobulin light chain expression was detected in 33 of 35 tested cases of the B-cell lymphomas, and a loss of one or several pan-T-cell antigens was observed in all of the cases of the T-cell lymphomas. In seven cases (13%), the diagnosis of malignancy was based only on these immunohistological criteria. This study shows that nonepidermotropic cutaneous lymphomas are B-cell lymphomas in 75% of the cases, most often of the large-cell type. It also emphasizes the value of immunohistochemistry to firmly establish malignancy when routine light microscopical findings are questionable.
Notes:
 
PMID 
D Cherqui, L Palazzo, P Piedbois, F Charlotte, C Duvoux, J J Duron, P L Fagniez, D Valla (1994)  Common bile duct stricture as a late complication of upper abdominal radiotherapy.   J Hepatol 20: 6. 693-697 Jun  
Abstract: We report the cases of two patients who developed symptomatic common bile duct stricture 10 years after upper abdominal radiotherapy for malignant lymphoma. Both patients were in complete remission and presented with marked obstructive jaundice. Endosonography was useful in both cases and showed segmental thickening of the bile duct wall narrowing in the lumen. Both patients underwent surgical exploration, confirming biliary obstruction due to intrinsic wall thickening, and had successful biliary drainage by Roux-en-Y hepatico-jejunostomy. Histological examination of the resected bile duct, in one case, and of a bile duct biopsy, in the other, was consistent with late irradiation injury. We conclude that stricture may be a delayed consequence of radiotherapy applied to normal bile ducts.
Notes:
1993
 
DOI   
PMID 
F Charlotte, K M Win, A M Preaux, P Mavier, D Dhumeaux, E S Zafrani, J Rosenbaum (1993)  Immunolocalization of heparin-binding growth factors (HBGF) types 1 and 2 in rat liver. Selective hyperexpression of HBGF-2 in carbon tetrachloride-induced fibrosis.   J Pathol 169: 4. 471-476 Apr  
Abstract: Ito cells play a major role in liver fibrosis but the mechanisms controlling their activation in vivo are poorly understood. Heparin-binding growth factors (HBGF) types 1 and 2 are mitogenic for cultured Ito cells. They have been found in liver extracts but their cellular localization is unknown. We have studied by immunohistochemistry HBGF-1 and -2 expression in normal rat liver and in carbon tetrachloride (CCl4)-induced fibrosis. In normal liver, HBGF-1 was present only in sinusoidal cells whereas HBGF-2 was also detected in endothelial cells lining major vessels. At the acute stage of CCl4 intoxication, HBGF-2 was expressed in centrilobular clusters of mononuclear phagocytes that were surrounded by many HBGF-2-negative Ito cells. In the later stages, HBGF-2 was expressed by Ito cells within the fibrous bands. No modulation of HBGF-1 expression was noted at any stage. These results suggest that (1) at the acute stage of CCl4 intoxication, HBGF-2 produced by mononuclear phagocytes could participate in the recruitment of Ito cells; and (2) during the CCl4-induced fibrotic process, HBGF-2 could contribute to Ito cell proliferation and the synthesis of fibrosis components. In this in vivo model of hepatic fibrosis, the hyperexpression of HBGF-2 is a relatively specific event since the expression of a structurally related molecule, HBGF-1 was not modulated.
Notes:
 
PMID 
H Boulahdour, D Cherqui, F Charlotte, A Rahmouni, D Dhumeaux, E S Zafrani, M Meignan (1993)  The hot spot hepatobiliary scan in focal nodular hyperplasia.   J Nucl Med 34: 12. 2105-2110 Dec  
Abstract: A prospective study was performed on 14 patients with histologically proven focal nodular hyperplasia (FNH) using a hepatobiliary scan with trimethylbromoimino-diacetic acid (TBIDA) and a colloid scan with rhenium sulfur colloids. TBIDA uptake was relatively normal in the region of the tumor, but during the clearance phase 23/25 of the tumors were detected by a hot spot of radioactivity. Depending on the relative contrast achieved between the tumor and normal liver, this hot spot appeared early or later, but was always present at 60 min. In three tumors, a "doughnut" pattern was observed within the hot spot due to a central defect. Hypervascularization was observed during the perfusion phase in 76% of the tumoral sites and normal colloid uptake in only 64%. The detectability of FNH appears greater with TBIDA (92%) than with CT or MRI (84%). The high prevalence of hot spots may be due to careful technological conditions when obtaining hepatobiliary scans. Late images, overexposed films, multiple views and stimulation of gallbladder excretion increased tumor detectability. The hot spot sign may be a useful tool when combined with the results of other imaging modalities in the diagnosis of FNH. The peculiar pathology of FNH with fibrosis, hyperplastic hepatocytes and cholangiolar proliferation might explain this scintigraphic appearance.
Notes:
 
