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Dive into the research topics where Arthur Varoquaux is active.

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Featured researches published by Arthur Varoquaux.


European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging | 2014

Detection and quantification of focal uptake in head and neck tumours: 18 F-FDG PET/MR versus PET/CT

Arthur Varoquaux; Olivier Rager; Antoine Poncet; Bénédicte M. A. Delattre; Osman Ratib; Christoph Becker; Pavel Dulguerov; Nicolas Dulguerov; Habib Zaidi; Minerva Becker

PurposeOur objectives were to assess the quality of PET images and coregistered anatomic images obtained with PET/MR, to evaluate the detection of focal uptake and SUV, and to compare these findings with those of PET/CT in patients with head and neck tumours.MethodsThe study group comprised 32 consecutive patients with malignant head and neck tumours who underwent whole-body 18F-FDG PET/MR and PET/CT. PET images were reconstructed using the attenuation correction sequence for PET/MR and CT for PET/CT. Two experienced observers evaluated the anonymized data. They evaluated image and fusion quality, lesion conspicuity, anatomic location, number and size of categorized (benign versus assumed malignant) lesions with focal uptake. Region of interest (ROI) analysis was performed to determine SUVs of lesions and organs for both modalities. Statistical analysis considered data clustering due to multiple lesions per patient.ResultsPET/MR coregistration and image fusion was feasible in all patients. The analysis included 66 malignant lesions (tumours, metastatic lymph nodes and distant metastases), 136 benign lesions and 470 organ ROIs. There was no statistically significant difference between PET/MR and PET/CT regarding rating scores for image quality, fusion quality, lesion conspicuity or anatomic location, number of detected lesions and number of patients with and without malignant lesions. A high correlation was observed for SUVmean and SUVmax measured on PET/MR and PET/CT for malignant lesions, benign lesions and organs (ρ = 0.787 to 0.877, p < 0.001). SUVmean and SUVmax measured on PET/MR were significantly lower than on PET/CT for malignant tumours, metastatic neck nodes, benign lesions, bone marrow, and liver (p < 0.05). The main factor affecting the difference between SUVs in malignant lesions was tumour size (p < 0.01).ConclusionIn patients with head and neck tumours, PET/MR showed equivalent performance to PET/CT in terms of qualitative results. Comparison of SUVs revealed an excellent correlation for measurements on both modalities, but underestimation of SUVs measured on PET/MR as compared to PET/CT.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2009

Variants of CTGF are associated with hepatic fibrosis in Chinese, Sudanese, and Brazilians infected with Schistosomes

Alain Dessein; Christophe Chevillard; Violaine Arnaud; Xunya Hou; Anas Ahmed Hamdoun; Hélia Dessein; Hongbin He; Suzan A. Abdelmaboud; Xinsong Luo; Jun Li; Arthur Varoquaux; Adil Mergani; Mohammed Abdelwahed; Jie Zhou; Ahmed Monis; Maira Galdino da Rocha Pitta; Nagla Gasmelseed; Sandrine Cabantous; Yaqing Zhao; Aluizio Prata; Carlos Teixeira Brandt; Nasr Eldin Elwali; Laurent Argiro; Yuesheng Li

Abnormal fibrosis occurs during chronic hepatic inflammations and is the principal cause of death in hepatitis C virus and schistosome infections. Hepatic fibrosis (HF) may develop either slowly or rapidly in schistosome-infected subjects. This depends, in part, on a major genetic control exerted by genes of chromosome 6q23. A gene (connective tissue growth factor [CTGF]) is located in that region that encodes a strongly fibrogenic molecule. We show that the single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs9402373 that lies close to CTGF is associated with severe HF (P = 2 × 10−6; odds ratio [OR] = 2.01; confidence interval of OR [CI] = 1.51–2.7) in two Chinese samples, in Sudanese, and in Brazilians infected with either Schistosoma japonicum or S. mansoni. Furthermore, SNP rs12526196, also located close to CTGF, is independently associated with severe fibrosis (P = 6 × 10−4; OR = 1.94; CI = 1.32–2.82) in the Chinese and Sudanese subjects. Both variants affect nuclear factor binding and may alter gene transcription or transcript stability. The identified variants may be valuable markers for the prediction of disease progression, and identify a critical step in the development of HF that could be a target for chemotherapy.


