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Dive into the research topics where Christophe Bedane is active.

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Featured researches published by Christophe Bedane.


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2011

Risk factors for bullous pemphigoid in the elderly: a prospective case-control study.

Sylvie Bastuji-Garin; Pascal Joly; Pauline Lemordant; A. Sparsa; Christophe Bedane; E. Delaporte; Jean-Claude Roujeau; Philippe Bernard; Jean-Claude Guillaume; S. Ingen-Housz-Oro; Hervé Maillard; Catherine Pauwels; C. Picard-Dahan; Yes Dutronc; Marie-Aleth Richard

A rise in the incidence of bullous pemphigoid (BP) was documented recently in Europe, and the main risk factors for BP remain unknown. We conducted a multicenter case-control study to evaluate risk factors for BP. We identified 201 incident BP cases and 345 controls individually matched for age, gender, center, and place of residence (home, nursing home, or extended-care facility). We used univariate and multivariate logistic regression analyses to compare drugs used for over 3 months, comorbidities, and physical and cognitive impairments between cases and controls. Mean age of BP patients was 84.2 (±8.7) years. Factors independently associated with BP by multivariate analysis were major cognitive impairment (odds ratio (OR), 2.19; 95% confidence interval (95% CI), 1.24-3.87), bedridden condition (OR, 2.19; 95% CI, 1.23-3.89), Parkinsons disease (OR, 2.16; 95% CI, 1.09-4.27), unipolar or bipolar disorder (OR, 5.25; 95% CI, 1.21-22.86), and chronic use of spironolactone (OR, 2.30; 95% CI, 1.20-4.46) or phenothiazines with aliphatic side chains (OR, 3.70; 95% CI, 1.21-11.34). Chronic analgesic use was associated with a lower risk of BP (OR, 0.49; 95% CI, 0.30-0.81). Thus, risk factors for BP include neurological disorders, particularly dementia and Parkinsons disease, psychiatric disorders (unipolar and bipolar disorders), bedridden condition, and chronic use of several drugs.


Science Translational Medicine | 2013

Long-Term Remissions of Severe Pemphigus After Rituximab Therapy Are Associated with Prolonged Failure of Desmoglein B Cell Response

Natacha Colliou; Damien Picard; F. Caillot; Sébastien Calbo; Stéphanie Le Corre; Annick Lim; Brigitte Lemercier; Brigitte Le Mauff; Maud Maho-Vaillant; Serge Jacquot; Christophe Bedane; Philippe Bernard; F. Caux; Catherine Prost; E. Delaporte; M.-S. Doutre; Brigitte Dreno; Nathalie Franck; Saskia Ingen-Housz-Oro; Olivier Chosidow; C. Pauwels; Catherine Picard; Jean-Claude Roujeau; Michèle Sigal; Emmanuelle Tancrede-Bohin; Isabelle Templier; Rüdiger Eming; Michael Hertl; M. D’Incan; Pascal Joly

