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Dive into the research topics where Claude Bohuon is active.

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Featured researches published by Claude Bohuon.


The Lancet | 1993

High serum procalcitonin concentrations in patients with sepsis and infection

M. Assicot; Dominique Gendrel; Carsin H; Josette Raymond; Guilbaud J; Claude Bohuon

Abstract High concentrations of calcitonin-like immunoreactivity have been found in the blood of patients with various extrathyroid diseases. By means of a monoclonal immunoradiometric assay for calcitonin precursors, we have measured serum concentrations of procalcitonin in patients with various bacterial and viral infections. 79 children (newborn to age 12 years) in hospital with suspected infections were investigated prospectively. 19 patients with severe bacterial infections had very high serum concentrations of procalcitonin at diagnosis (range 6-53 ng/mL) in comparison with 21 children found to have no signs of infection (baseline concentrations <0·1 ng/mL). Serum procalcitonin values decreased rapidly during antibiotic therapy. 11 patients with peripheral bacterial colonisation or local infections without invasive sepsis and 18 (86%) of 21 patients with viral infections had concentrations within or slightly above the normal range (0·1-1·5 ng/mL). Among 9 severely burned patients studied in an intensive care unit, the post-traumatic course of procalcitonin concentrations (range 0·1-120 ng/mL) was closely related to infectious complications and acute septic episodes. Concentrations of mature calcitonin were normal in all subjects, whatever procalcitonin concentrations were found. Concentrations of a substance immunologically identical to procalcitonin are raised during septic conditions. Serum concentrations seem to be correlated with the severity of microbial invasion.


Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 1999

Comparison of procalcitonin with C-reactive protein, interleukin 6 and interferon-alpha for differentiation of bacterial vs. viral infections

Dominique Gendrel; Josette Raymond; Joël Coste; Florence Moulin; Mathie Lorrot; Sylvie Guérin; Sophie Ravilly; Hervé Lefèvre; Catherine Royer; Catherine Lacombe; Pierre Palmer; Claude Bohuon

BACKGROUND Procalcitonin (PCT) concentration increases in bacterial infections but remains low in viral infections and inflammatory diseases. The change is rapid and the molecule is stable, making it a potentially useful marker for distinguishing between bacterial and viral infections. METHODS PCT concentration was determined with an immunoluminometric assay on plasma collected at admission in 360 infants and children hospitalized for bacterial or viral infection. It was compared with C-reactive protein (CRP), interleukin 6 and interferon-alpha measured on the same sample. RESULTS The mean PCT concentration was 46 microg/l (median, 17.8) in 46 children with septicemia or bacterial meningitis. PCT concentration was > 1 microg/l in 44 of 46 in this group and in 59 of 78 children with a localized bacterial infection who had a negative blood culture (sensitivity, 83%). PCT concentration was > 1 microg/l in 16 of 236 children with a viral infection (specificity, 93%). PCT concentration was low in 9 of 10 patients with inflammatory disease and fever. A CRP value > or =20 mg/l was observed in 61 of 236 patients (26%) with viral infection and in 105 of 124 patients (86%) with bacterial infection. IL-6 was > 100 pg/ml in 14% of patients infected with virus and in 53% with bacteria. A secretion of interferon-alpha was found in serum in 77% of viral infected patients and in 8.6% of bacterial infected patients. CONCLUSIONS In this study a PCT value of 1 microg/l or greater had better specificity, sensitivity and predictive value than CRP, interleukin 6 and interferon-alpha in children for distinguishing between viral and bacterial infections. PCT values are higher in invasive bacterial infections, but the cutoff value of 1 microg/l indicates the severity of the disease in localized bacterial infection and helps to decide antibiotic treatment in emergency room. PCT may be useful in an emergency room for differentiation of bacterial vs. viral infections in children and for making decisions about antibiotic treatments.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 1997

Measurement of Procalcitonin Levels in Children with Bacterial or Viral Meningitis

Dominique Gendrel; Josette Raymond; Marcel Assicot; Florence Moulin; Jean-Luc Iniguez; Pierre Lebon; Claude Bohuon

