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result(s) for
"Gillet, Y."
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Factors Predicting Mortality in Necrotizing Community-Acquired Pneumonia Caused by Staphylococcus aureus Containing Panton-Valentine Leukocidin
by
Vandenesch, François
,
Gillet, Yves
,
Bes, Michèle
in
Adult respiratory distress syndrome
,
Antibiotics
,
Articles and Commentaries
2007
Background. Necrotizing pneumonia due to Panton-Valentine leukocidin–producing strains of Staphylococcus aureus is associated with a high mortality rate. We sought factors associated with vital outcome in 50 cases occurring from 1986 through 2005. Methods. We compared the clinical and biological characteristics of 50 patients according to their vital outcome and examined the characteristics of the corresponding S. aureus isolates. Results. The overall mortality rate was 56%, and the median survival time was 10 days. All of the deaths were attributed to S. aureus infection and were secondary to refractory shock and/or respiratory failure. Fatal outcome was associated with classical severity factors, such as the need for mechanical ventilation or inotrope support, and with onset of the acute respiratory distress syndrome. Airway bleeding was strongly associated with fatal outcome (P = .002). Patients who had focal staphylococcal infection before the onset of pneumonia had a significantly lower mortality rate (P = .002). The main biological feature associated with death was leukopenia (P
Journal Article
Early Impact of 13-Valent Pneumococcal Conjugate Vaccine on Community-Acquired Pneumonia in Children
by
Varon, E.
,
Zenkhri, F.
,
Dommergues, M. A.
in
ARTICLES AND COMMENTARIES
,
Bacterial diseases
,
Biological and medical sciences
2014
Background. Pneumococcal serotypes 1, 3, 5, 7F, and 19A were the most implicated in community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) after implementation of 7-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV7). In France, the switch from PCV7 to 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV13) occurred in June 2010. An active surveillance network was set up to analyze the impact of PCV13 on CAP. Methods. An observational prospective study performed in 8 pediatric emergency departments from June 2009 to May 2012 included all children between 1 month and 15 years of age with chest radiography–confirmed pneumonia. Three 1-year periods were defined: pre-PCV13, transitional, and post-PCV13. Results. During the 3-year study period, among the 953 274 pediatric emergency visits, 5645 children with CAP were included. CAP with pleural effusion and documented pneumococcal CAP were diagnosed in 365 and 136 patients, respectively. Despite an increase (4.5%) in number of pediatric emergency visits, cases of CAP decreased by 16% (2060 to 1725) between pre- and post-PCV13 periods. The decrease reached 32% in infants in the same periods (757 to 516; P < .001). Between pre- and post-PCV13 periods, the proportion of CAP patients with a C-reactive protein level >120 mg/dL decreased from 41.3% to 29.7% (P < .001), the number of pleural effusion cases decreased by 53% (167 to 79; P < .001) and the number of pneumococcal CAP cases decreased by 63% (64 to 24; P = .002). The number of additional PCV13 serotypes identified decreased by 74% (27 to 7). Conclusions. Our data suggest a strong impact of PCV13 on CAP, pleural effusion, and documented pneumococcal pneumonia, particularly cases due to PCV13 serotypes.
Journal Article
Quality control implementation for universal characterization of DNA and RNA viruses in clinical respiratory samples using single metagenomic next-generation sequencing workflow
by
Josset, L.
,
Vallet, S.
,
Morfin, F.
in
Biochemistry, Molecular Biology
,
Causes of
,
Clinical virology
2018
Background
In recent years, metagenomic Next-Generation Sequencing (mNGS) has increasingly been used for an accurate assumption-free virological diagnosis. However, the systematic workflow evaluation on clinical respiratory samples and implementation of quality controls (QCs) is still lacking.
Methods
A total of 3 QCs were implemented and processed through the whole mNGS workflow: a no-template-control to evaluate contamination issues during the process; an internal and an external QC to check the integrity of the reagents, equipment, the presence of inhibitors, and to allow the validation of results for each sample. The workflow was then evaluated on 37 clinical respiratory samples from patients with acute respiratory infections previously tested for a broad panel of viruses using semi-quantitative real-time PCR assays (28 positive samples including 6 multiple viral infections; 9 negative samples). Selected specimens included nasopharyngeal swabs (
n
= 20), aspirates (
n
= 10), or sputums (
n
= 7).