Changes in the B cell repertoire mediate long-lasting therapeutic effects of rituximab in pemphigus patients. A Blistering Attack on Autoimmunity The devastating effects of autoimmune diseases like type 1 diabetes and multiple sclerosis are front-page news. However, rare autoimmune diseases may be even more distressing in their relative anonymity. One such condition is pemphigus, which is a severe blistering condition caused by autoantibodies to adhesion proteins in the skin and mucus. The B cell–depleting antibody rituximab has been shown to treat pemphigus short term in early clinical trials. Now, Colliou et al. find that rituximab therapy can help pemphigus patients even after 6 years, in part by reshaping the B cell repertoire during reconstitution. The authors followed pemphigus patients from their early trial out at least 6 years after rituximab therapy. They found that nearly two-thirds of patients achieved a long-term complete response—either completely off of therapy or when treated with low levels of supplementary prednisone. They then compared patients with complete response to those with incomplete response to look at differences in reconstitution of the B cell compartment. Patients with complete response had a greater proportion of naïve and transitional B cells than those with incomplete response, which suggests a barrier to B cell maturation. Indeed, many of these transitional B cells secreted the regulatory cytokine interleukin-10. Moreover, complete responders had a specific loss of anti–desmoglein-specific B cells, which are pathogenic in pemphigus patients, but not B cells that respond to infectious agents. Together, these data suggest that B cell repertoire is reshaped after rituximab therapy, allowing for long-term effects in addition to the short-term loss of pathogenic B cells. If these observations are confirmed in large studies, these data could form the basis for a new frontline therapy for recalcitrant pemphigus. Pemphigus is a severe blistering condition of the skin and mucosa caused by autoantibodies directed against desmogleins, which are a type of keratinocyte adhesion protein. B cell depletion by rituximab has short-term efficacy against pemphigus. We aimed to assess the long-term course of pemphigus patients after B cell depletion and to understand the immunological mechanisms that mediate long-lasting remissions. We evaluated the clinical course of 22 pemphigus patients treated with rituximab after a 79-month median follow-up and compared the anti-desmoglein B cell response and B and T lymphocyte subpopulations and repertoire between patients who achieved complete remission (CR) and those who had incomplete remission (IR). Thirteen patients (59%) experienced CR during the study, including 10 patients off treatment and 3 patients with prednisone doses <10 mg/day; 9 patients had IR. A marked increase was observed in the ratio of CD19+CD27− naïve B cells to CD19+CD27+ memory B cells. Indeed, patients in CR had a fourfold higher number of transitional B cells and interleukin-10–secreting regulatory B cells than those in IR. Furthermore, CR was associated with modification of the initial B cell repertoire and the disappearance of desmoglein-specific circulating immunoglobulin G–positive (IgG+) B lymphocytes, whereas a skewed B cell repertoire was observed in patients in IR. Thus, a blockage of B cell maturation, a prolonged repopulation with naïve B cells, and a delayed reappearance of memory B cells, which resulted in the disappearance of circulating desmoglein-specific IgG+ B lymphocytes, contribute to the long-lasting effectiveness of rituximab for treating pemphigus.


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2008

B-Cell Depletion Immunotherapy in Pemphigus: Effects on Cellular and Humoral Immune Responses

Hugo Mouquet; Philippe Musette; Marie-Lyse Gougeon; Serge Jacquot; Brigitte Lemercier; Annick Lim; Danièle Gilbert; Ingrid Dutot; Jean-Claude Roujeau; Michel D'Incan; Christophe Bedane; François Tron; Pascal Joly

Pemphigus are B-cell-mediated autoimmune diseases affecting skin and mucous membranes. They are characterized by the production of pathogenic autoantibodies directed against desmogleins (Dsg). In this prospective study, we treated 21 pemphigus patients with rituximab and analyzed immunological modifications induced by anti-CD20 immunotherapy. The total depletion of peripheral B cells led to a significant decrease of total serum IgM but not IgG levels. The B-cell depletion was followed by a progressive re-emergence of naive blood B lymphocytes, with one-third of them expressing a transitional CD19+CD38(high)CD24(high) phenotype. In most patients, clinical response to rituximab was closely related to the evolution of anti-Dsg autoantibodies that decreased in patients who achieved complete remission, whereas they remained unchanged or reincreased in relapsing patients. In contrast, serum antimicrobial IgG remained stable after rituximab treatment. B-cell repertoire analysis of three patients using immunoscope showed distortions of VH-IgM and VH-IgG immunoscope profiles before treatment, particularly clonal and oligoclonal expansions in some VH families, which were not found after B-cell reconstitution, following anti-CD20 immunotherapy. The depletion of autoreactive B cells leading to the elimination of anti-Dsg autoantibodies in most remitted patients and the restoration of a diverse B-cell repertoire by naive B lymphocytes may provide an explanation for the long-lasting efficacy of rituximab in pemphigus patients.


Archives of Dermatology | 2008

Prospective Multicenter Study of Pegylated Liposomal Doxorubicin Treatment in Patients With Advanced or Refractory Mycosis Fungoides or Sézary Syndrome

G. Quereux; Sonia Marques; Jean-Michel Nguyen; Christophe Bedane; M. D’Incan; O. Dereure; Elisabeth Puzenat; Alain Claudy; Ludovic Martin; Pascal Joly; Michèle Delaunay; M. Beylot-Barry; Pierre Vabres; Philippe Célérier; Bruno Sasolas; F. Grange; Amir Khammari; Brigitte Dreno

