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Dive into the research topics where Corinne Antoine is active.

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Featured researches published by Corinne Antoine.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2010

Preexisting Donor-Specific HLA Antibodies Predict Outcome in Kidney Transplantation

Carmen Lefaucheur; Alexandre Loupy; Gary S. Hill; Joao Andrade; Dominique Nochy; Corinne Antoine; Chantal Gautreau; Dominique Charron; Caroline Suberbielle-Boissel

The clinical importance of preexisting HLA antibodies at the time of transplantation, identified by contemporary techniques, is not well understood. We conducted an observational study analyzing the association between preexisting donor-specific HLA antibodies (HLA-DSA) and incidence of acute antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) and survival of patients and grafts among 402 consecutive deceased-donor kidney transplant recipients. We detected HLA-DSA using Luminex single-antigen assays on the peak reactive and current sera. All patients had a negative lymphocytotoxic cross-match test on the day of transplantation. We found that 8-year graft survival was significantly worse (61%) among patients with preexisting HLA-DSA compared with both sensitized patients without HLA-DSA (93%) and nonsensitized patients (84%). Peak HLA-DSA Luminex mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) predicted AMR better than current HLA-DSA MFI (P = 0.028). As MFI of the highest ranked HLA-DSA detected on peak serum increased, graft survival decreased and the relative risk for AMR increased: Patients with MFI >6000 had >100-fold higher risk for AMR than patients with MFI <465 (relative risk 113; 95% confidence interval 31 to 414). The presence of HLA-DSA did not associate with patient survival. In conclusion, the risk for both AMR and graft loss directly correlates with peak HLA-DSA strength. Quantification of HLA antibodies allows stratification of immunologic risk, which should help guide selection of acceptable grafts for sensitized patients.


American Journal of Transplantation | 2002

Desensitization and Subsequent Kidney Transplantation of Patients Using Intravenous Immunoglobulins (IVIg)

Corinne Antoine; Pierre Julia; Caroline Suberbielle-Boissel; Samir Boudjeltia; Rabah Fraoui; Chafic Hacen; Alain Duboust; Jean Bariety

Transplantation of patients possessing antibodies against allo‐HLA antigens can be delayed for years. We have shown that administration of intravenous immunoglobulins (IVIg) can induce a profound and sustained decrease in the titers of anti‐HLA antibodies. We report here the first series of patients desensitized, then transplanted using IVIg therapy. Fifteen patients have been included and treated with IVIg, given as 3 monthly courses of 2 g/kg body weight. Thirteen of those 15 patients (87%) were effectively desensitized and underwent immediate transplantation. Eleven were transplanted with a cadaveric donor, and two with a living donor against which the pretreatment cross‐match was positive. One graft was lost from thrombosis and one from rejection. All other patients had uneventful courses, without any episodes of rejection, with a follow‐up of more than 1 year. Thus, IVIg therapy allows safe and prompt kidney transplantation of immunized patients.


American Journal of Transplantation | 2009

Clinical relevance of preformed HLA donor-specific antibodies in kidney transplantation.

Carmen Lefaucheur; C. Suberbielle-Boissel; Gary S. Hill; Dominique Nochy; J. Andrade; Corinne Antoine; C. Gautreau; Dominique Charron

Since the pioneering work of Patel and Terazaki, the presence of an anti-donor anti-body of the IgG isotype, as demonstrated by a lymphocytotoxic assay on T cells, has been a contraindication to transplantation, due to the very high rate of graft loss reported (>80% in the first few weeks posttransplant). The advent of more sensible and specific techniques of detection of anti-HLA antibodies (such as ELISA or Luminex techniques) has questioned this dogma, with a number of reports showing that transplantation, despite the presence of an donor-specific antibody (DSA), could be done without excessive graft losses, despite higher rates of rejection. We thus decided to retrospectively screen a cohort of 237 patients consecutively transplanted in our unit. This study analyzes the influence of preformed DSA, identified by HLA-specific ELISA assays, on graft survival and evaluates the incidence of antibody-mediated rejection (AMR). Kidney graft survival at 8 years was significantly worse in patients with DSA. The incidence of AMR in patients with DSA was 9-fold higher than in patients without DSA and led to a significantly worse graft survival. The prevalence for AMR in patients with DSA detected on historic serum was 32.3% and was significantly more elevated in patients with strongly positive DSA (score 6-8) and in patients with his-toric positive crossmatches. Interestingly, those patients with DSA that did not experience AMR had the same graft survival as patients without DSA. Thus, the presence of preformed DSA is strongly associated with increased graft loss in kidney transplants, related to an increased risk of AMR. Our findings demonstrate the importance of detection and charac-terization of DSA before transplantation. Stratification of this immunological risk should be used both to determine kidney allocation and to devise specific strategies for these patients.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2007

