Bach-Nga Pham
French Institute of Health and Medical Research
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Publication
Featured researches published by Bach-Nga Pham.
Journal of Hepatology | 2002
M. Martinot-Peignoux; Nathalie Boyer; Magalie Colombat; Rahouda Akremi; Bach-Nga Pham; Stephan Ollivier; Corinne Castelnau; Donimique Valla; Claude Degott; Patrick Marcellin
BACKGROUND/AIMS A recent NIH research workshop on hepatitis B virus (HBV) revisited the definition of healthy HBsAg carriers. The new definition inactive surface antigen (HBsAg) carriers includes an estimated serum HBV DNA level below 105 copies/ml. However, this cut-off value needs to be confirmed. METHODS Eighty-five consecutive patients, HBsAg-positive/HBeAg-negative with persistently normal alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and undetectable serum HBV DNA with standard assay (Versant HBV DNA Assay (bDNA), Bayer) were prospectively followed for 3.2+/-2.6 (range 0.5-11) years; 58 underwent a liver biopsy. Serum HBV DNA was quantified with a sensitive polymerase chain reaction assay (Cobas Amplicor HBV Monitor, Roche) (sensitivity 200 copies/ml), and liver histology was assessed using the Ishak scoring system. RESULTS The median serum HBV DNA level was 1300 copies/ml (<200-179 x 10(3) copies/ml), 16% of the subjects had no detectable serum HBV DNA and 98% had levels below 10(5) copies/ml. Histologic lesions were mild (total score <7) in all cases. Loss of HBsAg was observed in three patients, three patients experienced a transient increase in ALT (<2 x upper limit of normal), and serum HBV DNA levels remained stable (1-6 years) in 97% of the 38 patients retested. CONCLUSIONS In our study of inactive HBsAg carriers, the median serum HBV DNA level was 1300 copies/ml, the serum HBV DNA level was below 10(5) copies/ml in 98% of the patients, and remained stable; histological lesions were mild in all cases.
Hepatology | 2006
Corinne Castelnau; Frédéric Le Gal; Marie-Pierre Ripault; Emmanuel Gordien; M. Martinot-Peignoux; Nathalie Boyer; Bach-Nga Pham; Sarah Maylin; P. Bedossa; Paul Dény; Patrick Marcellin; Elyanne Gault
Hepatitis delta virus (HDV) can cause severe acute and chronic liver disease in patients infected by hepatitis B virus. Interferon alpha at high doses, although poorly efficient, is the only treatment reported to provide some benefit in chronic hepatitis delta. Pegylated interferon alpha (PEG‐IFN) has not yet been evaluated. Treatment is usually monitored by the qualitative detection of HDV‐RNA in serum. In this study, safety and efficacy of PEG‐IFN were assessed in chronic hepatitis delta, and serum HDV‐RNA kinetics were determined using quantitative RT‐PCR. Fourteen patients with chronic hepatitis delta received subcutaneous PEG‐IFN alpha‐2b during 12 months (1.5 μg/kg per week). Serum HDV‐RNA was quantified at initiation and during the course of therapy, and during the posttreatment follow‐up period, which ranged from 6 to 42 months (median 16 months). PEG‐IFN alpha‐2b was well tolerated, inducing no serious adverse effect. Sustained biochemical response was obtained in 8 patients (57%). At the end of treatment, 8 patients (57%) had achieved virological response (undetectable HDV‐RNA). Sustained virological response throughout the posttreatment follow‐up period was observed in 6 patients (43%). HDV‐RNA kinetics were predictive of the response: after 3 months of PEG‐IFN, HDV‐RNA levels were significantly lower in the responders than in the nonresponders group (P = .018). After 6 months of therapy, a negative HDV‐RNA was predictive of sustained response (P = .021). In conclusion, this preliminary study indicates that PEG‐IFN alpha‐2b is safe and efficient for treatment of chronic hepatitis delta. The follow‐up of HDV‐RNA levels during therapy, which allows the differentiation of various profiles of virological responses, improves treatment monitoring. (HEPATOLOGY 2006;44:728–735.)