OBJECTIVE To assess the rate of objective response to pegylated liposomal doxorubicin hydrochloride (Caelyx) in patients with advanced or refractory cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL). DESIGN Prospective, open, multicenter study. SETTING Thirteen dermatology departments in France. PATIENTS Twenty-five patients with either (1) stage II to stage IV CTCL previously unsuccessfully treated with at least 2 lines of treatments or (2) histologically transformed epidermotropic CTCL requiring chemotherapy. INTERVENTION Administration of Caelyx intravenously once every 4 weeks at a dose of 40 mg/m(2). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES The response to treatment was evaluated by clinical evaluation. RESULTS At the end of treatment, we observed an objective response (primary end point) in 56% of the patients (14 of 25): 5 complete responses and 9 partial responses. The median overall survival time was 43.7 months. For the 14 patients who experienced an objective response, the median progression-free survival time after the end of treatment was 5 months. CONCLUSIONS This prospective study demonstrates the effectiveness of Caelyx in treating CTCL, with an overall response rate of 56% in spite of the high proportion of patients with advanced-stage disease. Responses were observed in 2 subpopulations of patients in which the prognosis is known to be poorer: Sézary syndrome (overall response rate, 60%) and transformed CTCL (overall response rate, 50%). Moreover, this study shows that dose escalation to 40 mg/m(2) does not seem to improve the effectiveness but increases toxic effects (especially hematologic toxic effects) compared with the dose previously tested of 20 mg/m(2).


British Journal of Dermatology | 2004

Histological evolution of recurrent basal cell carcinoma and therapeutic implications for incompletely excised lesions.

S. Boulinguez; C. Grison‐Tabone; Laurence Lamant; S. Valmary; R. Viraben; J.M. Bonnetblanc; Christophe Bedane

Background  It has been proposed that the management of incompletely excised recurrent basal cell carcinomas (BCCs) should depend on their histological appearance, and that nonaggressive recurrent BCCs may not require re‐excision.


JAMA Dermatology | 2014

Clinical and Immunologic Factors Associated With Bullous Pemphigoid Relapse During the First Year of Treatment: A Multicenter, Prospective Study

Fanny Fichel; Coralie Barbe; Pascal Joly; Christophe Bedane; Pierre Vabres; F. Truchetet; F. Aubin; Catherine Michel; Juliette Jegou; F. Grange; Frank Antonicelli; Philippe Bernard

IMPORTANCE Although predisposing factors for bullous pemphigoid (BP) have been recently established, no clinical or immunologic factors have yet been identified to predict disease outcome. OBJECTIVE To identify risk factors for BP relapse during the first year of treatment. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Multicenter prospective study of 120 consecutive patients with newly diagnosed BP in 8 French dermatology departments. Baseline and 6 follow-up visits were planned to record disease activity and collect blood samples for measurement of serum anti-BP180 and anti-BP230 levels by means of enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES The end point was clinical relapse within the first year of therapy. Associations of clinical and immunologic (including serum levels of anti-BP180 and anti-BP230 autoantibodies) parameters with clinical relapse were assessed using univariate and multivariate analyses. RESULTS During the 1-year follow-up, 35 patients (29.2%) experienced relapse, whereas anti-BP180 and anti-BP230 ELISA results were similar at baseline between patients who did and did not experience relapse. Factors at baseline independently associated with relapse were extensive disease at inclusion (hazard ratio [HR], 2.37 [95% CI, 1.2-4.8]) and an associated dementia (HR, 2.09 [95% CI, 1.0-4.2]). Use of superpotent topical corticosteroids alone (by 100 patients [83.3%]) induced a dramatic, early decrease in serum levels of anti-BP180 and anti-BP230 autoantibodies. Mean early decreases in autoantibody levels between baseline and day 60 were lower in patients with relapse compared with patients with ongoing remission (-10.0% and -45.2%, respectively, for anti-BP180 levels [P < .001] and -11.8% and -35.4%, respectively, for anti-BP230 levels [P = .046]). A higher serum level of anti-BP180 at day 150, with a cutoff of 23 U/mL, provided 84.2% sensitivity, 44.8% specificity, 33.3% positive predictive value, and 89.7% negative predictive value for the occurrence of relapses between days 150 and 360. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE The pronounced decrease in the level of anti-BP180 autoantibodies and, to a lesser extent, those directed against BP230 confirmed the use of superpotent topical corticosteroids alone as a reference BP treatment. Furthermore, our study suggests that neurological diseases play a major role in BP, not only as a predisposing but also as a prognostic factor.


British Journal of Dermatology | 2000

Role of drug exposure in aphthous ulcers: a case–control study

S. Boulinguez; S. Reix; Christophe Bedane; C. Debrock; M.-L. Bouyssou-Gauthier; A. Sparsa; V. Le Brun; P. De Vencay; P. Bernard; J.-M. Bonnetblanc

Background Drug‐induced aphthous ulcers have been the subject of several isolated and heterogeneous case reports for the last three decades.


