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Dive into the research topics where Danielle Degenne is active.

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Featured researches published by Danielle Degenne.


Gastroenterology | 2009

Influence of Trough Serum Levels and Immunogenicity on Long-term Outcome of Adalimumab Therapy in Crohn's Disease

Konstantinos Karmiris; Gilles Paintaud; Maja Noman; Charlotte Magdelaine–Beuzelin; Marc Ferrante; Danielle Degenne; Karolien Claes; Tamara Coopman; Nele Van Schuerbeek; Gert Van Assche; Severine Vermeire; Paul Rutgeerts

BACKGROUND & AIMS Adalimumab is an efficacious therapy for active Crohns disease, but long-term data are scarce. We conducted an observational study to assess the long-term clinical benefit of adalimumab in patients who failed to respond to infliximab, specifically focusing on the influence of trough serum concentration and antibodies against adalimumab on clinical outcome. METHODS A total of 168 patients with Crohns disease treated with adalimumab in a tertiary center were included in a prospective follow-up program. Trough serum concentration and antibodies against adalimumab were measured at predefined time points using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays. RESULTS A total of 71% and 67% of patients responded by weeks 4 and 12, respectively; among them, 61.5% demonstrated sustained clinical benefit until the end of follow-up (median [interquartile range], 20.4 [11.7-30.0] months). Of the 156 patients receiving maintenance therapy, 102 (65.4%) had to step up to 40 mg weekly and 60 (38.5%) eventually stopped adalimumab therapy mainly due to loss of response. Significantly lower adalimumab trough serum concentrations were measured throughout the follow-up period in patients who discontinued therapy as compared with patients who stayed on adalimumab. Antibodies against adalimumab were present in 9.2% of the patients and affected trough serum concentration. Serious adverse events occurred in 12% of the patients. CONCLUSIONS Introduction of adalimumab after failure of infliximab therapy resulted in a sustained clinical benefit in two thirds of patients during a median follow-up period of almost 2 years. Discontinuation was directly related to low adalimumab trough serum concentration, which was observed more frequently in patients who developed antibodies against adalimumab.


Therapeutic Drug Monitoring | 2008

Infliximab Pharmacokinetics in Inflammatory Bowel Disease Patients

David Ternant; Alexandre Aubourg; Charlotte Magdelaine-Beuzelin; Danielle Degenne; Hervé Watier; Laurence Picon; Gilles Paintaud

Infliximab, a chimeric monoclonal antibody, has profoundly modified the treatment of several inflammatory diseases, but no satisfactory description of its pharmacokinetics is available. The objective of this study is to describe the pharmacokinetics of infliximab and to explore the sources of its interindividual variability. Thirty-three chronic inflammatory bowel disease patients were studied. Infliximab serum concentrations, obtained during therapeutic drug monitoring, were analyzed using a population approach. Influence of sex, weight, age, concomitant immunosuppressive treatment, and development of antibodies toward infliximab (ATI) on pharmacokinetic parameters was investigated. A two-compartment model with first-order distribution and elimination constants allowed a satisfactory description of infliximab serum concentrations. Mean population distribution and elimination half-lives were 4.3 and 18.5 days, respectively. Weight and sex were found to significantly influence volume of distribution of the central compartment, which increased with weight and was higher in men. Clearance was 2.7 times higher, and elimination half-life was 34% lower in the presence of ATI. In two patients, an increase in infliximab dose or a decrease in dosing interval lead to a decrease in infliximab clearance toward its value in patients without ATI. Infliximab pharmacokinetics are similar to those of other monoclonal antibodies, notably with an elimination half-life of approximately 3 weeks. Both body weight and sex were found to influence infliximab pharmacokinetics, and its clearance increased thrice in the presence of ATI.


Therapeutic Drug Monitoring | 2009

An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for therapeutic drug monitoring of cetuximab.

