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Dive into the research topics where Claire Pinçon is active.

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Featured researches published by Claire Pinçon.


Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2011

Renal resistance index and its prognostic significance in patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction

Pierre Vladimir Ennezat; Sylvestre Maréchaux; Marie Six-Carpentier; Claire Pinçon; Ibrahim Sediri; Pascal Delsart; Marc Gras; Claire Mounier-Vehier; Corinne Gautier; David Montaigne; Brigitte Jude; Philippe Asseman; Thierry H. Le Jemtel

BACKGROUND Functional renal impairment is a common feature of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF). The link between functional renal impairment and HFpEF remains incompletely understood. With hypertension and diabetes as frequent co-morbidities, patients with HFpEF are at risk of developing intra-renal vascular hemodynamic alterations that may lead to functional renal impairment and impact on prognosis. METHODS Renal resistive index (RRI) was non-invasively determined by Doppler ultrasonic examination in 90 HFpEF patients and 90 age- and sex-matched hypertensive patients without evidence of heart failure (HF) who served as controls. Clinical, laboratory and cardiac echocardiography data were obtained in HFpEF patients and controls. To investigate its possible clinical relevance, RRI was evaluated as a prognostic index of all-cause mortality and hospitalization for HF. RESULTS Mean RRI was substantially greater in HFpEF patients than in controls (P < 0.0001), while mean blood pressure, glomerular filtration rate, hemoglobin and serum protein levels were significantly lower in HFpEF patients than in controls. On multivariable analysis, mean RRI was independently associated with HFpEF. In addition, increased mean RRI was an independent predictor of poor outcome [hazard ratio = 1.06 95% confidence interval (1.01-1.10), P = 0.007] and remained significantly associated with the outcome after adjustment for univariate predictors that included low mean blood pressure, low hemoglobin concentration and low glomerular filtration rate. Conclusion. Patients with HFpEF exhibit intra-renal vascular hemodynamic alterations. The severity of intra-renal vascular hemodynamic alterations correlates with a poor outcome.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2010

Modified Ross operation with reinforcement of the pulmonary autograft: Six-year results

Francis Juthier; Carlo Banfi; André Vincentelli; Pierre-Vladimir Ennezat; Thierry Le Tourneau; Claire Pinçon; Alain Prat

OBJECTIVE The Ross procedure is widely used for aortic valve disease in patients who are still growing and young adults with active lifestyles or the desire for pregnancy. The need for autograft reoperation remains the principal limitation of the procedure. Autograft inclusion in a polyester tube prosthesis has been proposed with good postoperative results, but the durability of these technical modifications has not been assessed. We report the midterm results of pulmonary autograft reinforcement with a Valsalva Gelweave Dacron tube (Terumo Cardiovascular Systems Inc, Ann Arbor, Mich). METHODS Since 1992, we have performed 322 Ross operations; 12 patients underwent a modified Ross procedure with the autograft included in a Valsalva Gelweave Dacron tube. The mean age of these patients was 29.7 +/- 10.8 years (range, 15.3-46.5 years). The mean aortic crossclamp time was 126 +/- 11 minutes (range, 110-142 minutes). The mean follow-up was 4 +/- 1.4 years (range 1.7-5.8 years). RESULTS No perioperative deaths were observed, and all patients are alive and doing well. No significant autograft regurgitation was recorded during follow-up. The mean diameters of the autograft annulus and the neosinus of Valsalva were 23.3 +/- 2.6 mm and 32.6 +/- 3.3 mm, respectively, at discharge, and 24.0 +/- 1.9 mm and 33.6 +/- 3.3 mm, respectively, at the last control (P = .32 and P = .08, respectively). CONCLUSION These results support that this technical modification of the Ross operation might be proposed for patients at risk of autograft dilatation when an inclusion technique is not feasible.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2012

Reoperation after the Ross procedure: incidence, management, and survival.

Francis Juthier; André Vincentelli; Claire Pinçon; Carlo Banfi; Pierre Vladimir Ennezat; Sylvestre Maréchaux; Alain Prat

