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Dive into the research topics where Eric Thervet is active.

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Featured researches published by Eric Thervet.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2002

Henoch-Schönlein Purpura in Adults: Outcome and Prognostic Factors

Evangéline Pillebout; Eric Thervet; Gary S. Hill; Corinne Alberti; Philippe Vanhille; Dominique Nochy

Henoch-Schönlein Purpura nephritis (HSPN) has been extensively studied in children but, its natural history in adults is much less known. A cohort of 250 adults suffering HSP was retrospectively analyzed for a median follow-up period of 14.8 yr. All patients had biopsies consistent with HSP (predominant IgA mesangial deposits) associated with purpura, bowel angina, and/or abdominal pain. At presentation, palpable purpura was present in 96% of patients, and arthritis was reported in 61%, and gastrointestinal involvement in 48%. Thirty-two percent of the patients showed renal insufficiency (Creatinine clearance [CrCl] <50 ml/min), usually associated with proteinuria (99%) and/or hematuria (93%). Endocapillary glomerulonephritis was the most frequent lesion on renal biopsy (61%). At the end of follow-up, patient survival was only 74%. The first cause of death was carcinoma (most of them of respiratory or digestive tract). Regarding renal function, 11% of patients reached end-stage renal failure, 13% exhibited severe renal failure (CrCl <30 ml/min), and 14% moderate renal insufficiency (CrCl <50 ml/min). Clinical remission defined as the absence of proteinuria, hematuria, and a normal renal function was achieved in only 20%. This is a retrospective study; therefore, it is not possible to demonstrate any steroid and/or cyclophosphamide efficacy in diminishing the incidence of renal insufficiency. Multivariate analysis demonstrated that renal function impairment and proteinuria level at presentation and, on renal biopsy, the degree of interstitial fibrosis, percentage of sclerotic glomeruli, and presence of glomeruli with fibrinoid necrosis were associated with a poor renal prognosis. The data indicate that clinical presentation of HSPN in adults is severe and its outcome relatively poor, worse than in children. Identification of clinical and histologic prognostic factors may permit the design of appropriate therapeutic prospective studies.


Gastroenterology | 2011

Factors associated with chronic hepatitis in patients with hepatitis E virus infection who have received solid organ transplants

Nassim Kamar; Cyril Garrouste; Elizabeth B. Haagsma; Valérie Garrigue; Sven Pischke; Cécile Chauvet; Jérôme Dumortier; Amélie Cannesson; Elisabeth Cassuto-Viguier; Eric Thervet; Filomena Conti; Pascal Lebray; Harry R. Dalton; Robert N. Santella; Nada Kanaan; Marie Essig; Christiane Mousson; Sylvie Radenne; Anne Marie Roque-Afonso; Jacques Izopet; Lionel Rostaing

BACKGROUND & AIMS Hepatitis E virus (HEV) infection can cause chronic hepatitis in recipients of solid organ transplants. However, the factors that contribute to chronic infection and the outcomes of these patients are incompletely understood. We performed a retrospective analysis of data from 17 centers from Europe and the United States that described the progression, outcomes, and factors associated with development of chronic HEV infection in recipients of transplanted solid organs. METHODS We studied data from 85 recipients of solid organ transplants who were infected with HEV. Chronic HEV infection was defined by the persistent increases in levels of liver enzymes and polymerase chain reaction evidence of HEV in the serum and/or stool for at least 6 months. RESULTS Fifty-six patients (65.9%) developed chronic hepatitis. Univariate analysis associated liver transplant, shorter times since transplant, lower levels of liver enzymes and serum creatinine, lower platelet counts, and tacrolimus-based immunosuppressive therapy (rather than cyclosporin A) with chronic hepatitis. On multivariate analysis, the independent predictive factors associated with chronic HEV infection were the use of tacrolimus rather than cyclosporin A (odds ratio [OR], 1.87; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.49-1.97; P = .004) and a low platelet count at the time of diagnosis with HEV infection (OR, 1.02; 95% CI, 1.001-1.1; P = .04). Of patients with chronic hepatitis, 18 (32.1%) achieved viral clearance after the dose of immunosuppressive therapy was reduced. No HEV reactivation was observed after HEV clearance. CONCLUSIONS HEV infection causes chronic hepatitis in more than 60% of recipients of solid organ transplants. Tacrolimus therapy is the main predictive factor for chronic hepatitis. Dose reductions of immunosuppressive therapy resulted in viral clearance in more than 30% of patients.


American Journal of Transplantation | 2007

Individualized mycophenolate mofetil dosing based on drug exposure significantly improves patient outcomes after renal transplantation.

