David Brassat
University of Toulouse
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Publication
Featured researches published by David Brassat.
Nature Medicine | 2000
Ludwig Kappos; Giancarlo Comi; Hillel Panitch; Joel Oger; Jack P. Antel; Paul J. Conlon; Lawrence Steinman; Alexander Rae-Grant; John E. Castaldo; Nancy Eckert; Joseph B. Guarnaccia; Pamela Mills; Gary Johnson; Peter A. Calabresi; C. Pozzilli; S. Bastianello; Elisabetta Giugni; Tatiana Witjas; Patrick Cozzone; Jean Pelletier; Dieter Pöhlau; H. Przuntek; Volker Hoffmann; Christopher T. Bever; Eleanor Katz; M. Clanet; Isabelle Berry; David Brassat; Irene Brunet; Gilles Edan
In this ‘double-blind’, randomized, placebo-controlled phase II trial, we compared an altered peptide ligand of myelin basic protein with placebo, evaluating their safety and influence on magnetic resonance imaging in relapsing–remitting multiple sclerosis. A safety board suspended the trial because of hypersensitivity reactions in 9% of the patients. There were no increases in either clinical relapses or in new enhancing lesions in any patient, even those with hypersensitivity reactions. Secondary analysis of those patients completing the study showed that the volume and number of enhancing lesions were reduced at a dose of 5 mg. There was also a regulatory type 2 T helper-cell response to altered peptide ligand that cross-reacted with the native peptide.
JAMA Neurology | 2008
Esther Byun; Stacy J. Caillier; Xavier Montalban; Pablo Villoslada; Oscar Fernández; David Brassat; Manuel Comabella; Joanne Wang; Lisa F. Barcellos; Sergio E. Baranzini; Jorge R. Oksenberg
OBJECTIVE To identify promising candidate genes linked to interindividual differences in the efficacy of interferon beta therapy. Recombinant interferon beta therapy is widely used to reduce disease activity in multiple sclerosis (MS). However, up to 50% of patients continue to have relapses and worsening disability despite therapy. DESIGN We used a genome-wide pharmacogenomic approach to identify single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) allelic differences associated with interferon beta therapy response. SETTING Four collaborating centers in the Mediterranean Basin. Data Coordination Center at the University of California, San Francisco. PATIENTS A cohort of 206 patients with relapsing-remitting MS followed up prospectively for 2 years after initiation of treatment. INTERVENTION DNA was pooled and hybridized to Affymetrix 100K GeneChips. Pooling schemes were designed to minimize confounding batch effects and increase confidence by technical replication. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Single-nucleotide polymorphism detection. Comparison of allelic frequencies between good responders and nonresponders to interferon beta therapy. RESULTS A multianalytical approach detected significant associations between several SNPs and treatment response, which were validated by individual DNA genotyping on an independent platform. After the validation stage was complete, 81 additional individuals were added to the analysis to increase power. We found that responders and nonresponders had significantly different genotype frequencies for SNPs located in many genes, including glypican 5, collagen type XXV alpha1, hyaluronan proteoglycan link protein, calpastatin, and neuronal PAS domain protein 3. CONCLUSIONS The reported results address the question of genetic heterogeneity in MS and the response to immunotherapy by analysis of the correlation between different genotypes and clinical response to interferon beta therapy. Many of the detected differences between responders and nonresponders were genes associated with ion channels and signal transduction pathways. The study also suggests that genetic variants in heparan sulfate proteoglycan genes may be of clinical interest in MS as predictors of the response to therapy. In addition to new insights into the mechanistic biology of interferon beta, these results help define the molecular basis of interferon beta therapy response heterogeneity.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2000
Alexandra Herman-Bert; Giovanni Stevanin; Jean-Claude Netter; Olivier Rascol; David Brassat; Patrick Calvas; Agnès Camuzat; Qiu-Ping Yuan; Martin Schalling; Alexandra Durr; Alexis Brice
We examined a large French family with autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxia (ADCA) that was excluded from all previously identified spinocerebellar ataxia genes and loci. The patients-seven women and a 4-year-old boy-exhibited slowly progressive childhood-onset cerebellar gait ataxia associated with cerebellar dysarthria, moderate mental retardation (IQ 62-76), and mild developmental delays in motor acquisition. Nystagmus and pyramidal signs were also observed in some cases. This unique association of clinical features clearly distinguishes this new entity from other previously described ADCA. Cerebral magnetic-resonance imaging showed moderate cerebellar and pontine atrophy in two patients. We performed a genomewide search and found significant evidence for linkage to chromosome 19q13.3-q13.4, in an approximately 8-cM interval between markers D19S219 and D19S553.