BACKGROUND The risk of reoperation on the autograft and homograft is the major long-term drawback of the Ross procedure. The incidence and clinical implications of reoperations after the Ross procedure are reported. METHODS Between March 1992 and February 2010, 336 consecutive patients had a Ross procedure (mean follow-up, 6.2±4.9 years). Autograft implant technique was freestanding root replacement in 269 patients, subcoronary implantation in 52 patients and a modified root replacement with the autograft included in a Valsalva tube graft in 15. RESULTS Subsequently, 38 patients (11.3%) underwent reoperations, for autograft dilatation in 23 and a significant autograft insufficiency in 9, at 9.6±3.7 years and 2.6±3.9 years, respectively. Aortic and pulmonary infective endocarditis occurred in 3 patients. Three patients underwent a non valve-related cardiac reoperation. Three patients received a transcatheter pulmonary valve implantation after 12.2±1.7 years. At 15 years, freedoms for autograft and homograft explantation (with 95% confidence interval) were 83.3% (77.4%- to 9.2%) and 92.8% (87.6% to 97.9%), respectively. Native aortic valve regurgitation, indexed aortic annulus diameter exceeding 1.35 cm/m2 and autograft diameter were risk factors for dilated autograft reoperation (hazard ratio, 3.23 [95% confidence interval, 1.19 to 8.81], p=0.02; 3.83 [0.9 to 16.33], p=0.07 and 1.2 per mm [1.01 to 1.41], p=0.03), respectively. CONCLUSIONS Autograft dilatation was the leading cause of reoperation in patients who underwent root replacement. Long-term follow-up is mandatory to determine whether modifications of the operative technique could limit autograft dilatation.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2010

Indications and Results of Anterior Mediastinal Tracheostomy for Malignancies

Massimo Conti; Lotfi Benhamed; G. Mortuaire; Dominique Chevalier; Claire Pinçon; Alain Wurtz

BACKGROUND This study was designed to assess the early and long-term results, and determine suitable indications of anterior mediastinal tracheostomy, after radical resection for cervicothoracic malignancies. METHODS From 1985 to 2009, 13 patients ranging in age from 40 to 75 years underwent an anterior mediastinal tracheostomy for malignancy, 2 as an isolated procedure, 5 with concomitant laryngectomy, and 6 with concomitant laryngopharyngoesophagectomy. The patients had subglottic carcinoma, proximal tracheal carcinoma invading the subglottic larynx (n = 6), stomal recurrence following laryngectomy (n = 4), esophageal carcinoma invading the proximal trachea (n = 2), or tracheal recurrence after conventional resection (n = 1). The postoperative course and outcome were assessed in all patients. RESULTS In 5 patients, the postoperative course was uneventful. There were 2 in-hospital deaths, and 6 patients experienced nonfatal complications including three pharyngocutaneous fistulas, two pharyngogastric or pharyngocolic anastomotic leaks, and one pulmonary embolism. Satisfactory airway was achieved in 7 patients presenting with proximal obstruction, and ability to tolerate oral feeding, in 2 patients with esophageal carcinoma. The mean follow-up time for survivors was 89 months (range, 9 to 201 months). Patients with esophageal carcinoma or recurrence of tracheal carcinoma showed a poor outcome. In contrast, in the subgroup of patients with head and neck malignancy, 3-year and 5-year survival rates were 57% and 43%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS Our results and survival analysis from the literature suggest that suitable indications for anterior mediastinal tracheostomy are (1) carcinoma of the subglottic region or proximal trachea invading the subglottic larynx, (2) stomal recurrence after laryngectomy, and (3) well-differentiated thyroid carcinoma invading the trachea or recurrence.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2015

ECMO as a bridge to decision: Recovery, VAD, or heart transplantation?

N Rousse; F Juthier; Claire Pinçon; Ilir Hysi; Carlo Banfi; Emmanuel Robin; G Fayad; B Jegou; Alain Prat; A Vincentelli

BACKGROUND Our 8-year experience with ECMO support as a bridge to decision was reviewed. METHODS A cohort of 124 consecutive patients received ECMO for refractory cardiogenic shock in our institution. Twenty-six of these were out of hospital cardiac arrests and were excluded from this analysis. The median age was 43 years, in the range of 11 to 73 years. RESULTS The median duration of ECMO support was 4.5 days. Mortality while supported by ECMO was 50% with a median support time of 2 days. Weaning from ECMO was achieved for 49 patients with the following outcomes: cardiac recovery (60%), heart transplantation (26%), and VAD implantation (14%). Median duration of support before weaning was 8 days. Hospital survival was 83%, 61.5% and 71% for cardiac recovery, heart transplantation and VAD implantation, respectively. ECMO weaning was significantly improved in all patients who had normalized their renal function, and when duration of support>6 days (HR: 4.255 [1.255-14.493], p=0.02 and HR: 2.164 [1.152-4.082], p=0.02, respectively). A creatinine level>14 mg/l the day of weaning was a significant predictor of death (HR: 5.807 [1.089-30.953]; p=0.04). Median follow up was 2.4 years; one-year survival rate was 78%, 51% and 75% for cardiac recovery, heart transplantation and VAD implantation, respectively. CONCLUSION With at least 6 days of support, ECMO allowed a better patient selection for myocardial recovery, VAD implantation or heart transplantation. Whether VAD implantation or heart transplant in those patients is a better indication remains to be evaluated.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2012