Y. Le Meur; M. Buchler; Antoine Thierry; Sophie Caillard; F. Villemain; Sylvie Lavaud; Isabelle Etienne; P. F. Westeel; B. H. de Ligny; Lionel Rostaing; Eric Thervet; Jean-Christophe Szelag; Jean-Philippe Rerolle; Annick Rousseau; Guy Touchard; Pierre Marquet

Efficacy and safety of mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) may be optimized with individualized doses based on therapeutic monitoring of its active metabolite, mycophenolic acid (MPA). In this 12‐month study, 137 renal allograft recipients from 11 French centers receiving basiliximab, cyclosporine A, MMF and corticosteroids were randomized to receive either concentration‐controlled doses or fixed‐dose MMF. A novel Bayesian estimator of MPA AUC based on three‐point sampling was used to individualize doses on posttransplant days 7 and 14 and months 1, 3 and 6. The primary endpoint was treatment failure (death, graft loss, acute rejection and MMF discontinuation). Data from 65 patients/group were analyzed. At month 12, the concentration‐controlled group had fewer treatment failures (p = 0.03) and acute rejection episodes (p = 0.01) with no differences in adverse event frequency. The MMF dose was higher in the concentration‐controlled group at day 14 (p < 0.0001), month 1 (p < 0.0001) and month 3 (p < 0.01), as were median AUCs on day 14 (33.7 vs. 27.1 mg•h/L; p = 0.0001) and at month 1 (45.0 vs. 30.9 mg•h/L; p < 0.0001). Therapeutic MPA monitoring using a limited sampling strategy can reduce the risk of treatment failure and acute rejection in renal allograft recipients 12 months posttransplant with no increase in adverse events.


Therapeutic Drug Monitoring | 2009

Opportunities to optimize tacrolimus therapy in solid organ transplantation: report of the European consensus conference.

Pierre Wallemacq; Victor W. Armstrong; Mercè Brunet; Vincent Haufroid; David W. Holt; Atholl Johnston; Dirk Kuypers; Yannick Le Meur; Pierre Marquet; Michael Oellerich; Eric Thervet; Burkhand Toenshoff; Nas Undre; Lutz T. Weber; Ian S. Westley; Michel Mourad

In 2007, a consortium of European experts on tacrolimus (TAC) met to discuss the most recent advances in the drug/dose optimization of TAC taking into account specific clinical situations and the analytical methods currently available and drew some recommendations and guidelines to help clinicians with the practical use of the drug. Pharmacokinetic, pharmacodynamic, and more recently pharmacogenetic approaches aid physicians to individualize long-term therapies as TAC demonstrates a high degree of both between- and within-individual variability, which may result in an increased risk of therapeutic failure if all patients are administered a uniform dose. TAC has undoubtedly benefited from therapeutic drug monitoring, but interpretation of the blood concentration is confounded by the relative differences between the assays. Single time points, limited sampling strategies, and area under concentration-time curve have all been considered to determine the most appropriate sampling procedure that correlates with efficacy. Therapeutic trough TAC concentration ranges have changed since the initial introduction of the drug, while still maintaining adequate immunosuppression and avoiding drug-related adverse effects. Pharmacodynamic markers have also been considered advantageous to the clinician, which may better reflect efficacy and safety, taking into account the between-individual variability rather than whole blood concentrations. The choice of method, differences between methods, and potential pitfalls of the method should all be considered when determining TAC concentrations. The recommendations of this consensus meeting regarding the analytical methods include the following: encourage the development and promote the use of analytical methods displaying a lower limit of quantification (1 ng/mL), perform careful validation when implementing a new analytical assay, participate in external proficiency testing programs, promote the use of certified material as calibrators in high-performance liquid chromatography with mass spectrometric detection methods, and take account of the assay and intermethod bias when comparing clinical trial outcomes. It is also important to consider that TAC concentrations may also be influenced by other factors such as specific pharmacokinetic characteristics associated with the population, drug interactions, pharmacogenetics, adverse events that may alter TAC concentrations, and any change in the oral formulation that may result in pharmacokinetic changes. This meeting emphasized the importance of obtaining multicenter prospective trials to assess the efficacy of alternative strategies to TAC trough concentrations whether it is other single time points or area under the concentration-time curve Bayesian estimation using limited sampling strategies and to select, standardize, and validate routine biomarkers of TAC pharmacodynamics.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2003

Association of the Multidrug Resistance-1 Gene Single-Nucleotide Polymorphisms with the Tacrolimus Dose Requirements in Renal Transplant Recipients

Dany Anglicheau; Céline Verstuyft; Pierre Laurent-Puig; Laurent Becquemont; Marie-Helene Schlageter; Bruno Cassinat; Philippe Beaune; Christophe Legendre; Eric Thervet