Archives of Dermatological Research | 1996

Binding of autoantibodies is not restricted to desmosomes in pemphigus vulgaris

Christophe Bedane; Catherine Prost; Elisabeth Thomine; Lilianne Intrator; Pascal Joly; Frederic Caux; Myriam Blecker; Philippe Bernard; Marie Jo Leboutet; François Tron; Philippe Lauret; Jean Marie Bonnetblanc; Louis Dubertret

Pemphigus vulgaris (PV) and pemphigus foliaceus (PF) are autoimmune blistering diseases characterized by a loss of cell-cell adhesion and by autoantibodies directed against epidermal cadherins. PF antigen has been established as desmoglein I which is located strictly on the desmosome, whereas the precise ultrastructural localization of PV antigen remains unclear and controversial to date. To further investigate this question, we compared the location of immune deposits in 14 patients with PV and 10 patients with PF by both direct and indirect immunoelectron microscopy (IEM). Inclusion criteria were based upon clinical features, histological level of cleavage and characterization of circulating antibodies by Western blot on epithelial bovine tongue extracts. IEM was performed on unfixed 0.7-mm slices of skin for the direct technique or on normal skin for the indirect technique using peroxidase labelling. In PF, by both direct and indirect IEM, immune deposits were located on the extracellular part of desmosomes (desmoglea) in all the samples studied. In PV, by both direct and indirect IEM, deposits were situated on the desmoglea and along large portions of the keratinocyte membrane without desmosomal structures in 15 of the 18 samples studied and only on the desmoglea in 3 samples. These results suggest that, in contrast to PF, the target antigen in PV is not always restricted to desmosomes. As various types of adherens junctions have been reported to mediate cell adhesion in the epidermis, the PV antigen could be a component of desmosomes and of other focal adhesions.


Journal of The American Academy of Dermatology | 1992

Erythema elevatum diutinum in a patient with relapsing polychondritis

Philippe Bernard; Christophe Bedane; Jean-Louis Delrous; Gilbert Catanzano; Jean-Marie Bonnetblanc

A 69-year-old man with a history of relapsing polychondritis developed a widespread cutaneous eruption that was clinically and histologically typical of erythema elevatum diutinum. This eruption was accompanied by a recurrence of arthralgias. The significance of this association between relapsing polychondritis and erythema elevatum diutinum, which has not been previously reported, is discussed.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2008

Onset of psoriatic arthritis in patients treated with efalizumab for moderate to severe psoriasis.

M. Viguier; Pascal Richette; F. Aubin; M. Beylot-Barry; Morad Lahfa; Christophe Bedane; Franck Delesalle; Marie-Aleth Richard-Lallemand; E. Delaporte; Louis Dubertret; Thomas Bardin; Hervé Bachelez

OBJECTIVE To investigate the nature of polyarthritis in patients with moderate to severe psoriasis undergoing treatment with efalizumab, a humanized anti-CD11a monoclonal antibody. METHODS In a multicenter study, we retrospectively analyzed patients who developed arthritis during treatment with efalizumab. The relationship between joint manifestations and psoriatic disease was addressed by using different classification criteria for psoriatic arthritis (PsA). The course of arthritis and its response to treatment were also investigated. RESULTS Sixteen patients developed de novo inflammatory rheumatic disease, with a mean delay of 15 weeks following the start of treatment, and with exclusive asymmetric peripheral monarthritis or oligoarthritis (8 patients), inflammatory spinal disease (1 patient), or both (7 patients), associated in some cases with enthesitis and dactylitis. All patients fulfilled at least 2 different sets of classification criteria for PsA. In most of them, an improvement in skin lesions was observed at the onset of PsA, as measured using the Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (mean score 24.88 before efalizumab versus 18.78 at the time of arthritis). Efalizumab treatment was stopped in 11 patients and was followed by the elimination of rheumatologic symptoms in 1 patient, while 8 patients required treatment with nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs with or without methotrexate, with 2 later being switched to tumor necrosis factor alpha inhibitors. Reintroduction of efalizumab (2 patients) was followed by a relapse of PsA. CONCLUSION This study questions the role of efalizumab in the induction of PsA. It also emphasizes the discrepancy between the courses of psoriatic skin and joint manifestations under treatment. Prospective case-control studies are needed to accurately investigate the impact of efalizumab on PsA.

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A. Sparsa

University of Limoges

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François Labrousse

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Bernard Guillot

University of Montpellier

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