Characterizing Pneumocystis in the Lungs of Bats: Understanding Pneumocystis Evolution and the Spread of Pneumocystis Organisms in Mammal Populations

Haroon Akbar; Claire Pinçon; Cécile-Marie Aliouat-Denis; Sandra Derouiche; M. L. Taylor; Muriel Pottier; Laura-Helena Carreto-Binaghi; Antonio Ernesto González-González; Aurore Courpon; Véronique Barriel; Jacques Guillot; Magali Chabé; Roberto Suárez-Alvarez; El Moukhtar Aliouat; Eduardo Dei-Cas; Christine Demanche

ABSTRACT Bats belong to a wide variety of species and occupy diversified habitats, from cities to the countryside. Their different diets (i.e., nectarivore, frugivore, insectivore, hematophage) lead Chiroptera to colonize a range of ecological niches. These flying mammals exert an undisputable impact on both ecosystems and circulation of pathogens that they harbor. Pneumocystis species are recognized as major opportunistic fungal pathogens which cause life-threatening pneumonia in severely immunocompromised or weakened mammals. Pneumocystis consists of a heterogeneous group of highly adapted host-specific fungal parasites that colonize a wide range of mammalian hosts. In the present study, 216 lungs of 19 bat species, sampled from diverse biotopes in the New and Old Worlds, were examined. Each bat species may be harboring a specific Pneumocystis species. We report 32.9% of Pneumocystis carriage in wild bats (41.9% in Microchiroptera). Ecological and behavioral factors (elevation, crowding, migration) seemed to influence the Pneumocystis carriage. This study suggests that Pneumocystis-host association may yield much information on Pneumocystis transmission, phylogeny, and biology in mammals. Moreover, the link between genetic variability of Pneumocystis isolated from populations of the same bat species and their geographic area could be exploited in terms of phylogeography.


Echocardiography-a Journal of Cardiovascular Ultrasound and Allied Techniques | 2008

Cardiac Correlates of Exercise Induced Pulmonary Hypertension in Patients with Chronic Heart Failure Due to Left Ventricular Systolic Dysfunction

Sylvestre Maréchaux; Claire Pinçon; Thierry Le Tourneau; Pascal De Groote; Clémence Huerre; Philippe Asseman; Eric Van Belle; Rémi Nevière; Christophe Bauters; Ghislaine Deklunder; Thierry H. LeJemtel; Pierre V. Ennezat

Background: Patients with chronic heart failure (CHF) due to left ventricular systolic dysfunction (LVSD) may develop pulmonary hypertension at rest and during exercise. The cardiac correlates of pulmonary hypertension have been ascertained in the resting state, but seldom during exercise in these patients. Aims: We sought to determine the cardiac correlates of exercise induced pulmonary hypertension in patients with LVSD by monitoring the estimated pulmonary artery systolic pressure (PASP) by continuous Doppler echocardiography during semirecumbent bicycle exercise. Methods: Eighty‐five patients (mean age 57 ± 13 years, 75% male) with CHF due to LVSD (LV ejection fraction [EF] <45%, mean LVEF 26 ± 8%) were studied. Results: Mitral effective regurgitant orifice area and E‐wave were independent predictors of resting PASP. Resting PASP and exercise induced changes in PASP were unrelated (r =−0.08, P = 0.45). Decrease in LV end‐systolic volume, increase in left atrial (LA) area, resting LV asynchrony, and decreased tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion (TAPSE) were independent predictors of exercise PASP. Conclusions: Resting LV asynchrony, impaired LV contractile reserve, and increase in LA dilatation correlate with the severity of exercise induced pulmonary hypertension in patients with CHF due to LVSD, while right ventricular systolic dysfunction is inversely related to the severity of exercise induced pulmonary hypertension.