Cryptococcus neoformans in Organ Transplant Recipients: Impact of Calcineurin-Inhibitor Agents on Mortality

Nina Singh; Barbara D. Alexander; Olivier Lortholary; Françoise Dromer; Krishan L. Gupta; George T. John; Ramon Del Busto; Goran B. Klintmalm; Jyoti Somani; G. Marshall Lyon; Kenneth Pursell; Valentina Stosor; Patricia Muňoz; Ajit P. Limaye; Andre C. Kalil; Timothy L. Pruett; Julia Garcia-Diaz; Atul Humar; Sally Houston; Andrew A. House; Dannah Wray; Susan L. Orloff; Lorraine A. Dowdy; Robert A. Fisher; Joseph Heitman; Marilyn M. Wagener; Shahid Husain; Corinne Antoine; Barrou Benoît; Anne Elisabeth Heng

Variables influencing the risk of dissemination and outcome of Cryptococcus neoformans infection were assessed in 111 organ transplant recipients with cryptococcosis in a prospective, multicenter, international study. Sixty-one percent (68/111) of the patients had disseminated infection. The risk of disseminated cryptococcosis was significantly higher for liver transplant recipients (adjusted hazard ratio [HR], 6.65; P=.048). The overall mortality rate at 90 days was 14% (16/111). The mortality rate was higher in patients with abnormal mental status (P=.023), renal failure at baseline (P=.028), fungemia (P=.006), and disseminated infection (P=.035) and was lower in those receiving a calcineurin-inhibitor agent (P=.003). In a multivariable analysis, the receipt of a calcineurin-inhibitor agent was independently associated with a lower mortality (adjusted HR, 0.21; P=.008), and renal failure at baseline with a higher mortality rate (adjusted HR, 3.14; P=.037). Thus, outcome in transplant recipients with cryptococcosis appears to be influenced by the type of immunosuppressive agent employed. Additionally, discerning the basis for transplant type-specific differences in disease severity has implications relevant for yielding further insights into the pathogenesis of C. neoformans infection in transplant recipients.


American Journal of Transplantation | 2008

Clinical Relevance of Preformed HLA Donor-Specific Antibodies in Kidney Transplantation: Preformed HLA Donor-Specific Antibodies

Carmen Lefaucheur; C. Suberbielle-Boissel; Gary S. Hill; Dominique Nochy; J. Andrade; Corinne Antoine; C. Gautreau; Dominique Charron

This study analyzes the influence of preformed DSA, identified by HLA‐specific ELISA assays, on graft survival and evaluates the incidence of antibody‐mediated rejection (AMR) in patients with and without pregraft desensitization.


Transplantation | 2001

Induction versus noninduction in renal transplant recipients with tacrolimus-based immunosuppression

Georges Mourad; Valérie Garrigue; Jean-Paul Squifflet; T. Besse; François Berthoux; Eric Alamartine; Dominique Durand; Lionel Rostaing; Philippe Lang; Christophe Baron; Corinne Antoine; Paul Vialtel; Thierry Romanet; Yvon Lebranchu; Azmi Al Najjar; Christian Hiesse; L. Potaux; Pierre Merville; Jean-Louis Touraine; Nicole Lefrançois; Michèle Kessler; Edith Renoult; Claire Pouteil-Noble; Rémi Cahen; Christophe Legendre; Jeanine Bedrossian; Patrick Le Pogamp; Joseph Rivalan; Michel Olmer; Raj Purgus

