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Dive into the research topics where Catherine Grandpeix-Guyodo is active.

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Featured researches published by Catherine Grandpeix-Guyodo.


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2010

Pediatric Mastocytosis Is a Clonal Disease Associated with D816V and Other Activating c-KIT Mutations

C. Bodemer; Olivier Hermine; Fabienne Palmerini; Ying Yang; Catherine Grandpeix-Guyodo; Phillip S. Leventhal; S. Hadj-Rabia; Laurent Nasca; S. Georgin-Lavialle; Annick Cohen-Akenine; Jean-Marie Launay; Stéphane Barete; Frédéric Féger; Michel Arock; Benoı̂t Catteau; Beatrix Sans; J.-F. Stalder; François Skowron; Luc Thomas; Gérard Lorette; P. Plantin; Pierre Bordigoni; O. Lortholary; Yves de Prost; Alain Moussy; Hagay Sobol; Patrice Dubreuil

Adult mastocytosis is an incurable clonal disease associated with c-KIT mutations, mostly in exon 17 (D816V). In contrast, pediatric mastocytosis often spontaneously regresses and is considered a reactive disease. Previous studies on childhood mastocytosis assessed only a few patients and focused primarily on codon 816 mutations, with various results. In this study, we analyzed the entire c-KIT sequence from cutaneous biopsies of 50 children with mastocytosis (ages 0-16 years). A mutation of codon 816 (exon 17) was found in 42% of cases, and mutations outside exon 17 were observed in 44%. Unexpectedly, half of the mutations were located in the fifth Ig loop of c-KITs extracellular domain, which is encoded by exons 8 and 9. All mutations identified in this study were somatic and caused a constitutive activation of c-KIT. There was no clear phenotype-genotype correlation, no clear relationship between the mutations and familial versus spontaneous disease, and no significant change in the relative expression of the c-KIT GNNK+ and GNNK isoforms. These findings strongly support the idea that, although pediatric mastocytosis can spontaneously regress, it is a clonal disease most commonly associated with activating mutations in c-KIT.


American Journal of Hematology | 2010

Masitinib for the treatment of systemic and cutaneous mastocytosis with handicap: A phase 2a study†

C. Paul; Beatrix Sans; Felipe Suarez; Philippe Casassus; Stéphane Barete; Fanny Lanternier; Catherine Grandpeix-Guyodo; Patrice Dubreuil; Fabienne Palmerini; Colin Mansfield; Paul Gineste; Alain Moussy; Olivier Hermine; O. Lortholary

Treatment options for patients suffering from indolent forms of mastocytosis remain inadequate with the hyperactivation of mast cells responsible for many of the diseases systemic manifestations. Masitinib is a potent and highly selective oral tyrosine kinase inhibitor. A combined inhibition of c‐Kit and Lyn make it particularly efficient in controlling the activity of mast cells and therefore, of potential therapeutic benefit in mastocytosis. Masitinib was administered to 25 patients diagnosed as having systemic or cutaneous mastocytosis with related handicap (i.e., disabilities associated with flushes, depression, pruritus and quality‐of‐life) at the initial dose levels of 3 or 6 mg/kg/day over 12 weeks. In accordance with the AFIRMM study, response was based upon change of clinical symptoms associated with patient handicap at week 12 relative to baseline, regardless of disease subtype. Improvement was observed in all primary endpoints at week 12 including a reduction of flushes, Hamilton rating, and pruritus as compared with baseline by 64% (P = 0.0005), 43% (P = 0.0049), and 36% (P = 0.0077), respectively. An overall clinical response was observed in 14/25 patients (56%; [95%CI = 37%−75%]), with sustainable improvement observed throughout an extension phase (>60 weeks). Common adverse events were edema (44%), nausea (44%), muscle spasms (28%), and rash (28%), the majority of which were of mild or moderate severity with a significant decline in frequency observed after 12 weeks of treatment. One patient experienced a serious adverse event of reversible agranulocytosis. Masitinib is a promising treatment for indolent forms of mastocytosis with handicap and indicates acceptable tolerability for long‐term treatment regimens. Am. J. Hematol. 85:921–925, 2010.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2013

Gastrointestinal manifestations in mastocytosis: A study of 83 patients

Harry Sokol; Sophie Georgin-Lavialle; Danielle Canioni; Stéphane Barete; Gandhi Damaj; Erinn Soucie; Julie Bruneau; Marie-Olivia Chandesris; Felipe Suarez; Jean-Marie Launay; Achille Aouba; Catherine Grandpeix-Guyodo; Fanny Lanternier; Bernard Grosbois; Christian De Gennes; P. Cathébras; Olivier Fain; Nadia Hoyeau-Idrissi; Patrice Dubreuil; O. Lortholary; Laurent Beaugerie; Brigitte Ranque; Olivier Hermine