Neurology | 2013
Nicholas Schwab; Tilman Schneider-Hohendorf; Vilmos Posevitz; Johanna Breuer; Kerstin Göbel; Susanne Windhagen; Bruno Brochet; Patrick Vermersch; Christine Lebrun-Frenay; Anita Posevitz-Fejfar; Ruggero Capra; Luisa Imberti; Vera Straeten; J. Haas; Brigitte Wildemann; Joachim Havla; Tania Kümpfel; Ingrid Meinl; Kyle Niessen; Susan Goelz; Christoph Kleinschnitz; Clemens Warnke; Dorothea Buck; Ralf Gold; Bernd C. Kieseier; Sven G. Meuth; John Foley; Andrew T. Chan; David Brassat; Heinz Wiendl
Objective: To find biomarkers identifying patients at risk for the development of progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) during natalizumab treatment. Methods: Patients were recruited from 10 European and US cohorts. Of 289 patients with multiple sclerosis (MS), 224 had been treated with natalizumab (18–80 months), 21 received other immune-modulatory treatments, and 28 were untreated. We had access to samples from 16 natalizumab PML patients. Eight of these patients had given blood before the diagnosis of PML. We also analyzed non-natalizumab-treated patients who developed PML (n = 10) and age- and sex-matched healthy donors (n = 31). All flow cytometric assessments were done on previously cryopreserved, viable peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Results: The percentage of l-selectin-expressing CD4+ T cells was significantly lower in patients treated long-term with natalizumab (40.2%) when compared with patients not receiving natalizumab treatment (47.2%; p = 0.016) or healthy controls (61.0%; p < 0.0001). An unusually low percentage (9-fold lower; 4.6%) was highly correlated with the risk of developing PML in the patient group with available pre-PML samples when compared with non-PML natalizumab-treated patients (p ≤ 0.0001). Samples were gathered between 4 and 26 months before PML diagnosis. Conclusions: The cell-based assessment of the percentage of l-selectin-expressing CD4 T cells could provide an urgently needed biomarker for individual PML risk assessment.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Darin T. Okuda; Aksel Siva; Matilde Inglese; Ilana Katz; Melih Tutuncu; B. Mark Keegan; Stacy L. Donlon; Le H. Hua; Angela Vidal-Jordana; Xavier Montalban; Alex Rovira; Mar Tintoré; Maria Pia Amato; Bruno Brochet; Jérôme De Seze; David Brassat; Patrick Vermersch; Nicola De Stefano; Maria Pia Sormani; Daniel Pelletier; Christine Lebrun; Club Francophone de la Sclérose en Plaques
Objective To report the 5-year risk and to identify risk factors for the development of a seminal acute or progressive clinical event in a multi-national cohort of asymptomatic subjects meeting 2009 RIS Criteria. Methods Retrospectively identified RIS subjects from 22 databases within 5 countries were evaluated. Time to the first clinical event related to demyelination (acute or 12-month progression of neurological deficits) was compared across different groups by univariate and multivariate analyses utilizing a Cox regression model. Results Data were available in 451 RIS subjects (F: 354 (78.5%)). The mean age at from the time of the first brain MRI revealing anomalies suggestive of MS was 37.2 years (y) (median: 37.1 y, range: 11–74 y) with mean clinical follow-up time of 4.4 y (median: 2.8 y, range: 0.01–21.1 y). Clinical events were identified in 34% (standard error = 3%) of individuals within a 5-year period from the first brain MRI study. Of those who developed symptoms, 9.6% fulfilled criteria for primary progressive MS. In the multivariate model, age [hazard ratio (HR): 0.98 (95% CI: 0.96–0.99); p = 0.03], sex (male) [HR: 1.93 (1.24–2.99); p = 0.004], and lesions within the cervical or thoracic spinal cord [HR: 3.08 (2.06–4.62); p = <0.001] were identified as significant predictors for the development of a first clinical event. Interpretation These data provide supportive evidence that a meaningful number of RIS subjects evolve to a first clinical symptom. An age <37 y, male sex, and spinal cord involvement appear to be the most important independent predictors of symptom onset.