We measured the plasma procalcitonin levels in 59 children who were admitted to the hospital because of bacterial or viral meningitis. Eighteen children with acute bacterial meningitis had elevated procalcitonin levels (mean level, 54.5 micrograms/L; range, 4.8-110 micrograms/L). The procalcitonin levels in 41 children with viral meningitis were low (mean level, 0.32 micrograms/L; range, 0-1.7 micrograms/L; P < .0001). Assay of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) cells and proteins and serum C-reactive protein showed a zone of overlapping values between the two groups. Procalcitonin was not produced in CSF. Plasma procalcitonin levels decreased rapidly during antibiotic therapy. These data suggest that the measurement of plasma procalcitonin might be of value in the differential diagnosis of meningitis due to either bacteria or viruses.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1996

Procalcitonin as a marker for the early diagnosis of neonatal infection

Dominique Gendrel; Marcel Assicot; Josette Raymond; Florence Moulin; Christine Francoual; Jean Badoual; Claude Bohuon

Serum procalcitonin was determined in newborn infants at the time of admission to the pediatrics or obstetrics unit. Increased levels were found in all neonates with bacterial sepsis. Neonates with viral infection, bacterial colonization, or neonatal distress had normal or slightly increased levels. These data suggest that procalcitonin might be of value in diagnosing neonatal sepsis.


Archives of Disease in Childhood | 2001

Procalcitonin in children admitted to hospital with community acquired pneumonia

Florence Moulin; Josette Raymond; Mathie Lorrot; Marc E; Coste J; Jean-Luc Iniguez; Kalifa G; Claude Bohuon; Dominique Gendrel

AIMS To assess the sensitivity, specificity, and predictive value of procalcitonin (PCT) in differentiating bacterial and viral causes of pneumonia. METHODS A total of 72 children with community acquired pneumonia were studied. Ten had positive blood culture for Streptococcus pneumoniae and 15 had bacterial pneumonia according to sputum analysis (S pneumoniae in 15,Haemophilus influenzae b in one). Ten patients had Mycoplasma pneumoniae infection and 37 were infected with viruses, eight of whom had viral infection plus bacterial coinfection. PCT concentration was compared to C reactive protein (CRP) concentration and leucocyte count, and, if samples were available, interleukin 6 (IL-6) concentration. RESULTS PCT concentration was greater than 2 μg/l in all 10 patients with blood culture positive for S pneumoniae; in eight of these, CRP concentration was above 60 mg/l. PCT concentration was greater than 1 μg/l in 86% of patients with bacterial infection (includingMycoplasma and bacterial superinfection of viral pneumonia). A CRP concentration of 20 mg/l had a similar sensitivity but a much lower specificity than PCT (40%v 86%) for discriminating between bacterial and viral causes of pneumonia. PCT concentration was significantly higher in cases of bacterial pneumonia with positive blood culture whereas CRP concentration was not. Specificity and sensitivity were lower for leucocyte count and IL-6 concentration. CONCLUSIONS PCT concentration, with a threshold of 1 μg/l is more sensitive and specific and has greater positive and negative predictive values than CRP, IL-6, or white blood cell count for differentiating bacterial and viral causes of community pneumonia in untreated children admitted to hospital as emergency cases.


Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 2000

Procalcitonin as a marker of bacterial infection.

Dominique Gendrel; Claude Bohuon

CHIEF EDITORS’ NOTE: Each year we publish four review articles for which a total of 4 AMA Category 2 hours can be credited as part of a physician’s unsupervised learning activities. At the end of the article are questions (with the answers provided) for your consideration. All record keeping for these credit hours is the responsibility of the physician. Do not send the answers to the journal office. Support for the CME Review Articles is provided by an educational grant from Roche Laboratories, Nutley, NJ.