Hepatology | 2015

IL-22 and IL-22 binding protein (IL-22BP) regulate fibrosis and cirrhosis in hepatitis C virus and schistosome infections

Mathieu Sertorio; Xunya Hou; Rodrigo Feliciano do Carmo; Hélia Dessein; Sandrine Cabantous; Mohammed Abdelwahed; Audrey Romano; Fernanda Albuquerque; Luydson Richardson Silva Vasconcelos; Theomira Mauadie Azevedo Carmo; Jun Li; Arthur Varoquaux; Violaine Arnaud; Pablo R. S. Oliveira; Anas Hamdoun; Hongbin He; Suzan Adbelmaboud; Adil Mergani; Jie Zhou; Ahmed Monis; Leila Maria Moreira Beltrão Pereira; Philippe Halfon; Marc Bourlière; Raymundo Paraná; Mitermayer dos Reis; David Gonnelli; Patrícia Moura; Nasr Eldin Elwali; Laurent Argiro; Yuesheng Li

Interleukin (IL)‐22 acts on epithelia, hepatocytes, and pancreatic cells and stimulates innate immunity, tissue protection, and repair. IL‐22 may also cause inflammation and abnormal cell proliferation. The binding of IL‐22 to its receptor is competed by IL‐22 binding protein (IL‐22BP), which may limit the deleterious effects of IL‐22. The role of IL‐22 and IL‐22BP in chronic liver diseases is unknown. We addressed this question in individuals chronically infected with schistosomes or hepatitis C virus (HCV). We first demonstrate that schistosome eggs stimulate production of IL‐22 transcripts and inhibit accumulation of IL22‐BP transcripts in schistosome‐infected mice, and that schistosome eggs selectively stimulate production of IL‐22 in cultures of blood leukocytes from individuals chronically infected with Schistosoma japonicum. High IL‐22 levels in cultures correlated with protection against hepatic fibrosis and portal hypertension. To test further the implication of IL‐22/IL‐22BP in hepatic disease, we analyzed common genetic variants of IL22RA2, which encodes IL‐22BP, and found that the genotypes, AA, GG of rs6570136 (P = 0.003; odds ratio [OR] = 2), and CC, TT of rs2064501 (P = 0.01; OR = 2), were associated with severe fibrosis in Chinese infected with S. japonicum. We confirmed this result in Sudanese (rs6570136 GG [P = 0.0007; OR = 8.2], rs2064501 TT [P = 0.02; OR = 3.1]), and Brazilians (rs6570136 GG [P = 0.003; OR = 26], rs2064501 TC, TT (P = 0.03; OR = 11]) infected with S. mansoni. The aggravating genotypes were associated with high IL22RA2 transcripts levels. Furthermore, these same variants were also associated with HCV‐induced fibrosis and cirrhosis (rs6570136 GG, GA [P = 0.007; OR = 1.7], rs2064501 TT, TC (P = 0.004; OR = 2.4]). Conclusions: These results provide strong evidence that IL‐22 protects against and IL‐22BP aggravates liver fibrosis and cirrhosis in humans with chronic liver infections. Thus, pharmacological modulation of IL‐22 BP may be an effective strategy to limit cirrhosis. (Hepatology 2015;61:1321–1331)


American Journal of Neuroradiology | 2016

Imaging of Neurovascular Compression Syndromes: Trigeminal Neuralgia, Hemifacial Spasm, Vestibular Paroxysmia, and Glossopharyngeal Neuralgia

Sven Haller; Léonard Etienne; Eniko Veronika Kovari; Arthur Varoquaux; H Urbach; Minerva Becker

SUMMARY: Neurovascular compression syndromes are usually caused by arteries that directly contact the cisternal portion of a cranial nerve. Not all cases of neurovascular contact are clinically symptomatic. The transition zone between the central and peripheral myelin is the most vulnerable region for symptomatic neurovascular compression syndromes. Trigeminal neuralgia (cranial nerve V) has an incidence of 4–20/100,000, a transition zone of 4 mm, with symptomatic neurovascular compression typically proximal. Hemifacial spasm (cranial nerve VII) has an incidence of 1/100,000, a transition zone of 2.5 mm, with symptomatic neurovascular compression typically proximal. Vestibular paroxysmia (cranial nerve VIII) has an unknown incidence, a transition zone of 11 mm, with symptomatic neurovascular compression typically at the internal auditory canal. Glossopharyngeal neuralgia (cranial nerve IX) has an incidence of 0.5/100,000, a transition zone of 1.5 mm, with symptomatic neurovascular compression typically proximal. The transition zone overlaps the root entry zone close to the brain stem in cranial nerves V, VII, and IX, yet it is more distal and does not overlap the root entry zone in cranial nerve VIII. Although symptomatic neurovascular compression syndromes may also occur if the neurovascular contact is outside the transition zone, symptomatic neurovascular compression syndromes are more common if the neurovascular contact occurs at the transition zone or central myelin section, in particular when associated with nerve displacement and atrophy.


