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Featured researches published by Frédéric Lucht.


European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases | 2005

Arthroplastic and osteosynthetic infections due to Propionibacterium acnes: a retrospective study of 52 cases, 1995–2002

M.-F. Lutz; P. Berthelot; A. Fresard; C. Cazorla; A. Carricajo; A.-C. Vautrin; M.-H. Fessy; Frédéric Lucht

The cases of 52 patients with Propionibacterium acnes infection of orthopaedic implants are summarized: 20 patients with definite infection (sepsis, with P. acnes recovered from multiple specimens per patient), 15 with probable infection (sepsis, with P. acnes recovered from one specimen), and 17 with possible infection (signs of prosthetic malfunction or pseudo-osteoarthritis, with P. acnes recovered from one specimen). The patient population consisted of 37 males and 15 females with a mean age of 51.8 years (range 17–88). Besides bone surgery, 21% of these patients had severe coexisting illness. The study population was very heterogeneous and clinical presentation very polymorphic; infections became clinically apparent through sepsis, prosthetic malfunction, or a delay in consolidation. The diagnosis was highly dependent on the quality of the samples taken and the methodology used by the microbiology laboratory to isolate this bacterium. Culture time was long, on average 11.4 days. Treatment involved a combination of antibiotic treatments (67% of cases) and ablation of the material (83% of cases). Although P. acnes is considered to be weakly pathogenic, this bacterium may be responsible for infections in patients with implanted orthopaedic material. Ablation of the arthroplastic or osteosynthetic material is necessary in the majority of cases.


European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases | 2010

Is nasal carriage of Staphylococcus aureus the main acquisition pathway for surgical-site infection in orthopaedic surgery?

P. Berthelot; Florence Grattard; C. Cazorla; J.-P. Passot; J.-P. Fayard; R. Meley; J. Bejuy; F. Farizon; Bruno Pozzetto; Frédéric Lucht

The endogenous or exogenous origin of Staphylococcus aureus, responsible for orthopaedic surgical-site infections (SSI), remains debated. We conducted a multicentre prospective cohort study to analyse the respective part of exogenous contamination and endogenous self-inoculation by S. aureus during elective orthopaedic surgery. The nose of each consecutive patient was sampled before surgery. Strains of S. aureus isolated from the nose and the wound, in the case of SSI, were compared by antibiotypes or pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE). A total of 3,908 consecutive patients undergoing orthopaedic surgery were included. Seventy-seven patients developed an SSI (2%), including 22 related to S. aureus (0.6%). S. aureus was isolated from the nose of 790 patients (20.2%) at the time of surgery. In the multivariate analysis, S. aureus nasal carriage was found to be a risk factor for S. aureus SSI in orthopaedic surgery. However, only nine subjects exhibiting S. aureus SSI had been found to be carriers before surgery: when compared, three pairs of strains were considered to be different and six similar. In most cases of S. aureus SSI, either an endogenous origin could not be demonstrated or pre-operative nasal colonisation retrieved a strain that was different from the one recovered from the surgical site


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 1999

Investigation of a Nosocomial Outbreak Due to Serratia marcescens in a Maternity Hospital

Philippe Berthelot; Florence Grattard; Colette Amerger; Marie-Claude Frery; Frédéric Lucht; Bruno Pozzetto; Philippe Fargier

OBJECTIVES To investigate an outbreak of Serratia marcescens in a maternity hospital (November 1994 to May 1995). DESIGN Retrospective analysis of epidemiological data and prospective study of systematic bacteriological samples from patients and environment, with genotyping of strains by arbitrarily primed polymerase chain reaction. SETTING A private maternity hospital, Saint-Etienne, France. RESULTS In the neonatal unit, 1 newborn developed a bacteremia, and 36 were colonized in stools with S marcescens. As the colonization of some newborns was shown to occur only a few hours after delivery, the inquiry was extended to other maternity wards, where 8 babies and 4 mothers were found to be colonized. Environmental sampling led to the isolation of S marcescens from a bottle of enteral feed additive in the neonatal unit and from the transducers of two internal tocographs in the delivery rooms. The genotyping of 27 strains showed two different profiles: a major epidemic profile shared by 22 strains (18 from babies of the neonatal unit, 2 from babies of other units, and 2 from breast milk) and another profile shared by 5 strains (2 from transducers of internal tocographs, 2 from babies, and 1 from a mother). The strain isolated from lipid enteral feeding was not available for typing. Although this source of contamination was removed soon from the neonatal unit, the outbreak stopped only when infection control measures were reinforced in the delivery rooms, including the nonreuse of internal tocographs. CONCLUSIONS In delivery rooms, the quality of hygiene needs to be as high as in surgery rooms to prevent nosocomial colonization or infection of neonates at birth.