PMID 
K M Win, F Charlotte, A Mallat, D Cherqui, N Martin, P Mavier, A M Preaux, D Dhumeaux, J Rosenbaum (1993)  Mitogenic effect of transforming growth factor-beta 1 on human Ito cells in culture: evidence for mediation by endogenous platelet-derived growth factor.   Hepatology 18: 1. 137-145 Jul  
Abstract: We assessed the effect of transforming growth factor-beta 1 on the proliferation of human Ito cells. Ito cells in their myofibroblastlike phenotype were grown from explants of human liver and were characterized with electron microscopy and positive immunostaining for desmin and smooth muscle alpha-actin. Transforming growth factor-beta 1 was mitogenic for human Ito cells whatever the culture conditions, although it was, as previously described, inhibitory of growth for rat Ito cells. The mitogenic effect of transforming growth factor-beta 1 was likely due to induction of autocrine platelet-derived growth factor chain secretion by Ito cells themselves because (a) the mitogenic effect of transforming growth factor-beta 1 was blocked by specific platelet-derived growth factor antibodies, (b) transforming growth factor-beta 1 increased platelet-derived growth factor-A chain messenger RNA expression and platelet-derived growth factor-AA secretion by human Ito cells and (c) human Ito cells expressed the alpha-type platelet-derived growth factor-A receptor messenger RNA. Exogenous platelet-derived growth factor-AA was also mitogenic for human Ito cells, mimicking the effect of transforming growth factor-beta 1. Our data suggest that results obtained with rat Ito cells must be extrapolated with caution to human ones. The mitogenic effect of transforming growth factor-beta 1 on human Ito cells probably has pathophysiological relevance because transforming growth factor-beta 1 has been demonstrated in vivo at sites of active liver fibrogenesis.
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1992
 
PMID 
A Rahmouni, M Golli, D Mathieu, M C Anglade, F Charlotte, N Vasile (1992)  Castleman disease mimicking liver tumor: CT and MR features.   J Comput Assist Tomogr 16: 5. 699-703 Sep/Oct  
Abstract: We report the CT and MR features of two localized abdominal forms of Castleman disease mimicking hypervascular liver tumors due to their unusual location in the porta hepatis and the portacaval space. The MR appearance of Castleman lymph nodes is emphasized, including their characteristics on dynamic turbo-fast low angle shot (FLASH) sequences after Gd-DOTA bolus injection. Our report suggests that the CT and MR features of Castleman lymph nodes in these locations cannot enable their differentiation from other hypervascular masses such as benign liver tumors.
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PMID 
P Joly, F Charlotte, M Leibowitch, C Haioun, J Wechsler, F Dreyfus, J P Escande, J Revuz, M Bagot (1992)  Primary cutaneous lymphoma, with the exception of mycosis fungoides   Ann Dermatol Venereol 119: 6-7. 457-462  
Abstract: Cutaneous lymphomas other than mycosis fungoides (MF) form a rare and heterogeneous group. Their clinical behavior remains largely unknown. In this study, the clinical, immunohistological characteristics and follow-up data of 27 well-documented cases of primary cutaneous lymphomas other than MF, limited to the skin (stage IE) were reviewed. The tumors were divided into large-cell lymphomas (LCL) (21/27 = 77 p. 100) and small-cell lymphomas (SML) (6/27 = 23 p. 100). A B-cell phenotype was most often expressed by cutaneous lymphomas (23/27 = 85 p. 100). The clinical course of cutaneous lymphoma was closely dependent upon the histological subtype. Fourteen patients with LCL were treated by radiotherapy alone. Nine patients (64 p. 100) relapsed within two years post-treatment. Seven of them relapsed in the skin outside the initial site, suggesting that radiotherapy alone is not an adequate treatment for these patients. The preliminary results concerning 7 other patients with LCL treated with an initial third generation polychemotherapy regimen are presented.
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PMID 
D Cherqui, P Piedbois, C Duvoux, D Mathieu, C Le Péchoux, J Y Lauzet, J M Métreau, N Rotman, F Charlotte, M Julien (1992)  Liver transplantation associated with combined adjuvant treatment in hepatocellular carcinoma. Feasibility and preliminary results   Presse Med 21: 41. 2010-2011 Dec  
Abstract: Combined adjuvant therapy was prospectively assessed in 7 patients receiving orthotopic liver transplantation for hepatocellular carcinoma complicating cirrhosis. The protocol included hepatic arterial chemotherapy while waiting for transplant, immediate preoperative liver irradiation, and early postoperative chemotherapy. There were no postoperative deaths, and morbidity included mainly hematologic toxicity of chemotherapy. Two patients died of tumor recurrence 6 and 14 months after transplant. The remaining 5 patients are alive and free of disease with a follow-up of 7 to 26 months. These results show the feasibility of aggressive adjuvant therapy in patients transplanted for hepatocellular carcinoma and suggest a possible effect of such a protocol on the prevention of tumor recurrence.
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1991
 