Results
The optimal spiking level of the internal QC was first determined in order to be sufficiently detected without overconsumption of sequencing reads. According to QC validation criteria, mNGS results were validated for 34/37 selected samples. For valid samples, viral genotypes were accurately determined for 36/36 viruses detected with PCR (viral genome coverage ranged from 0.6 to 100%, median = 67.7%). This mNGS workflow allowed the detection of DNA and RNA viruses up to a semi-quantitative PCR Ct value of 36. The six multiple viral infections involving 2 to 4 viruses were also fully characterized. A strong correlation between results of mNGS and real-time PCR was obtained for each type of viral genome (R
2
ranged from 0.72 for linear single-stranded (ss) RNA viruses to 0.98 for linear ssDNA viruses).
Conclusions
Although the potential of mNGS technology is very promising, further evaluation studies are urgently needed for its routine clinical use within a reasonable timeframe. The approach described herein is crucial to bring standardization and to ensure the quality of the generated sequences in clinical setting. We provide an easy-to-use single protocol successfully evaluated for the characterization of a broad and representative panel of DNA and RNA respiratory viruses in various types of clinical samples.
Journal Article
Slug/Pcad pathway controls epithelial cell dynamics in mammary gland and breast carcinoma
2018
Mammary gland morphogenesis results from the coordination of proliferation, cohort migration, apoptosis and stem/progenitor cell dynamics. We showed earlier that the transcription repressor Slug is involved in these functions during mammary tubulogenesis. Slug is expressed by a subpopulation of basal epithelial cells, co-expressed with P-cadherin (Pcad). Slug-knockout mammary glands showed excessive branching, similarly to Pcad-knockout. Here, we found that Slug unexpectedly binds and activates
Pcad
promoter through E-boxes, inducing Pcad expression. We determined that Pcad can mediate several functions of Slug: Pcad promoted clonal mammosphere growth, basal epithelial differentiation, cell–cell dissociation and cell migration, rescuing Slug depletion. Pcad also promoted cell migration in isolated cells, in association with Src activation, focal adhesion reorganization and cell polarization. Pcad, similarly to Slug, was required for
in vitro
3D tubulogenesis. Therefore, Pcad appears to be responsible for epithelial–mesenchymal transition-linked plasticity in mammary epithelial cells. In addition, we found that genes from the Slug/Pcad pathway components were co-expressed and specifically correlated in human breast carcinomas subtypes, carrying pathophysiological significance.
Journal Article
Immunogenicity and safety of measles-mumps-rubella-varicella (MMRV) vaccine followed by one dose of varicella vaccine in children aged 15 months–2 years or 2–6 years primed with measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine
by
Meister, N.
,
Lanse, X.
,
Douha, M.
in
Allergy and Immunology
,
Antibodies
,
Antibodies, Viral - blood
2009
In this open, randomized, comparative study (105908/
NCT00353288), 458 age-stratified children (15 months–2 years and 2–6 years) previously primed with MMR received one dose of either a combined MMRV vaccine (
Priorix-Tetra™, MMRV group) or concomitant MMR and varicella vaccines (
Priorix™ and
Varilrix™, MMR
+
V group), followed 42–56 days later by another dose of varicella vaccine (
Varilrix™) in both groups. Post-vaccination measles, mumps and rubella seropositivity rates and antibody geometric mean titers (GMTs) were high (99.5% for anti-measles and 100% for anti-mumps and anti-rubella) in both vaccine groups. In the two age strata, varicella seroconversion rates were, post-dose 1: ≥97.6% (MMRV), ≥96.6% (MMR
+
V) and, post-dose 2: 100% in both groups. Post-dose 2, anti-varicella GMTs increased respectively 14.1- and 12.6-fold (MMRV), and 9.8- and 13.1-fold (MMR
+
V). Both vaccine regimens were well-tolerated. Post-dose 1, the incidence of any solicited local symptom during the 4-days follow-up was ≤28.2% (MMRV) and ≤19.8% (MMR
+
V) and the incidence of fever >39.5
°C (rectal temperature) within 15 days was ≤2.8% (MMRV) and ≤2.6% (MMR
+
V). This MMRV vaccine appears an immunogenic and safe substitute for a second dose of MMR vaccine in young children. The increase in anti-varicella antibodies observed after a second dose of varicella vaccine supports a two-dose schedule for varicella-containing vaccine.