Burns | 1997

Evolution and significance of circulating procalcitonin levels compared with IL-6, TNFα and endotoxin levels early after thermal injury

H. Carsin; Marcel Assicol; Frederic Feger; Olivier Roy; Isabelle Pennacino; HervéLe Bever; P. Ainaud; Claude Bohuon

To determine the evolution and significance of circulating procalcitonin (ProCT), IL-6 TNF alpha and endotoxin levels early after thermal injury, we performed a prospective, single unit, longitudinal study. Forty burn patients with total body surface area (TBSA) > 30 per cent were studied, of whom 33 suffered an inhalation injury. Blood samples were taken on the day of admission, every 4 h during the first day and daily during the first week. All patients had increased ProCT and IL-6 levels without any proven infection. Endotoxin and TNF alpha levels remained very low or undetectable. ProCT and IL-levels correlated well with the severity of skin burn injury (respectively, p < 0.006 and p < 0.028, using the non-parametric Kruskal-Wallis test). ProCT levels are not associated with smoke inhalation. ProCT and IL6 are prognostic factors of mortality at the time of admission but less reliable than the clinical UBS (unit burn standard) score. Endotoxin and TNF alpha were undetectable, suggesting that the problem of the early gut bacterial translocation remains to be proven.


Cancer | 1987

Elevation of CA 125 in patients with benign and malignant ascites

Jean-François Bergmann; Jean-Michel Bidart; Martine George; Michel Beaugrand; Victor Georges Levy; Claude Bohuon

The presence of CA 125, an ovarian cancer‐associated antigen, was assessed in serum and ascites from patients with ovarian cancer (n = 47), hepatocellular carcinoma (n = 21), and liver cirrhosis (n = 40). Abnormal levels of serum CA 125 were observed in 49% of ovarian cancer patients, and in 89% of these same patients with ascites. In all cases of cirrhosis or hepatocellular carcinoma with ascites, CA 125 levels were above 35 U/ml. The specificity and sensitivity of CA 125 measurement for detecting ascites in chronic liver diseases were 73% and 100%, respectively. Furthermore, the CA 125 level was always higher in ascites than in serum. The authors conclude that CA 125 is a nonspecific marker of ascites. This result must be considered in the interpretation of CA 125 elevation in patients with ovarian cancer. Moreover, CA 125 may be of value in the diagnosis and monitoring of peritoneal diseases. Cancer 59:213–217, 1987.


Biochimie | 1971

Presence of two distinct catechol -O- methyltransferase activities in red blood cells

M. Assicot; Claude Bohuon

Summary Two types of catechol-O-methyltransferases were found to occur in the soluble and ghost fractions of rat erythrocytes. Preparations of catechol-O-methyltransferase from the two fractions differed in their pH optimum, heat stability, kinetic property and immunochemical reactivity.


Clinica Chimica Acta | 1988

Construction and clinical validation of a sensitive and specific assay for serum mature calcitonin using monoclonal anti-peptide antibodies.

Philippe Motté; Pascal Vauzelle; Paule Gardet; Pascale Ghillani; Bernard Caillou; C. Parmentier; Claude Bohuon; Dominique Bellet

Using calcitonin (CT) as an hapten, we have generated a library of monoclonal antibodies. Six monoclonal antibodies were developed and analyzed with respect to affinity and specificity for epitopes on CT by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay and radioimmunoassay. These antibodies were used in the construction and the optimization of a two-site monoclonal immunoradiometric assay (m-IRMA) for CT. We used a combination of two monoclonal antibodies to develop an assay which is rapid (overnight incubation), sensitive (10 pg/ml) and strictly specific for the mature form of calcitonin, ie the 32 amino acid-long polypeptide bearing a prolineamide as the C-terminal residue. This assay was utilized to demonstrate that mature calcitonin circulates as heterogeneous molecular species resulting from polymerization of calcitonin by disulphide linkage and/or by aggregation on irrelevant proteins. The clinical relevance of this assay was studied on a series of patients with medullary carcinoma of the thyroid (MCT) and the characteristics of the assay was compared with those of a conventional polyclonal radioimmunoassay. The m-IRMA for CT proved to be useful for both the diagnosis and the follow-up of MCT.

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Marcel Assicot

State University of New York System

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Dominique Gendrel

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Marc Pallardy

Université Paris-Saclay

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M. Assicot

Institut Gustave Roussy

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