BACKGROUND Mastocytosis is a heterogeneous disease characterized by mast cell accumulation in 1 or more organs. Gastrointestinal manifestations of systemic mastocytosis have been previously studied in small cohorts of patients, and no specific histologic description is available. OBJECTIVE We sought to assess the clinical and pathologic features of gastrointestinal manifestations in patients with mastocytosis. METHODS Medical history and gastrointestinal symptoms of patients with mastocytosis (n = 83) were compared with those of matched healthy subjects (n = 83) by means of patient questionnaire. Data were analyzed for epidemiologic, clinical, biological, and genetic factors associated with gastrointestinal symptoms for patients with mastocytosis. A comparative analysis of gastrointestinal histology from patients with mastocytosis (n = 23), control subjects with inflammatory bowel disease (n = 17), and healthy subjects (n = 19) was performed. RESULTS The following gastrointestinal symptoms occurred more frequently and were more severe in patients with mastocytosis than in healthy subjects: bloating (33% vs 7.2%, P < .0001), abdominal pain (27.3% vs 4.8%, P < .0001), nausea (23% vs 8.4%, P = .02), and diarrhea (33.85% vs 1.2%, P < .0001). Patients with mastocytosis had a significantly higher incidence of personal history of duodenal ulcer (P = .02). Wild-type (WT) c-Kit was associated with diarrhea (P = .03). Specific histologic lesions were present in patients with mastocytosis but were not correlated with clinical symptoms. CONCLUSION Gastrointestinal manifestations in patients with mastocytosis are highly prevalent and often severe. Clinical symptoms do not correspond to histologic findings, are nonspecific, and can simulate irritable bowel syndrome.


Brain Behavior and Immunity | 2014

Leukocyte telomere length in mastocytosis: Correlations with depression and perceived stress

Sophie Georgin-Lavialle; Daniela Silva Moura; Julie Bruneau; Jean-Christophe Chauvet-Gelinier; Gandhi Damaj; Erinn Soucie; Stéphane Barete; Anne-Laure Gacon; Catherine Grandpeix-Guyodo; Felipe Suarez; Jean-Marie Launay; I. Durieu; Aurélie Esparcieux; Isabelle Guichard; Agnès Sparsa; Franck E. Nicolini; Christian De Gennes; Benoit Trojak; Emmanuel Haffen; Pierre Vandel; O. Lortholary; Patrice Dubreuil; Bernard Bonin; Serge Sultan; Jean-Raymond Teyssier; Olivier Hermine

BACKGROUND Mastocytosisis a rare disease associated with chronic symptoms related to mast cell mediator release. Patients with mastocytosis display high level of negative emotionality such as depression and stress sensibility. Brain mast cells are mainly localized in the diencephalon, which is linked to emotion regulatory systems. Negative emotionality has been shown to be associated with telomere shortening. Taken together these observations led us to hypothesize that mast cells activity could be involved in both negative emotionality and telomere shortening in mastocytosis. OBJECTIVE To demonstrate a possible relationship between negative emotionality in mastocytosis and leukocytes telomere length. METHODS Leukocyte telomere length and telomerase activity were measured among mastocytosis patients and were correlated with perceived stress and depression assessed by the Beck Depression Inventory revised and the Perceived Stress Scale. RESULTS Mild-severe depression scores were frequent (78.9%) as well as high perceived stress (42.11%). Telomere length was correlated to perceived stress (r=0.77; p=0.0001) but not to depression in our population. Patients displaying Wild-type KIT significantly presented higher perceived stress levels. Patients with the D816VC KIT mutation who had high perceived stress scores displayed significantly shorter telomere but not if they had high depression scores. CONCLUSION These findings suggest that high perceived stress in mastocytosis could accelerate the rate of leukocytes telomere shortening. Since mastocytosis is, by definition, a mast cell mediated disease; these cells could be involved in this phenomenon. Mechanistic causal relationships between these parameters need to be investigated.


Medicine | 2016

Mastocytosis among elderly patients: A multicenter retrospective French study on 53 patients.

Audrey Rouet; Achille Aouba; Gandhi Damaj; Erinn Soucie; Katia Hanssens; Marie-Olivia Chandesris; Cristina Bulai Livideanu; Marine Dutertre; I. Durieu; Catherine Grandpeix-Guyodo; Stéphane Barete; Claude Bachmeyer; Angèle Soria; Laurent Frenzel; Olivier Fain; Bernard Grosbois; Christian De Gennes; M. Hamidou; Jean-Benoît Arlet; David Launay; C. Lavigne; Michel Arock; Olivier Lortholary; Patrice Dubreuil; Olivier Hermine; Sophie Georgin-Lavialle