Journal Article
Association between Staphylococcus aureus strains carrying gene for Panton-Valentine leukocidin and highly lethal necrotising pneumonia in young immunocompetent patients
2002
Between 1986 and 1998, eight cases of community-acquired pneumonia due to Staphylococcus aureus strains carrying the gene for the Panton-Valentine leukocidin (PVL) were recorded in France, six of which were fatal. We aimed to assess the clinical features of these eight cases, and those of other cases identified prospectively, and to compare them with the characteristics of patients with pneumonia caused by PVL-negative strains.
We compared eight retrospective and eight prospective cases of PVL-positive S aureus pneumonia with 36 cases of PVL-negative S aureus pneumonia. For all patients, we recorded age, length of hospital stay, risk factors for infection, signs and symptoms, laboratory findings, antibiotic treatment, and serial radiological findings.
Median age was 14·8 years (IQR 5·4-24·0) for the PVL-positive patients and 70·1 years (59·2-81·4) for the others (p=0·001). Influenza-like illness had occurred during the 2 days before admission in 12 of the 16 PVL-positive patients, but in only three of 33 PVL-negative patients (p<0·0001). PVL-positive infections were more often marked by: temperature greater than 39°C (p=0·01), heart rate above 140 beats per min (p=0·02), haemoptysis (p=0·005), onset of pleural effusion during hospital stay (p=0·004), and leucopenia (p=0·001). The survival rate 48 h after admission was 63% for the PVL-positive patients and 94% for PVL-negative individuals (p=0·007). Histopathological examination of lungs at necropsy from three cases of necrotising pneumonia associated with PVL-positive S aureus showed extensive necrotic ulcerations of the tracheal and bronchial mucosa and massive haemorrhagic necrosis of interalveolar septa.
PVL-producing S aureus strains cause rapidly progressive, haemorrhagic, necrotising pneumonia, mainly in otherwise healthy children and young adults. The pneumonia is often preceded by influenza-like symptoms and has a high lethality rate.
Journal Article
Community-Acquired Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus Infections in France: Emergence of a Single Clone That Produces Panton-Valentine Leukocidin
2002
To characterize the clinical and bacteriologic characteristics of community-acquired methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA) infections, we reviewed 14 cases that were diagnosed in previously healthy patients during an 18-month period in France. Eleven patients had skin or soft-tissue infections. Two patients died of CA-MRSA necrotizing pneumonia. A case of pleurisy occurred in a child who acquired CA-MRSA from his mother, who had a breast abscess. The Panton-Valentine leukocidin genes and the lukE-lukD leukocidin genes were detected in all 14 isolates. The clonal origin of all of the isolates was demonstrated on the basis of their pulsotypes and antibiotic resistance profiles. All isolates had an agr3 allele. The combination of the Panton-Valentine leukocidin determinant (which encodes a virulence factor for primary skin infection and pneumonia) with the mecA gene (which confers antibiotic resistance and epidemicity) appears to have created a superadapted S. aureus strain that is spreading in the community.
Journal Article
Nanoengineered implant as a new platform for regenerative nanomedicine using 3D well-organized human cell spheroids
2017
In tissue engineering, it is still rare today to see clinically transferable strategies for tissue-engineered graft production that conclusively offer better tissue regeneration than the already existing technologies, decreased recovery times, and less risk of complications. Here a novel tissue-engineering concept is presented for the production of living bone implants combining 1) a nanofibrous and microporous implant as cell colonization matrix and 2) 3D bone cell spheroids. This combination, double 3D implants, shows clinical relevant thicknesses for the treatment of an early stage of bone lesions before the need of bone substitutes. The strategy presented here shows a complete closure of a defect in nude mice calvaria after only 31 days. As a novel strategy for bone regenerative nanomedicine, it holds great promises to enhance the therapeutic efficacy of living bone implants.