Nicolas Cézé; David Ternant; Friedrich Piller; Danielle Degenne; Nicolas Azzopardi; Etienne Dorval; Hervé Watier; Thierry Lecomte; Gilles Paintaud

An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) measuring serum infliximab concentrations in treated patients was developed. Microtiter plates were sensitized with tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α) and saturated with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) containing 1% bovine serum albumin (BSA). Samples diluted 1:100 in PBS-1% BSA were added and bound infliximab was detected using peroxidase-conjugated goat anti-human immunoglobulin G specific for Fc fragment (HRP-anti hIgG). Reading was performed using an ELISA plate reader. The limit of detection, calculated by assaying 10 replicates of a drug-free serum sample or blank sample and defined as the lowest concentration distinguishable from zero at 2 standard deviations, was 0.014 μg/mL. Each quality control sample was tested on 7 occasions on 1 day and on 5 separate days. The intraday precision indices of the method were (percent coefficients of variation, CV%) 11.7%, 6.2%, and 6.9% for 0.04 μg/mL, 2 μg/mL, and 4.5 μg/mL, respectively. The corresponding bias measures (percent deviation) were −5.5%, −1.9%, and −7.9%, respectively. The between-days precision was 9.8%, 5.3%, and 5.3% for 0.04 μg/mL, 2 μg/mL, and 4.5 μg/mL, respectively. The corresponding bias were +0.3%, −0.3%, and −7.8%, respectively. Lower limit of quantitation and upper limit of quantitation were 0.04 μg/mL and 4.5 μg/mL, respectively. Trough serum concentrations of infliximab were measured in 6 adult patients with various diseases and in 5 pediatric patients with Crohns disease. For the latter group, samples drawn 1 hour after the end of the infusion and repeated measurements also were available. Data were described using a 1-compartment population pharmacokinetic model. Terminal elimination half-life was 10.9 days. This method is rapid, accurate, and reproducible, and may be useful in therapeutic drug monitoring of infliximab.


Pharmacogenetics and Genomics | 2009

IgG1 heavy chain-coding gene polymorphism (G1m allotypes) and development of antibodies-to-infliximab

Charlotte Magdelaine-Beuzelin; Severine Vermeire; Margaret Goodall; Filip Baert; Maja Noman; Gert Van Assche; Marc Ohresser; Danielle Degenne; Jean-Michel Dugoujon; Roy Jefferis; Paul Rutgeerts; Maire-Paule Lefranc; Hervé Watier

Objective The chimeric anti-tumor necrosis factor-&agr; antibody infliximab is known to induce antibodies-to-infliximab (ATI) in some treated patients. Immunogenicity in murine variable domains is expected; however, constant domains of its human heavy &ggr;1 chain may also be implicated as it expresses G1m1 and G1m17 allotypes. This allelic form may be immunogenic in patients that are homozygous for the G1m3 allotype commonly expressed in Caucasoid populations. Methods As G1m allotypic divergence may explain the presence of ATI or may influence their concentration, a genotyping method was developed and validated to determine antithetical (i.e. mutually exclusive) G1m3 and G1m17 allotypes (amino acid 120 of CH1 according to the international ImMunoGeneTics information system unique numbering) at the IGHG1 gene level (CH1 359g/a nucleotide polymorphism). Two hundred forty-five blood donors and 118 previously described patients suffering from Crohns disease, treated with infliximab, and having developed ATI in 73 of them, were genotyped. Results The IGHG1 CH1 359g/a polymorphism does not depart from the Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium in the control population, and allele frequencies were similar in controls and patients. No association was found between the patient G1m allotypes and the presence of ATI or their concentration. It remains possible that anti-Gm1 antibodies are not well detected by the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays used for ATI detection and/or that the G1m allotypes are minor antigens on IgG1. Conclusion The IGHG1 polymorphism does not seem to play a major role in the induction of ATI. Further analyses will be required to determine whether it is also the case for humanized or fully human antibodies bearing the same G1m allotypes.


mAbs | 2015

Therapeutic drug monitoring of eculizumab: Rationale for an individualized dosing schedule.

Philippe Gatault; Guillaume Brachet; David Ternant; Danielle Degenne; Guillaume Récipon; Christelle Barbet; Emmanuel Gyan; Valérie Gouilleux-Gruart; Cécile Bordes; Alexandra Farrell; Jean Michel Halimi; Hervé Watier

The annual cost of eculizumab maintenance therapy in paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) and atypical hemolytic–uremic syndrome (aHUS) exceeds


Therapeutic Drug Monitoring | 2010

An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay to study bevacizumab pharmacokinetics.