AbstractMastocytosis is a heterogeneous group of diseases with a young median age at diagnosis. Usually indolent and self-limited in childhood, the disease can exhibit aggressive progression in mid-adulthood. Our objectives were to describe the characteristics of the disease when diagnosed among elderly patients, for which rare data are available.The French Reference Center conducted a retrospective multicenter study on 53 patients with mastocytosis >69 years of age, to describe their clinical, biological, and genetic features.The median age of our cohort of patients was 75 years. Mastocytosis variants included were cutaneous (n = 1), indolent systemic (n = 5), aggressive systemic (n = 11), associated with a hematological non-mast cell disease (n = 34), and mast cell leukemia (n = 2). Clinical manifestations were predominantly mast cell activation symptoms (75.5%), poor performance status (50.9%), hepatosplenomegaly (50.9%), skin involvement (49.1%), osteoporosis (47.2%), and portal hypertension and ascites (26.4%). The main biological features were anemia (79.2%), thrombocytopenia (50.9%), leucopenia (20.8%), and liver enzyme abnormalities (32.1%). Of the 40 patients tested, 34 (85%), 2 (5%), and 4 (10%) exhibited the KIT D816V mutant, other KIT mutations and the wild-type form of the KIT gene, respectively. Additional sequencing detected significant genetic defects in 17 of 26 (65.3%) of the patients with associated hematological non-mast cell disease, including TET2, SRSF2, IDH2, and ASLX1 mutations. Death occurred in 19 (35.8%) patients, within a median delay of 9 months, despite the different treatment options available.Mastocytosis among elderly patients has a challenging early detection, rare skin involvement, and/or limited skin disease; it is heterogeneous and has often an aggressive presentation with nonfortuitous associated myeloid lineage malignant clones, and thus a poor overall prognosis.


Inflammatory Bowel Diseases | 2010

Gastrointestinal Involvement and manifestations in systemic mastocytosis.

Harry Sokol; Sophie Georgin-Lavialle; Catherine Grandpeix-Guyodo; Danielle Canioni; Stéphane Barete; Patrice Dubreuil; O. Lortholary; Laurent Beaugerie; Olivier Hermine


Molecular Psychiatry | 2016

Mast cells' involvement in inflammation pathways linked to depression: evidence in mastocytosis

S. Georgin-Lavialle; Daniela Silva Moura; A Salvador; J-C Chauvet-Gelinier; J-M Launay; Gandhi Damaj; Francine Côté; Erinn Soucie; M-O Chandesris; Stéphane Barete; Catherine Grandpeix-Guyodo; Claude Bachmeyer; M-A Alyanakian; Achille Aouba; Olivier Lortholary; Patrice Dubreuil; J-R Teyssier; Benoit Trojak; Emmanuel Haffen; Pierre Vandel; Bernard Bonin; Odile Beyne-Rauzy; Christian De Gennes; I. Durieu; Olivier Fain; Bernard Grosbois; Isabelle Guichard; Mohamed Hamidou; David Launay; Christian Lavigne


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2013

Mast cell sarcoma: a rare and aggressive entity--report of two cases and review of the literature.

Sophie Georgin-Lavialle; Claire Aguilar; Romain Guièze; Ludovic Lhermitte; Julie Bruneau; Sylvie Fraitag; Danielle Canioni; Marie-Olivia Chandesris; Felipe Suarez; Catherine Grandpeix-Guyodo; Gandhi Damaj; Stéphane Barete; Achille Aouba; Caroline Fite; Charlotte Robert; Philippe Gaulard; O. Lortholary; Olivier Tournilhac; Patrice Dubreuil; Olivier Hermine


Revue de Médecine Interne | 2011

Le sarcome mastocytaire, une entité rare et très agressive : description d’une série de 8 cas

Sophie Georgin-Lavialle; Claire Aguilar; Ludovic Lhermitte; R. Guieze; Sylvie Fraitag; Danielle Canioni; O. Chandesris; Catherine Grandpeix-Guyodo; O. Lortholary; Patrice Dubreuil; Olivier Tournilhac; Olivier Hermine


Revue de Médecine Interne | 2009

Peut-on remplacer la biopsie ostéomédullaire par un myélogramme avec phénotypage pour établir le diagnostic de mastocytose systémique avec atteinte médullaire ? Résultats de l’étude de 24 patients

Sophie Georgin-Lavialle; Ludovic Lhermitte; Catherine Grandpeix-Guyodo; Danielle Canioni; Stéphane Barete; Nicole Brousse; O. Lortholary; E.M. Intyre; Patrice Dubreuil; Yves Lepelletier; Vahid Asnafi; Olivier Hermine

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Olivier Hermine

Paris Descartes University

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O. Lortholary

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Danielle Canioni

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Felipe Suarez

Paris Descartes University

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Sophie Georgin-Lavialle

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Ludovic Lhermitte

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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