Background. The aim of this study was to compare the efficacy and safety of induction treatment with antithymocyte globulins (ATG) followed by tacrolimus therapy with immediate tacrolimus therapy in renal transplant recipients. Methods. This 12-month, open, prospective study was conducted in 15 centers in France and 1 center in Belgium; 309 patients were randomized to receive either induction therapy with ATG (n=151) followed by initiation of tacrolimus on day 9 or immediate tacrolimus-based triple therapy (n=158). In both study arms, the initial daily tacrolimus dose was 0.2 mg/kg. Steroid boluses were given in the first 2 days and tapered thereafter from 20 mg/day to 5 mg/day. Azathioprine was administered at 1–2 mg/kg per day. Results. At month 12, biopsy-confirmed acute rejections were reported for 15.2% (induction) and 30.4% (noninduction) of patients (P =0.001). The incidence of steroid-sensitive acute rejections was 7.9% (induction) and 22.2% (noninduction)(P =0.001). Steroid-resistant acute rejections were reported for 8.6% (induction) and 8.9% (noninduction) of patients. A total of nine patients died. Patient survival and graft survival at month 12 was similar in both treatment groups (97.4% vs. 96.8% and 92.1% vs. 91.1%, respectively). Statistically significant differences in the incidence of adverse events were found for cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection (induction, 32.5% vs. noninduction, 19.0%, P =0.009), leukopenia (37.3% vs. 9.5%, P <0.001), fever (25.2% vs. 10.1%, P =0.001), herpes simplex (17.9% vs. 5.7%, P =0.001), and thrombocytopenia (11.3% vs. 3.2%, P =0.007). In the induction group, serum sickness was observed in 10.6% of patients. The incidence of new onset diabetes mellitus was 3.4% (induction) and 4.5% (noninduction). Conclusion. Low incidences of acute rejection were found in both treatment arms. Induction treatment with ATG has the advantage of a lower incidence of acute rejection, but it significantly increases adverse events, particularly CMV infection.


American Journal of Transplantation | 2007

Determinants of poor graft outcome in patients with antibody-mediated acute rejection.

Carmen Lefaucheur; Dominique Nochy; Gary S. Hill; C. Suberbielle-Boissel; Corinne Antoine; Dominique Charron

This study analyzes the incidence and course of antibody‐mediated rejection (AMR) in a cohort of 237 renal transplant patients followed for 30 ± 20 months. Among these, 32 patients were considered to be at risk for AMR and received intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg), either as preconditioning (Group A, n = 18) or at the time of transplant (Group B, n = 14). The prevalence of AMR was 27.8% in Group A, 57.1% in Group B and 3.9% in the remainder of the population. Although graft loss remains greater among AMR than for acute cellular rejection (ACR) or the overall transplant population, we have identified a good outcome group (GFR > 15 mL/min/1.73 m2) (n = 13), whose renal function at the end of follow‐up was comparable to that of the general transplant population. The factors associated with bad outcome are: (1) immunologic: presence and/or persistence of donor‐specific anti‐HLA antibodies post‐transplantation and (2) histologic: neutrophilic glomerulitis, peritubular capillary dilatation with neutrophil infiltrates and interstitial edema at the time of first biopsy; and at the time of late biopsy (3–6 months): lesions of vascular rejection, and monocyte/macrophage infiltrates in glomeruli and dilated peritubular capillaries. Persistence of C4d does not predict outcome. This study outlines for the first time the immunologic and histologic profiles of AMR patients with poor prognosis.


American Journal of Transplantation | 2005

Renal Histopathological Lesions After Orthotopic Liver Transplantation (OLT)

Evangéline Pillebout; Dominique Nochy; Gary S. Hill; Filomena Conti; Corinne Antoine; Yvon Calmus

Liver transplant recipients are at risk of chronic renal failure (CRF), customarily considered to be secondary to CsA/FK506 nephrotoxicity. We have examined renal biopsies from 26 liver transplant recipients with CRF. Before OLT, 5 patients had CRF, 8 were diabetic and 9 hypertensive. Renal biopsies were performed at a mean of 5 years after liver transplantation. Mean SCr was then 212 μmol/L, proteinuria was 1 g/24 h. Twelve patients were diabetic and 25 hypertensive. Histology revealed impressive renal destruction, with a mean of 45% interstitial fibrosis and 45% glomerular sclerosis. All biopsies showed severe arteriosclerosis. CRF can be attributed to four associated primary lesions: (i) specific chronic CsA/FK506 arteriolopathy; (ii) typical diabetic nephropathy; (iii) acute or chronic thrombotic microangiopathy attributed to CsA/FK506 or α‐IFN and (iv) tubular changes related to administration of hydroxyethylstarch. At the end of the follow‐up, after a mean of 6.4 years, 12 patients required dialysis, 13 had CRF and only 1 had normal renal function. Thus, CRF in OLT recipients is more complex than originally thought and should not be classified as anti‐calcineurin nephrotoxicity without further investigations, including renal histology. These investigations have therapeutic potential, that is, they may lead to a more aggressive treatment of hypertension and/or diabetes.