Journal Article
Necrotizing Soft Tissue Infection Staphylococcus aureus but not S. pyogenes Isolates Display High Rates of Internalization and Cytotoxicity Toward Human Myoblasts
by
Norrby-Teglund, Anna
,
Leblanc, Pascal
,
Duguez, Stephanie
in
Animal genetics
,
Biochemistry
,
Biochemistry, Molecular Biology
2019
Necrotizing soft tissue infections (NSTIs) caused by group A Streptococcus (GAS) and occasionally by Staphylococcus aureus (SA) frequently involve the deep fascia and often lead to muscle necrosis.
To assess the pathogenicity of GAS and S. aureus for muscles in comparison to keratinocytes, adhesion and invasion of NSTI-GAS and NSTI-SA isolates were assessed in these cells. Bloodstream infections (BSI-SA) and noninvasive coagulase-negative staphylococci (CNS) isolates were used as controls.
NSTI-SA and BSI-SA exhibited stronger internalization into human keratinocytes and myoblasts than NSTI-GAS or CNS. S. aureus internalization reached over 30% in human myoblasts due to a higher percentage of infected myoblasts (>11%) as compared to keratinocytes (<3%). Higher cytotoxicity for myoblasts of NSTI-SA as compared to BSI-SA was attributed to higher levels of psmα and RNAIII transcripts in NSTI-SA. However, the 2 groups were not discriminated at the genomic level. The cellular basis of high internalization rate in myoblasts was attributed to higher expression of α5β1 integrin in myoblasts. Major contribution of FnbpAB-integrin α5β1 pathway to internalization was confirmed by isogenic mutants.
Our findings suggest a factor in NSTI-SA severity is the strong invasiveness of S. aureus in muscle cells, a property not shared by NSTI-GAS isolates.
Journal Article
Immunogenicity and safety of concomitant administration of a measles, mumps and rubella vaccine (M-M-RvaxPro®) and a varicella vaccine (VARIVAX®) by intramuscular or subcutaneous routes at separate injection sites: a randomised clinical trial
by
Gillet, Yves
,
Habermehl, Pirmin
,
Fiquet, Anne
in
Antibodies, Viral - blood
,
Biomedicine
,
Chickenpox
2009
Background
When this trial was initiated, the combined measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine was licensed for subcutaneous administration in all European countries and for intramuscular administration in some countries, whereas varicella vaccine was licensed only for subcutaneous administration. This study evaluated the intramuscular administration of an MMR vaccine (M-M-RvaxPro
®
) and a varicella vaccine (VARIVAX
®
) compared with the subcutaneous route.
Methods
An open-label randomised trial was performed in France and Germany. Healthy children, aged 12 to18 months, received single injections of M-M-RvaxPro and VARIVAX concomitantly at separate injection sites. Both vaccines were administered either intramuscularly (IM group,
n
= 374) or subcutaneously (SC group,
n
= 378). Immunogenicity was assessed before vaccination and 42 days after vaccination. Injection-site erythema, swelling and pain were recorded from days 0 to 4 after vaccination. Body temperature was monitored daily between 0 and 42 days after vaccination. Other adverse events were recorded up to 42 days after vaccination and serious adverse events until the second study visit.
Results
Antibody response rates at day 42 in the per-protocol set of children initially seronegative to measles, mumps, rubella or varicella were similar between the IM and SC groups for all four antigens. Response rates were 94 to 96% for measles, 98% for both mumps and rubella and 86 to 88% for varicella. For children initially seronegative to varicella, 99% achieved the seroconversion threshold (antibody concentrations of ≥ 1.25 gpELISA units/ml). Erythema and swelling were the most frequently reported injection-site reactions for both vaccines. Most injection-site reactions were of mild intensity or small size (≤ 2.5 cm). There was a trend for lower rates of injection-site erythema and swelling in the IM group. The incidence and nature of systemic adverse events were comparable for the two routes of administration, except varicella-like rashes, which were less frequent in the IM group.
Conclusion
The immunogenicities of M-M-RvaxPro and VARIVAX administered by the intramuscular route were comparable with those following subcutaneous administration, and the tolerability of the two vaccines was comparable regardless of administration route. Integration of both administration routes in the current European indications for the two vaccines will now allow physicians in Europe to choose their preferred administration route in routine clinical practice.
Trial registration
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00432523
Journal Article
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