Gastroenterology | 1993
Patrick Marcellin; Vincent Descamps; Michèle Martinot-Peignoux; Daniel Larzul; Lizhe Xu; Nathalie Boyer; Bach-Nga Pham; B. Crickx; Loïc Guillevin; Stéphane Belaich; Serge Erlinger; Jean-Pierre Benhamou
Essential mixed cryoglobulinemia is frequently associated with chronic hepatitis. This report presents four cases of cryoglobulinemia with vasculitis associated with chronic hepatitis related to hepatitis C virus infection. Hepatitis C virus infection was ascertained in the four patients by both the presence in the serum of anti-HCV antibodies detected by the four-antigen recombinant immunoblot assay and of HCV RNA detected by polymerase chain reaction. In two patients tested, anti-HCV antibodies were not detected after centrifugation in the purified cryoglobulin but were detected in the supernatant. HCV RNA was detected in the purified cryoglobulin in all four patients and was detected in the supernatant in three patients. In one patient receiving recombinant interferon alfa, serum aminotransferases normalized and cryoglobulin disappeared; in another patient receiving recombinant interferon alfa, serum aminotransferases remained high and the cryoglobulin persisted. The presence of HCV RNA in the cryoglobulin and the parallelism of the changes of the cryoglobulinemia and of the serum aminotransferases during recombinant interferon alfa administration suggest that HCV infection is responsible for the production of cryoglobulinemia and vasculitis. It is proposed that HCV infection is a cause of cryoglobulinemia associated with chronic hepatitis.
Nature Genetics | 2012
Virginie Helias; Carole Saison; Bryan A. Ballif; Thierry Peyrard; Junko Takahashi; Hideo Takahashi; Mitsunobu Tanaka; Jean-Charles Deybach; Hervé Puy; Maude Le Gall; Camille Sureau; Bach-Nga Pham; Pierre-Yves Le Pennec; Yoshihiko Tani; Jean-Pierre Cartron; Lionel Arnaud
The human ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter ABCB6 has been described as a mitochondrial porphyrin transporter essential for heme biosynthesis, but it is also suspected to contribute to anticancer drug resistance, as do other ABC transporters located at the plasma membrane. We identified ABCB6 as the genetic basis of the Lan blood group antigen expressed on red blood cells but also at the plasma membrane of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) cells, and we established that ABCB6 encodes a new blood group system (Langereis, Lan). Targeted sequencing of ABCB6 in 12 unrelated individuals of the Lan(−) blood type identified 10 different ABCB6 null mutations. This is the first report of deficient alleles of this human ABC transporter gene. Of note, Lan(−) (ABCB6−/−) individuals do not suffer any clinical consequences, although their deficiency in ABCB6 may place them at risk when determining drug dosage.
Transfusion | 2009
Bach-Nga Pham; Thierry Peyrard; Geneviève Juszczak; Isabelle Dubeaux; Dominique Gien; Antoine Blancher; Jean-Pierre Cartron; Philippe Rouger; Pierre-Yves Le Pennec
BACKGROUND: The rare HrB– phenotype is encoded by the (C)ces haplotype when present at the homozygous state. This haplotype contains two altered genes: a hybrid RHD‐CE‐Ds gene segregated with a ces allele of RHCE (733C>G and 1006G>T substitutions in Exon 5 and Exon 7 respectively). The aim of this study was to further investigate the molecular background of the (C)ces haplotype.
Journal of Hepatology | 2001
Bach-Nga Pham; Jacques Bernuau; François Durand; Alain Sauvanet; Claude Degott; Lionel Prin; Anne Janin
BACKGROUND Drug-induced liver disease is due to intrinsic or idiosyncratic hepatotoxins. Liver parenchyma is then infiltrated by immunocompetent cells. Eosinophils are primarily tissue leukocytes which are attracted into tissues by various chemoattractants, including chemokines. The aim of this study was to study eosinophils in the livers of patients with drug-induced liver disease. METHODS Immunohistochemical studies with antibodies against eosinophil cationic proteins (major basic protein, eosinophil-derived neurotoxin and eosinophil cationic protein), cytokines (interleukin 5 (IL-5), interleukin 3 (IL-3) and granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF)) and chemokines (eotaxin and RANTES (Regulated upon Activation Normal T cell Expressed and Secreted)) were performed to assess the in situ activation of the liver-infiltrating eosinophils of 14 patients with drug-induced liver disease and 19 controls. RESULTS Eosinophils were only observed in patients with drug-induced liver disease. Eosinophils were morphologically normal when hepatitis was due to paracetamol whereas eosinophils had granular changes when hepatitis was due to an idiosyncratic hepatotoxin. Eotaxin was detected in all patients with drug-induced liver disease, whereas RANTES was detected in three of them. IL-5, IL-3 or GM-CSF were not detected. CONCLUSIONS In patients with drug-induced liver disease, the recruitment of eosinophils in the liver may depend on eotaxin expression. Eosinophil changes may vary according to the type of drug.