Transplantation | 1999

Human herpes virus-8 and other risk factors for Kaposi's sarcoma in kidney transplant recipients

Dominique Farge; Celeste Lebbe; Z. Marjanovic; P. Tuppin; C. Mouquet; Marie-Noelle Peraldi; Philippe Lang; Christian Hiesse; Corinne Antoine; Christophe Legendre; J. Bedrossian; M. F. Gagnadoux; C. Loirat; C. Pellet; J. Sheldon; J.-L. Golmard; Félix Agbalika; T. F. Schulz

Background. The exact reasons for the high incidence of Kaposis sarcoma (KS) after kidney transplantation are still unknown. Immunosuppression is classically considered as the main risk factor, but the relative risk contributed by the patients geographic origin and by human herpes virus (HHV)-8 infection still has to be determined. Methods. We carried out a retrospective and a prospective study among kidney transplant recipients (TP) to identify the risk factors for posttransplantation KS. Each of 30 KS patients was matched with two controls to investigate the association with geographic origin, immunosuppressive regimen, HHV-8 antibodies before and after transplantation, and other infections. Among TP with new onset of KS, we prospectively evaluated HHV-8 serology and viremia in response to decreased immunosuppression. Results. African and Middle East origins, past infection with hepatitis B, hemoglobin level <12 g/dl, lymphocyte count <750/mm 3 at the time of diagnosis and initial use of polyclonal antilymphocyte sera were risk factors for KS. After multivariate analysis, origin in Africa or Middle East and use of antilymphocyte sera for induction remained as independent risk factors. Sixty-eight percent (17/25) of TP with HHV-8 antibodies before or after transplantation developed KS compared with 3% (1/33) of seronegative TP (P<0.00001). HHV-8 DNA was detectable in seven of nine peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and in six of six KS lesions at diagnosis; it became negative in PBMC in three of five patients in parallel with tumor regression. Conclusion. African and Middle East geographic origins, HHV-8 infection before and after kidney transplantation, and initial use of polyclonal antilymphocyte sera were independent risk factors for KS. The presence of HHV-8 antibodies before or after transplantation was highly predictive of the emergence of posttransplantation KS and conferred a 28-fold increased risk of KS (odds ratio=28.4; 95% confidence interval: 4.9-279). Detection of HHV-8 DNA within PBMC and KS lesions seems related to tumor burden and evolution.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2002

Prognostic Value of Quantitative Kaposi Sarcoma–Associated Herpesvirus Load in Posttransplantation Kaposi Sarcoma

Claire Pellet; Sylvie Chevret; Camille Frances; Sylvie Euvrard; Mylène Hurault; Christophe Legendre; Sophie Dalac; Dominique Farge; Corinne Antoine; Christian Hiesse; Marie-Noelle Peraldi; Philippe Lang; Didier Samuel; Yvon Calmus; Félix Agbalika; P. Morel; Fabien Calvo; Celeste Lebbe

Organ transplant recipients have a higher risk of Kaposi sarcoma (KS). A quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction assay was developed to evaluate KS-associated herpesvirus (KSHV) as a prognostic tool in transplant recipients with KS. Forty-three patients who developed KS after transplantation were included in a cross-sectional study to correlate virus load with transplantation or KS parameters. Seventeen patients (40%) had KSHV viremia (>100 copies/microg of DNA; median, 6067 copies/microg of DNA). Factors associated with these levels of viremia by univariate analysis were progression of KS (P=.00002), time from KS diagnosis (P=.0007), actual stage of KS (P=.006), initial stage of KS (P=.22), graft loss (P=.013), and time from transplantation (P=.0246). Disease progression remained associated with KSHV viremia in a multivariate analysis (P=.01). Thus, quantification of KSHV load in peripheral blood mononuclear cells could represent a useful tool for monitoring transplant recipients with KS.

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Christophe Legendre

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Gary S. Hill

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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François Gaudez

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Henri Kreis

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Yvon Calmus

Paris Descartes University

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