Neurology | 1999
David Brassat; C. Azais-Vuillemin; J. Yaouanq; Gilbert Semana; J. Reboul; I. Cournu; C. Mertens; Gilles Edan; Olivier Lyon-Caen; M. Clanet; Bertrand Fontaine
Background: Both genetic and environmental factors play a role in the pathophysiology of MS and may influence the clinical expression of the disease. Objective: To determine the contribution of familial factors to the clinical expression of MS. Methods: The French Multiple Sclerosis Genetics Group identified 87 sibling pairs. For each patient, sex, age at onset, duration of the disease, and disease course from onset were recorded. Disability was determined by the progression index (PI), defined as the ratio of the Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) score disease duration when the latter exceeded 5 years. Statistical analyses were performed either with a group of patients (clinical features, relation between human leukocyte antigen and clinical features) or with a group of sibpairs (concordance for clinical features). Results: The mean age at onset was 29.6 years, the ratio of women to men was 59:28, and the mean PI was 0.27. There was no correlation for disease course and age at onset between sibs with MS. In contrast, we observed a weak but significant correlation of the PI in MS sibpairs (r = 0.234, p = 0.03). Conclusion: This study revealed a concordance in MS sibling pairs for the disease severity, supporting the hypothesis that the degree of disability might be partly influenced by familial factors (environmental or genetic).
Multiple Sclerosis Journal | 2013
Tomas Olsson; Anat Achiron; Lars Alfredsson; Thomas Berger; David Brassat; Andrew T. Chan; Giancarlo Comi; Mefkure Eraksoy; Harald Hegen; Jan Hillert; Poul Erik Hyldgaard Jensen; Lucia Moiola; Kjell-Morten Myhr; Annette Bang Oturai; Sven Schippling; Aksel Siva; Per Soelberg Sørensen; Anne Kathrin Trampe; Thomas Weber; James Potts; Tatiana Plavina; Dominic Paes; Meena Subramanyam; Heinz Wiendl; Hussein Dib; Deniz Üren; Bernhard Hemmer; Dorothea Buck
JC virus (JCV) is an opportunistic virus known to cause progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy. Anti-JC virus (Anti-JCV) antibody prevalence in a large, geographically diverse, multi-national multiple sclerosis (MS) cohort was compared in a cross-sectional study. Overall, anti-JCV antibody prevalence was 57.6%. Anti-JCV antibody prevalence in MS patients ranged from approximately 47% to 68% across these countries: Norway, 47.4%; Denmark, 52.6%; Israel, 56.6%; France, 57.6%; Italy, 58.3%; Sweden, 59.0%; Germany, 59.1%; Austria, 66.7% and Turkey, 67.7%. Prevalence increased with age (from 49.5% in patients < 30 years of age to 66.5% in patients ≥ 60 years of age; p < 0.0001 comparing all age categories), was lower in females than in males (55.8% versus 61.9%; p < 0.0001) and was not affected by prior immunosuppressant or natalizumab use.
Multiple Sclerosis Journal | 2010
Christine Lebrun; Frédéric Blanc; David Brassat; Hélène Zéphir; Jérôme De Seze
Background: Radiologically isolated syndrome (RIS) is characterized by patients with asymptomatic T2 hypersignals detected by brain MRI fulfilling dissemination in space criteria and is suggestive of subclinical multiple sclerosis (MS). In previous studies, it was demonstrated that visual evoked potential and cerebrospinal fluid help to identify pejorative markers in converting to MS. Objective: To date the cognitive function has never been investigated in a cohort of RIS. The objective of this study was to investigate cognitive function in a cohort of 26 RIS patients. Methods: We prospectively assessed the BCcogSEP (a French adaptation of the Brief Repeatable Battery (BRB) including eight cognitive tests) of 26 patients with RIS, compared with 26 MS patients and 26 healthy subjects matched for age, sex and level of education. Results: When comparing the three groups, the cognitive performance was significantly lower in the RIS and MS groups compared with healthy subjects for the Paced Auditory Serial Addition Test (PASAT) 3 seconds (p = 0.002), phonemic fluencies (p = 0.02), the code of the WAIS (p = 0.05), the direct (p = 0.002) or indirect (p = 0.007) digit span test, the cross-taping test (p = 0.019) and Go—No-Go (p = 0.001). When we compared RIS and MS, the cognitive performance was significantly lower in MS patients for the direct span number (p = 0.003) and cross-tapping test (p = 0.05). We did not find significant differences between the three groups for the other tests. We did not find a correlation between clinical, biological and MRI results and cognitive dysfunctions. Conclusions: This study confirms the recently developed concept of RIS patients who present similar features to MS patients. Further studies are necessary to confirm these initial results and to correlate cognitive disorders with MRI surrogate markers.