Vox Sanguinis | 2008
H. W. Reesink; C. P. Engelfriet; H. Schennach; C. Gassner; Silvano Wendel; R. Fontão‐Wendel; M. A. De Brito; Pertti Sistonen; J. Matilainen; Thierry Peyrard; Bach-Nga Pham; Philippe Rouger; P.Y. Le Pennec; Willy A. Flegel; I. von Zabern; C. K. Lin; W. C. Tsoi; I. Hoffer; K. Barotine‐Toth; S. R. Joshi; K. Vasantha; V. Yahalom; O. Asher; Cyril Levene; Maria Antonietta Villa; Nicoletta Revelli; N. Greppi; Maurizio Marconi; Yoshihiko Tani; Claudia C. Folman
H. W. Reesink, C. P. Engelfriet, H. Schennach, C. Gassner, S. Wendel, R. Fontão-Wendel, M. A. de Brito, P. Sistonen, J. Matilainen, T. Peyrard, B. N. Pham, P. Rouger, P. Y. Le Pennec, W. A. Flegel, I. von Zabern, C. K. Lin, W. C. Tsoi, I. Hoffer, K. Barotine-Toth, S. R. Joshi, K. Vasantha, V. Yahalom, O. Asher, C. Levene, M. A. Villa, N. Revelli, N. Greppi, M. Marconi, Y. Tani, C. C. Folman, M. de Haas, M. M. W. Koopman, E. Beckers, D. S. Gounder, P. Flanagan, L. Wall, E. Aranburu Urtasun, H. Hustinx, C. Niederhauser, E. Massey, A. Gray, M. Needs, G. Daniels, T. Callaghan, C. Flickinger, S. J. Nance & G. M. Meny
Transfusion | 2011
Bach-Nga Pham; Thierry Peyrard; Geneviève Juszczak; Marylise Beolet; Geneviève Deram; Stéphanie Martin‐Blanc; Isabelle Dubeaux; Michèle Roussel; Sandrine Kappler-Gratias; Dominique Gien; Sylvie Poupel; Philippe Rouger; Pierre-Yves Le Pennec
BACKGROUND: DNA testing has enabled the documenting of numerous variants of RHCE alleles, especially in individuals of African origin. The risk for production of clinically significant alloantibodies to Rh antigens of patients carrying variant RHCE alleles has led us to analyze the different RhCE variants investigated by molecular biology. Alloimmunization was analyzed regarding the RHCE genetic profile.
Transfusion | 2011
Sandrine Kappler-Gratias; Thierry Peyrard; Marylise Beolet; Denise Amiranoff; Cécile Menanteau; Isabelle Dubeaux; Philippe Rouger; Jean-Pierre Cartron; Pierre Yves Le Pennec; Bach-Nga Pham
BACKGROUND: DNA analysis for the prediction of blood group antigen expression has broad implications in transfusion medicine. It may be of particular interest especially to detect variants, when antigen expression is weak or altered. The use of high‐throughput DNA analysis has never been applied to donors whose red blood cells (RBCs) are selected for reagent RBCs. The aim of this study was to analyze the concordance between the serologic phenotype and that predicted from DNA analysis in panel donors, to determine the benefit of the use of DNA analysis in reagent RBC selection strategy.
Transfusion | 2008
Thierry Peyrard; Bach-Nga Pham; Lionel Arnaud; Sophie Fleutiaux; Y. Brossard; Bénédicte Guerin; Isabelle Desmoulins; Philippe Rouger; Pierre-Yves Le Pennec
BACKGROUND: Jra is a high‐prevalence red cell (RBC) antigen. The clinical significance of anti‐Jra is controversial. When hemolytic disease of the fetus and newborn (HDFN) occurred, most reported cases were clinically mild. We report the first case of fatal HDFN due to anti‐Jra.
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