Diagnostic and interventional imaging | 2015

Ethylene vinyl alcohol copolymer (Onyx®) in peripheral interventional radiology: indications, advantages and limitations.

M. Saeed Kilani; J. Izaaryene; Frédéric Cohen; Arthur Varoquaux; Jean-Yves Gaubert; G. Louis; Alexis Jacquier; Jean-Michel Bartoli; G. Moulin; V. Vidal

Onyx(®) is a remarkable liquid embolizing agent that may allow a well-trained operator to undertake challenging embolization procedures. In multiple interventional radiology indications, the physico-chemical properties of Onyx(®) allow safe embolization. The purpose of this article is to review the advantages and disadvantages of Onyx(®) and identify its main indications.


Radiographics | 2015

Diffusion-weighted and PET/MR Imaging after Radiation Therapy for Malignant Head and Neck Tumors.

Arthur Varoquaux; Olivier Rager; Pavel Dulguerov; Karim Burkhardt; Angeliki Ailianou; Minerva Becker

Interpreting imaging studies of the irradiated neck constitutes a challenge because of radiation therapy-induced tissue alterations, the variable appearances of recurrent tumors, and functional and metabolic phenomena that mimic disease. Therefore, morphologic magnetic resonance (MR) imaging, diffusion-weighted (DW) imaging, positron emission tomography with computed tomography (PET/CT), and software fusion of PET and MR imaging data sets are increasingly used to facilitate diagnosis in clinical practice. Because MR imaging and PET often yield complementary information, PET/MR imaging holds promise to facilitate differentiation of tumor recurrence from radiation therapy-induced changes and complications. This review focuses on clinical applications of DW and PET/MR imaging in the irradiated neck and discusses the added value of multiparametric imaging to solve diagnostic dilemmas. Radiologists should understand key features of radiation therapy-induced tissue alterations and potential complications seen at DW and PET/MR imaging, including edema, fibrosis, scar tissue, soft-tissue necrosis, bone and cartilage necrosis, cranial nerve palsy, and radiation therapy-induced arteriosclerosis, brain necrosis, and thyroid disorders. DW and PET/MR imaging also play a complementary role in detection of residual and recurrent disease. Interpretation pitfalls due to technical, functional, and metabolic phenomena should be recognized and avoided. Familiarity with DW and PET/MR imaging features of expected findings, potential complications, and treatment failure after radiation therapy increases diagnostic confidence when interpreting images of the irradiated neck. Online supplemental material is available for this article.


Journal of Cranio-maxillofacial Surgery | 2014

Position paper from the IBRA Symposium on Surgery of the Head – The 2nd International Symposium for Condylar Fracture Osteosynthesis, Marseille, France 2012

Andreas Neff; C. Chossegros; Jean-Louis Blanc; Pierre Champsaur; F. Cheynet; Bernard Devauchelle; Uwe Eckelt; Joël Ferri; Mário Francisco Real Gabrielli; L. Guyot; David Andrew Koppel; Christophe Meyer; Bert Müller; Timo Peltomäki; Fabrizio Spallaccia; Arthur Varoquaux; Astrid Wilk; Poramate Pitak-Arnnop

BACKGROUND This is a position paper from the 2nd International Bone Research Association (IBRA) Symposium for Condylar Fracture Osteosynthesis 2012 was held at Marseille, succeeding the first congress in Strasbourg, France, in 2007. The goal of this IBRA symposium and this paper was to evaluate current trends and potential changes of treatment strategies for mandibular condylar fractures, which remain controversial over the past decades. METHODS Using a cross-sectional study design, we enrolled the consensus based on the panel of experts and participants in the IBRA Symposium 2012. The outcomes of interest were the panel and electronic votes on management of condylar base, neck and head fractures, and panel votes on endoscopic and paediatric condylar fractures. Appropriate descriptive and univariate statistics were used. RESULTS The consensus derived from 14 experts and 41 participant surgeons, using 12 case scenarios and 27 statements. The experts and participants had similar decision on the treatment of condylar base, neck and head fractures, as well as similar opinion on complications of condylar fracture osteosynthesis. They had a parallel agreement on using open reduction with internal fixation (ORIF) as treatment of choice for condylar base and neck fractures in adults. Endoscopic approaches should be considered for selected cases, such as condylar base fractures with lateral displacement. There was also a growing tendency to perform ORIF in condylar head fractures. The experts also agreed to treat children (>12 years old) in the same way as adults and to consider open reduction in severely displaced and dislocated fractures even in younger children. Nevertheless, non-surgical treatment should be the first choice for children <6 years of age. The decision to perform surgery in children was based on factors influencing facial growth, appropriate age for ORIF, and disagreement to use resorbable materials in children. CONCLUSIONS The experts and participating surgeons had comparable opinion on management of condylar fractures and complications of ORIF. Compared to the first Condylar Fracture Symposium 2007 in Strasbourg, ORIF may now be considered as the gold standard for both condylar base and neck fractures with displacement and dislocation. Although ORIF in condylar head fractures in adults and condylar fractures in children with mixed dentition is highly recommended, but this recommendation requires further investigations.