Annals of Neurology | 2004
Lisa F. Barcellos; Ann B. Begovich; Rebecca Reynolds; Stacy J. Caillier; David Brassat; Silke Schmidt; S. Grams; Karen Walker; Lori Steiner; Bruce Cree; Althea Stillman; Robin Lincoln; Margaret A. Pericak-Vance; Jonathan L. Haines; Henry A. Erlich; Stephen L. Hauser; Jorge R. Oksenberg
A large body of research supports a multifactorial cause in multiple sclerosis (MS), with an underlying genetic susceptibility likely acting in concert with undefined environmental exposures. Here, we used a highly efficient multilocus genotyping assay to study single nucleotide polymorphisms representing variation in 34 genes from inflammatory pathways in a well‐characterized MS familial data set. Evidence of transmission distortion was present for several polymorphisms. Results for the NOS2A locus (exon 10 C/T, D346D) on chromosome 17q11 remained significant after correction for multiple testing and were reproduced in a second independent African American MS data set. In addition, linkage to a NOS2A promoter region polymorphism, (CCTTT)n, was present in a third data set of multicase MS families. Our results provide strong evidence for linkage and association to a new candidate disease gene on chromosome 17q11 in MS and suggest that variation within NOS2A or a nearby locus contributes to disease susceptibility. Ann Neurol 2004
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2004
Shannon J. Kenealy; Marie-Claude Babron; Yuki Bradford; Nathalie Schnetz-Boutaud; Jonathan L. Haines; Jacqueline Rimmler; Silke Schmidt; Margaret A. Pericak-Vance; Lisa F. Barcellos; Robin Lincoln; Jorge R. Oksenberg; Stephen L. Hauser; M. Clanet; David Brassat; Gilles Edan; J. Yaouanq; Gilbert Semana; Isabelle Cournu-Rebeix; Olivier Lyon-Caen; Bertrand Fontaine
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a debilitating neuroimmunological and neurodegenerative disorder. Despite substantial evidence for polygenic inheritance of the disease, the major histocompatibility complex is the only region that clearly and consistently demonstrates linkage and association in MS studies. The goal of this study was to identify additional chromosomal regions that harbor susceptibility genes for MS. With a panel of 390 microsatellite markers genotyped in 245 U.S. and French multiplex families (456 affected relative pairs), this is the largest genomic screen for MS conducted to date. Four regions met both of our primary criteria for further interest (heterogeneity LOD [HLOD] and Z scores >2.0): 1q (HLOD=2.17; Z=3.38), 6p (HLOD=4.21; Z=2.26), 9q (HLOD; Z=2.71), and 16p (HLOD=2.64; Z=2.05). Two additional regions met only the Z score criterion: 3q (Z=2.39) and 5q (Z=2.17). Further examination of the data by country (United States vs. France) identified one additional region demonstrating suggestive linkage in the U.S. subset (18p [HLOD=2.39]) and two additional regions generating suggestive linkage in the French subset (1p [HLOD=2.08] and 22q [HLOD=2.06]). Examination of the data by human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-DR2 stratification identified four additional regions demonstrating suggestive linkage: 2q (HLOD=3.09 in the U.S. DR2- families), 6q (HLOD=3.10 in the French DR2- families), 13q (HLOD=2.32 in all DR2+ families and HLOD=2.17 in the U.S. DR2+ families), and 16q (HLOD=2.32 in all DR2+ families and HLOD=2.13 in the U.S. DR2+ families). These data suggest several regions that warrant further investigation in the search for MS susceptibility genes.