The immunosuppressive drug tacrolimus, whose pharmacokinetic characteristics display large interindividual variations, is a substrate for P-glycoprotein (P-gp), the product of the multidrug resistance-1 (MDR1) gene. Some of the single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) of MDR1 reported correlated with the in vivo activity of P-gp. Because P-gp is known to control tacrolimus intestinal absorption, it was postulated that these polymorphisms are associated with tacrolimus pharmacokinetic variations in renal transplant recipients. The objective of this study was to evaluate in a retrospective study of 81 renal transplant recipients the effect on tacrolimus dosages and concentration/dose ratio of four frequent MDR1 SNP possibly associated with P-gp function (T-129C in exon 1b, 1236C>T in exon 12, 2677G>T,A in exon 21, and 3435C>T in exon 26). As in the general population, the SNP in exons 12, 21, and 26 were frequent (16, 17.3, and 22.2% for the variant homozygous genotype, respectively) and exhibited incomplete linkage disequilibrium. One month after tacrolimus introduction, exon 21 SNP correlated significantly with the daily tacrolimus dose (P < or = 0.05) and the concentration/dose ratio (P < or = 0.02). Tacrolimus dose requirements were 40% higher in homozygous than wild-type patients for this SNP. The concentration/dose ratio was 36% lower in the wild-type patients, suggesting that, for a given dose, their tacrolimus blood concentration is lower. Haplotype analysis substantiated these results and suggested that exons 26 and 21 SNP may be associated with tacrolimus dose requirements. Genotype monitoring of the MDR1 gene reliably predicts the optimal dose of tacrolimus in renal transplant recipients and may predict the initial daily dose needed by individual patients to obtain adequate immunosuppression.


Transplantation | 2003

Impact of cytochrome P450 3A5 genetic polymorphism on tacrolimus doses and concentration-to-dose ratio in renal transplant recipients12

Eric Thervet; Dany Anglicheau; Barry P. King; Marie-Helene Schlageter; Bruno Cassinat; Philippe Beaune; Christophe Legendre; Ann K. Daly

Background. Tacrolimus pharmacokinetic characteristics vary greatly among individuals. Tacrolimus is a substrate of cytochrome P450 (CYP), of subfamily CYP3A. CYP3A activity is the sum of the activities of the family of CYP3A genes, including CYP3A5. Subjects with the CYP3A5*1/*1 genotype express large amounts of CYP3A5. Heterozygotes (genotype CYP3A5*1/*3) also express the enzyme. We postulated that CYP3A5 polymorphism is associated with tacrolimus pharmacokinetic variations. Methods. CYP3A5 genotype was evaluated in 80 renal transplant recipients and correlated with the daily tacrolimus dose and concentration-to-dose ratio. Results. The frequency of the homozygous CYP3A5*1 genotype (CYP3A5*1/*1) was 5%, and 11% of subjects were heterozygous (CYP3A5*1/*3). The mean doses required to obtain the targeted concentration-to-dose ratio were significantly lower in patients with the CYP3A5*1/*1 genotype. Conclusions. Determination of CYP3A5 genotype is predictive of the dose of tacrolimus in renal transplant recipients and may help to determine the initial daily dose needed by individual patients for adequate immunosuppression without excess nephrotoxicity.


American Journal of Transplantation | 2009

Outcome of Subclinical Antibody‐Mediated Rejection in Kidney Transplant Recipients with Preformed Donor‐Specific Antibodies

Alexandre Loupy; C. Suberbielle-Boissel; Gary S. Hill; Carmen Lefaucheur; Dany Anglicheau; Julien Zuber; Frank Martinez; Eric Thervet; Arnaud Mejean; Dominique Charron; J.-P. Duong Van Huyen; Patrick Bruneval; C. Legendre; D. Nochy

This study describes clinical relevance of subclinical antibody‐mediated rejection (SAMR) in a cohort of 54 DSA‐positive kidney transplant recipients receiving a deceased donor. In 3 months screening biopsies, 31.1% of patients met the criteria of SAMR. A total of 48.9% had an incomplete form of SAMR (g+/ptc+/C4d‐negative) whereas 20% had no humoral lesions. Patients with SAMR at 3 months had at 1 year: a higher C4d score, ptc score, and arteriosclerosis score, higher rate of IFTA (100% vs. 33.3%, p < 0.01) and a higher rate of transplant glomerulopathy (43% vs. 0%, p = 0.02) compared to patients without 3‐month SAMR. Patients with SAMR at 3 months exhibited at 1 year a higher class II MFImax‐DSA and a lower mGFR compared to patients without SAMR (39.2 ± 13.9 vs. 61.9 ± 19.2 mL/min/1.73 m2 respectively, p < 0.01). The group of patients with C4d‐negative SAMR at 3 months developed more ptc and IFTA lesions, and lower GFR at 1 year in comparison to biopsies without humoral lesions. SAMR is a frequent entity in KTR with preexisting DSAs and promotes subsequent GFR impairment and development of chronic AMR. C4d‐negative SAMR patients displayed an intermediate course between the no‐SAMR group and the C4d+ SAMR group. Screening biopsies may be useful to recognize patients more likely to develop SAMR.


Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2010

Optimization of Initial Tacrolimus Dose Using Pharmacogenetic Testing

Eric Thervet; Marie-Anne Loriot; Stephane Barbier; M. Buchler; M Ficheux; Gabriel Choukroun; Olivier Toupance; Guy Touchard; C Alberti; P. Le Pogamp; Bruno Moulin; Y. Le Meur; A.-E. Heng; Jean-François Subra; P. Beaune; Christophe Legendre

Retrospective studies have demonstrated that patients who are expressors of cytochrome P4503A5 (CYP3A5) require a higher tacrolimus dose to achieve a therapeutic trough concentration (C0). The aim of this study was to evaluate this effect prospectively by pretransplantation adaptation. We randomly assigned 280 renal transplant recipients to receive tacrolimus either according to CYP3A5 genotype or according to the standard daily regimen. The primary end point was the proportion of patients within the targeted C0. Secondary end points included the number of dose modifications and the delay in achieving the targeted C0. In the group receiving the adapted dose, a higher proportion of patients had values within the targeted C0 at day 3 after initiation of tacrolimus (43.2% vs. 29.1% P = 0.03); they required fewer dose modifications, and the targeted C0 was achieved by 75% of these patients more rapidly. The clinical end points were similar in the two groups. Pharmacogenetic adaptation of the daily dose of tacrolimus is associated with improved achievement of the target C0. Whether this improvement will affect clinical outcomes requires further evaluation.


American Journal of Transplantation | 2009

Efficacy on Renal Function of Early Conversion from Cyclosporine to Sirolimus 3 Months After Renal Transplantation: Concept Study

Yvon Lebranchu; Antoine Thierry; Olivier Toupance; P. F. Westeel; Isabelle Etienne; Eric Thervet; Bruno Moulin; Thierry Frouget; Y. Le Meur; A.-E. Heng; C. Onno; M. Buchler; Sandrine Girardot-Seguin; B. Hurault de Ligny

Sirolimus (SRL) allows to minimize the use of cyclosporine (CsA), but de novo administration after transplantation is associated with various complications. We report a prospective, open‐label, multicenter randomized study to evaluate conversion from a CsA‐based regimen to a SRL‐based regimen 3 months after transplantation. One hundred ninety‐two of a total of 237 patients were eligible at 3 months to be converted to SRL (n = 95) or to continue CsA (n = 97). All patients were also given mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) and oral steroids, planned to be discontinued at month 8. The primary endpoint, the clearance estimated according to Cockcroft and Gault at week 52, was significantly better in the SRL group (68.9 vs. 64.4 mL/min, p = 0.017). Patient and graft survival were not statistically different. The incidence of acute rejection episodes, mainly occurring after withdrawal of steroids, was numerically but not statistically higher in the SRL group (17% vs. 8%, p = 0.071). Sixteen patients discontinued SRL, mainly for adverse events (n = 11), and seven patients discontinued CsA for renal failure or acute rejection. Significantly, more patients in the SRL group reported aphthous, diarrhea, acne and high triglyceride levels. Conversion CsA to SRL 3 months after transplantation combined with MMF is associated with improvement in renal function.


Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2004

CYP3A5 and MDR1 Genetic Polymorphisms and Cyclosporine Pharmacokinetics After Renal Transplantation

Dany Anglicheau; Eric Thervet; Isabelle Etienne; Bruno Hurault de Ligny; Yannick Le Meur; Guy Touchard; M. Buchler; Pierre Laurent-Puig; David Tregouet; Philippe Beaune; Ann K. Daly; Christophe Legendre; Pierre Marquet

The immunosuppressive drug cyclosporine (INN, ciclosporin), whose pharmacokinetic characteristics vary greatly among individuals, is a substrate for cytochrome P450 (CYP) 3A and P‐glycoprotein, the product of the multidrug resistance 1 (MDR1) gene. Some of the single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in these genes are associated with deficient protein expression and reduced in vivo activity. We postulated that, in renal transplant recipients, these SNPs could be associated with interindividual variations in cyclosporine pharmacokinetics.

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Christophe Legendre

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Dany Anglicheau

Paris Descartes University

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Nicolas Pallet

Paris Descartes University

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Alexandre Karras

Paris Descartes University

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Frank Martinez

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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C. Legendre

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Julien Zuber

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Philippe Beaune

Paris Descartes University

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Henri Kreis

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Laure-Hélène Noël

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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