David Ternant; Nicolas Cézé; Thierry Lecomte; Danielle Degenne; Anne-Claire Duveau; Hervé Watier; Etienne Dorval; Gilles Paintaud

300,000 per patient. A better understanding of eculizumab pharmacokinetics and subsequent individual dose adjustment could reduce this cost. We measured the trough eculizumab concentration in 9 patients with maintenance therapy (aHUS, n = 7; PNH, n = 2) and determined: 1) the intra- and inter-individual variability; 2) the influence of weight on eculizumab pharmacokinetics; and 3) the rate of elimination of eculizumab following discontinuation. A one-compartment model was developed to describe the pharmacokinetics of eculizumab and predicted complement activity by body weight. Trough eculizumab concentrations were >50 µg/mL in 9/9, >100 µg/mL in 8/9, and >300 µg/mL in 5/9 of patients. Intra-individual variability was low but eculizumab concentrations, closely correlated with patient weight (R2 = 0.66, p = 0.034), varied broadly (55 ± 12 to 733 ± 164 µg/mL). Pharmacokinetic modeling showed that the elimination half-life varied greatly, with an increase from 7.8 d in a patient weighing 100 kg to 19.5 d in a 40 kg patient. We predicted that infusions of 1200 mg could be spaced every 4 or 6 weeks in patients weighing <90 and <70 kg, respectively. In this pilot study, the current recommended use of a fixed eculizumab dose for maintenance therapy is associated with excessively high trough concentrations in many patients. Further prospective larger studies are now required to support an individualized schedule adjusted for patient weight and based on the observed trough serum eculizumab concentration.


Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2007

Pharmacokinetics of bevacizumab in haemodialysis

Nathalie Garnier-Viougeat; Olivier Rixe; Gilles Paintaud; David Ternant; Danielle Degenne; Roger Mouawad; Gilbert Deray; Hassane Izzedine

Introduction: Bevacizumab is an antivascular endothelial growth factor humanized monoclonal antibody used to inhibit angiogenesis in cancer. It displays an important interindividual pharmacokinetic variability, which could explain part of the interindividual differences in clinical response. Therefore, an assay to measure bevacizumab serum concentrations is needed. Methods: An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay was developed using microtiter plates sensitised with vascular endothelial growth factor165, a recombinant form of vascular endothelial growth factor. Lower and upper limits of quantitation as well as limit of detection were determined. Eight calibrators and three quality controls, with concentrations of 5 mg/L, 30 mg/L, and 75 mg/L, were tested on five occasions initially and on five subsequent occasions. Trough and peak serum concentrations of bevacizumab were measured in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer. Bevacizumab concentrations were described using a two-compartment population pharmacokinetic model with first-order constants. Results: Imprecision and accuracy of calibrators and quality controls were 20% or less, except for the zero calibrator. The limit of detection was 0.033 mg/L. Lower and upper limits of quantitation were 5 and 75 mg/L, respectively. A total of 175 blood samples was available for analysis from 16 patients. Median (range) trough and peak concentrations during the treatment were 47.2 (9.6-106.9) mg/L and 159.3 (33.0-327.3) mg/L, respectively. Conclusion: This method is rapid, accurate, reproducible, and may be useful for pharmacokinetic and pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic studies as well as in therapeutic drug monitoring of bevacizumab.


Gastroenterology | 2008

W1132 A 3-Week Course of 80 Mg Weekly Administered Adalimumab As a Rescue Therapy for Patients with Crohn's Disease Who Lost Response to 40 Mg Weekly: Relationship with Adalimumab Trough Serum Levels

Konstantinos Karmiris; Maja Noman; Gilles Paintaud; Marc Ferrante; Anne-Claire Duveau; Danielle Degenne; Gert Van Assche; Severine Vermeire; Paul Rutgeerts


Fundamental & Clinical Pharmacology | 2008

Development of anti-infliximab antibodies increases infliximab clearance in chronic inflammatory bowel disease

David Ternant; Alexandre Aubourg; Charlotte Magdelaine-Beuzelin; Danielle Degenne; Hervé Watier; Laurence Picon; Gilles Paintaud


/data/revues/00916749/v107i4/S0091674901701753/ | 2012

Hereditary angioedema type III: An additional French pedigree with autosomal dominant transmission

Ludovic Martin; Danielle Degenne; Annick Toutain; Denise Ponard; Hervé Watier

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Gilles Paintaud

François Rabelais University

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Hervé Watier

François Rabelais University

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David Ternant

François Rabelais University

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Etienne Dorval

François Rabelais University

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Nicolas Cézé

François Rabelais University

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Thierry Lecomte

François Rabelais University

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Gert Van Assche

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Maja Noman

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Paul Rutgeerts

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Severine Vermeire

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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