Archives of Cardiovascular Diseases | 2013

Anaemia to predict outcome in patients with acute coronary syndromes

Pierre Vladimir Ennezat; Sylvestre Maréchaux; Claire Pinçon; Jonathan Finzi; Stéphanie Barrailler; Nadia Bouabdallaoui; Eric Van Belle; Gilles Montalescot; Jean-Philippe Collet

BACKGROUND Owing to the heterogeneous population of patients with acute coronary syndromes (ACS), risk stratification with tools such as the GRACE risk score is recommended to guide therapeutic management and improve outcome. AIM To evaluate whether anaemia refines the value of the GRACE risk model to predict midterm outcome after an ACS. METHODS A prospective registry of 1064 ACS patients (63 ± 14 years; 73% men; 57% ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction [MI]) was studied. Anaemia was defined as haemoglobin less than 13 mg/dL in men or less than 12 mg/dL in women. The primary endpoint was 6-month death or rehospitalization for MI. RESULTS The primary endpoint was reached in 132 patients, including 68 deaths. Anaemia was associated with adverse clinical outcomes (hazard ratio 3.008, 95% confidence interval 2.137-4.234; P<0.0001) in univariate analysis and remained independently associated with outcome after adjustment for the Global Registry of Acute Coronary Events (GRACE) risk score (hazard ratio 2.870, 95% confidence interval 1.815-4.538; P<0.0001). Anaemia provided additional prognostic information to the GRACE score as demonstrated by a systematic improvement in global model fit and discrimination (c-statistic increasing from 0.633 [0.571;0.696] to 0.697 [0.638;0.755]). Subsequently, adding anaemia to the GRACE score led to reclassification of 595 patients into different risk categories; 16.5% patients at low risk (≤ 5% risk of death or rehospitalization for MI) were upgraded to intermediate (>5-10%) or high risk (>10%); 79.5% patients at intermediate risk were reclassified as low (55%) or high risk (24%); and 45.5% patients at high risk were downgraded to intermediate risk. Overall, 174 patients were reclassified into a higher risk category (17.3%) and 421 into a lower risk category (41.9%). CONCLUSION Anaemia provides independent additional prognostic information to the GRACE score. Combining anaemia with the GRACE score refines its predictive value, which often overestimates the risk.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Ploidy of cell-sorted trophic and cystic forms of Pneumocystis carinii.

Anna Martinez; El Moukhtar Aliouat; Annie Standaert-Vitse; Elisabeth Werkmeister; Muriel Pottier; Claire Pinçon; Eduardo Dei-Cas; Cécile-Marie Aliouat-Denis

Once regarded as an AIDS-defining illness, Pneumocystis pneumonia (PcP) is nowadays prevailing in immunocompromised HIV-negative individuals such as patients receiving immunosuppressive therapies or affected by primary immunodeficiency. Moreover, Pneumocystis clinical spectrum is broadening to non-severely-immunocompromised subjects who could be colonized by the fungus while remaining asymptomatic for PcP, thus being able to transmit the infection by airborne route to susceptible hosts. Although the taxonomical position of the Pneumocystis genus has been clarified, several aspects of its life cycle remain elusive such as its mode of proliferation within the alveolus or its ploidy level. As no long-term culture model exists to grow Pneumocystis organisms in vitro, an option was to use a model of immunosuppressed rat infected with Pneumocystis carinii and sort life cycle stage fractions using a high-through-put cytometer. Subsequently, ploidy levels of the P. carinii trophic and cystic form fractions were measured by flow cytometry. In the cystic form, eight contents of DNA were measured thus strengthening the fact that each mature cyst contains eight haploid spores. Following release, each spore evolves into a trophic form. The majority of the trophic form fraction was haploid in our study. Some less abundant trophic forms displayed two contents of DNA indicating that they could undergo (i) mating/fusion leading to a diploid status or (ii) asexual mitotic division or (iii) both. Even less abundant trophic forms with four contents of DNA were suggestive of mitotic divisions occurring following mating in diploid trophic forms. Of interest, was the presence of trophic forms with three contents of DNA, an unusual finding that could be related to asymmetrical mitotic divisions occurring in other fungal species to create genetic diversity at lower energetic expenses than mating. Overall, ploidy data of P. carinii life cycle stages shed new light on the complexity of its modes of proliferation.


Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology | 2009

High-Speed Cell Sorting of Infectious Trophic and Cystic Forms of Pneumocystis carinii

Anna Martinez; El Moukhtar Aliouat; Muriel Pottier; Nausicâa Gantois; Claire Pinçon; Annie Standaert-Vitse; Eduardo Dei-Cas; Cécile-Marie Aliouat-Denis

ABSTRACT. The separation of Pneumocystis carinii life‐cycle stages while preserving infectivity is a hitherto unresolved challenge. We describe an original, reproducible, and efficient method for separating trophic from cystic forms of P. carinii using a high‐speed cell sorter. The large amounts of highly purified (99.6±0.3%) infectious trophic and cystic forms can now be used to elucidate the poorly understood P. carinii life cycle.

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Eduardo Dei-Cas

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

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