PMID 
P Joly, F Charlotte, M Leibowitch, C Haioun, J Wechsler, F Dreyfus, J P Escande, J Revuz, F Reyes, B Varet (1991)  Cutaneous lymphomas other than mycosis fungoides: follow-up study of 52 patients.   J Clin Oncol 9: 11. 1994-2001 Nov  
Abstract: Cutaneous lymphomas other than mycosis fungoides (MF) represent a rare and heterogeneous group of lymphomas. Their clinical behavior remains largely unknown. In this study, the clinical and immunohistologic characteristics and follow-up data of 52 well-documented cases of cutaneous lymphomas other than MF, presenting with initial cutaneous lesions, were reviewed. Twenty-seven patients presented with skin disease alone (stage IE), and 25 patients had concurrent cutaneous and extracutaneous disease (stage IV). The tumors were grouped into high-grade lymphomas (HGLs; 21%), intermediate-grade lymphomas (IGLs; 58%), and low-grade lymphomas (LGLs; 21%). A B-cell phenotype was most often expressed by cutaneous lymphomas (73%), particularly by stage IE lymphomas (85%). Among 13 cases of T-cell lymphomas, loss of one of the pan-T-cell antigens was detected in all cases but one. The clinical course of cutaneous lymphoma was closely dependent on stage and histologic subtype but not on T-cell or B-cell phenotype. Of 20 patients with stage IV HGL or IGL, 13 were treated by polychemotherapy with curative potential. Their median survival was 37 months. Fourteen patients with stage IE HGL or IGL were treated by radiotherapy alone. Nine patients (69%) relapsed within 2 years posttreatment. Seven of them relapsed in the skin outside the initial site involved, suggesting that radiotherapy alone is not an adequate treatment for these patients. Preliminary results concerning seven other patients with stage IE IGL or HGL treated by an initial third-generation polychemotherapy regimen are presented.
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PMID 
F Charlotte, J L Olivier, C Chypre, T Beuret, G Sadoul, F Chatelet, J Luboinski, J Marchand, G Bereziat (1991)  Detection and typing of human papillomaviruses in cervical smears by an original application of the polymerase chain reaction.   Mol Cell Probes 5: 6. 445-450 Dec  
Abstract: The detection and typing of human papillomaviruses on cervical smears were performed by means of a new application of the polymerase chain reaction allowing easier and faster detection of the amplification product. This application consisted of a combination of two series of amplifications and the use of primers labelled with biotin and with 125 iodine on a reporter group for the second amplification. The final amplification product was detected by counting the radioactivity after incubation of the media in avidin-coated tubes. This test was compared with conventional methods of detection by electrophoresis and Southern blot and its specificity was confirmed. The study of a series of 52 patients demonstrated a higher prevalence of type 16 in relation to type 6/11 and 18 and a correlation between the degree of dysplasia and the frequency of oncogenic types 16 and 18. This new application could facilitate studies of the prevalence of HPV in large series of cervical smears.
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1990
 
PMID 
F Charlotte, F Potet, R Salmon, X Sastre, C Gotheil, B Rodier, G Lascar (1990)  Intra-epithelial cancer of the anal canal. Pathogenic study apropos of 5 cases   Gastroenterol Clin Biol 14: 3. 224-229  
Abstract: Anal carcinomas are rare and their precancerous conditions are not well known. Two populations at risk are described, elderly women and, recently, homosexual males. Early detection of dysplastic lesions or intraepithelial carcinoma in the anal mucosa could lead to preservation on the anal sphincter and consequently to improvement of quality of survival. The present study included 3 women and 2 men. The pathological examination of the surgical specimens in these 5 cases (hemorrhoidal procidence, rectal prolapsus, fibrous polyps, fissure) showed, in all cases, an intraepithelial carcinoma developed in the squamous epithelium of the anal canal. In one of the 5 cases, the anal lesion was concomitant with an intraepithelial carcinoma of the uterine cervix. Complete local resection of the lesions were performed in all cases, associated with complementary radiotherapy in one patient. On follow-up, we observed one recurrence after 8 months in one out of 5 patients. All patients are alive. Histogically, the specimens showed an intraepithelial carcinoma in all 5 cases, with a microinvasive carcinoma in one case. The transitional mucosa of the anal canal showed dysplatic modification in all cases. Immunohistochemical study of the 5 cases did not discern the papilloma virus antigene. In the one case where it was performed, molecular hybridization showed a type 33 papillomavirus. The risk factors of anal carcinomas seems to be changing, in particularly the incidence is increasing in the homosexual patients. In this particular population, as in the uterine cervix, the human papilloma virus is probably one of the main etiological factors. The management of these lesions is not well-defined.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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