European Journal of Gastroenterology & Hepatology | 2012

Prognostic value of preoperative coronary computed tomography angiography in patients treated by orthotopic liver transplantation.

P. Cassagneau; Alexis Jacquier; Roch Giorgi; Nicolas Amabile; Jean-Yves Gaubert; Frédéric Cohen; Muller C; Jolibert M; G. Louis; Arthur Varoquaux; Vidal; Jean-Michel Bartoli; G. Moulin

Objectives The aim of this study was to assess the feasibility of 64-slice coronary computed tomography (CT) angiography in patients treated by orthotopic liver transplantation, and to compare prognostic values of CT angiography and dobutamine stress echocardiography in the same population. Methods Eighty-two consecutive patients, without known coronary artery disease, who underwent orthotopic liver transplantation, were included in this study. A CT angiography was performed along with usual explorations including dobutamine stress echography. A one-year minimal follow-up was performed to seek cardiac events. Results Fifty-two (65.8%) patients underwent a CT angiography. Thirty-seven (71%) were totally normal or showed nonobstructive coronary plaque, six (12%) showed at least one obstructive coronary plaque greater than 50%. Nine (17%) of the examined patients had at least one nonassessable segment. A total of six (7.6%) major cardiac events occurred in a mean-time follow-up of 17.8±12.7 months. Conclusion CT angiography that is normal or with a nonobstructive coronary plaque has a negative predicting value of 95% [0.82–0.99] for major cardiac adverse events, and of 100% [0.91–1] for clinical coronary events in patients undergoing orthotopic liver transplantation. The prognostic value of CT angiography was comparable with that of dobutamine stress echography.


Endocrine-related Cancer | 2015

Magnetic resonance spectroscopy of paragangliomas: new insights into in vivo metabolomics

Arthur Varoquaux; Yann Le Fur; Alessio Imperiale; Antony Reyre; Marion Montava; N. Fakhry; Izzie-Jacques Namer; G. Moulin; Karel Pacak; Maxime Guye; David Taïeb

Paragangliomas (PGLs) can be associated with mutations in genes of the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle. Succinate dehydrogenase (SDHx) mutations are the prime examples of genetically determined TCA cycle defects with accumulation of succinate. Succinate, which acts as an oncometabolite, can be detected by ex vivo metabolomics approaches. The aim of this study was to evaluate the potential role of proton magnetic resonance (MR) spectroscopy ((1)H-MRS) for identifying SDHx-related PGLs in vivo and noninvasively. Eight patients were prospectively evaluated with single voxel (1)H-MRS. MR spectra from eight tumors (four SDHx-related PGLs, two sporadic PGLs, one cervical schwannoma, and one cervical neurofibroma) were acquired and interpreted qualitatively. Compared to other tumors, a succinate resonance peak was detected only in SDHx-related tumor patients. Spectra quality was considered good in three cases, medium in two cases, poor in two cases, and uninterpretable in the latter case. Smaller lesions had lower spectra quality compared to larger lesions. Jugular PGLs also exhibited a poorer spectra quality compared to other locations. (1)H-MRS has always been challenging in terms of its technical requisites. This is even more true for the evaluation of head and neck tumors. However, (1)H-MRS might be added to the classical MR sequences for metabolomic characterization of PGLs. In vivo detection of succinate might guide genetic testing, characterize SDHx variants of unknown significance (in the absence of available tumor sample), and even optimize a selection of appropriate therapies.


Journal De Radiologie | 2008

Cathéters centraux insérés par voie périphérique : une technique prometteuse

V. Vidal; Alexis Jacquier; O. Monnet; Arthur Varoquaux; T. Le Corroller; Jean-Yves Gaubert; P. Champsaur; Jean Michel Bartoli; G. Moulin

Peripherally inserted central catheters (PICC): a promising technique To describe technical features and benefits from PICC lines.

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G. Moulin

Aix-Marseille University

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V. Vidal

Aix-Marseille University

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J. Michel

Aix-Marseille University

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P. Dessi

Aix-Marseille University

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N. Fakhry

Aix-Marseille University

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