Expert Review of Anti-infective Therapy | 2014

Detection and clinical relevance of Staphylococcus aureus nasal carriage: an update

Paul O. Verhoeven; Julie Gagnaire; Elisabeth Botelho-Nevers; Florence Grattard; Anne Carricajo; Frédéric Lucht; Bruno Pozzetto; Philippe Berthelot

Staphylococcus aureus nasal carriage is a well-defined risk factor of infection with this bacterium. The increased risk of S. aureus infection in nasal carriers is supported by the fact that the strains isolated from both colonization and infection sites are indistinguishable in most of the cases. Persistent nasal carriage seems to be associated with an increased risk of infection and this status could be defined now in clinical routine by using one or two quantitative nasal samples. There is evidence for supporting the detection of nasal carriage of S. aureus in patients undergoing cardiac surgery and in those undergoing hemodialysis in order to implement decolonization measures. More studies are needed to determine which carriers have the highest risk of infection and why decolonization strategies failed to reduce S. aureus infection in some other groups of patients.


Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2009

Measure of viral load by using the abbott real-time HIV-1 assay on dried blood and plasma spot specimens collected in 2 rural dispensaries in Cameroon.

André Dieudonné Mbida; Samuel Sosso; Pierre Flori; Henia Saoudin; Philip Lawrence; Marcel Monny-Lobé; Yves Oyono; Edward Ndzi; Giulia Cappelli; Frédéric Lucht; Bruno Pozzetto; Odile Ouwe Missi Oukem-Boyer; Thomas Bourlet

Background:This study aimed to evaluate the use of dried blood spots (DBSs) and dried plasma spots (DPSs) locally collected in 2 rural dispensaries in Cameroon for the quantification of HIV-1 RNA. Methods:Forty-one subjects were sampled and spots of whole blood and plasma were deposited onto Whatman 903 cards and dried at ambient temperature under local conditions. Two sets of DBS and DPS cards were done per patient. The rest of the liquid plasma (LP) was frozen until use. LPs were tested at the “Chantal Biya” International Reference Centre (Yaoundé, Cameroon) by the Abbott Real-Time HIV-1 assay (Abbott Molecular Diagnostics, Wiesbaden, Germany). One series of DBS and DPS was transported and tested between 2 and 6 weeks later at the Virology Laboratory of Saint-Etienne (France). The second series was routed by mail and tested after up to 3 months of storage at ambient temperature. Results:From the first series, the correlation rate between viral loads obtained from LP and DBS, and from LP and DPS, was 0.98 and 0.99, respectively; specificity of DBS and DPS results was 100%. The results obtained from the second series indicate a great stability of DBS after long-term storage. Conclusion:This study demonstrates that DBSs collected under local conditions in resource-limited settings are suitable for the differed quantification of HIV-1 RNA.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2000

Neutralization of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1) Mediated by Parotid IgA of HIV-1—Infected Patients

Philippe Moja; Corinne Tranchat; Isabelle Tchou; Bruno Pozzetto; Frédéric Lucht; Claude Desgranges; Christian Genin

Infection with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) has been shown to elicit a serum antibody response with neutralizing activity against T cell line-adapted HIV strains and primary HIV-1 isolates. Mucosal surfaces are the primary route of HIV-1 infection. Evidence is presented here for the presence of HIV-neutralizing antibodies in secretions. Infection of mucosal cells with HIV stimulates systemic and mucosal immune responses and results in the generation of neutralizing antibodies. Serum IgG and IgA neutralize HIV-1MN infection of susceptible T cell lines; serum IgG inhibits more effectively. Mucosal IgA purified from parotid saliva of HIV-1-seropositive individuals could neutralize both a T cell line-adapted strain and a primary isolate. The neutralizing activity of IgA was not directed against the anti-third-variable-loop or the anti-ELDKWA epitope. Thus, the specificity of mucosal IgA for HIV-1 neutralization epitopes remains to be determined and may provide insight into development of a mucosal vaccine.


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 2006

Outbreak of postoperative shoulder arthritis due to Propionibacterium acnes infection in nondebilitated patients.

Philippe Berthelot; Anne Carricajo; Gérald Aubert; H. Akhavan; D. Gazielly; Frédéric Lucht

We investigated an outbreak of postoperative shoulder arthritis due to Propionibacterium acnes infection in nondebilitated patients. Risk factors were male sex, the order in which surgery was performed during the daily operating schedule, and increased duration of the surgical procedure. After modification of the ventilation system and implementation of improved cleaning methods in the operating theater, no new cases were recorded.


AIDS | 2013

Performance of creatinine and cystatin C-based glomerular filtration rate estimating equations in a European HIV-positive cohort.

Amandine Gagneux-Brunon; Pierre Delanaye; Nicolas Maillard; Anne Frésard; Thierry Basset; Eric Alamartine; Frédéric Lucht; Hans Pottel; Christophe Mariat

Objective:To validate glomerular filtration rate (GFR) estimating equations in white HIV-infected patients based on serum creatinine and/or serum cystatin C. Design:Single-center, cross-sectional evaluation of the predictive performance of GFR estimators. Methods:GFR was measured by iohexol plasma clearance. Serum creatinine (Scr) and serum cystatin C (Scyst) were measured by traceable and standardized methods. We evaluated the performance of the Modification of Diet in Renal Disease (MDRD) and the Chronic Kidney Disease-Epidemiology Collaboration (CKD-EPI) equations. We also studied the performance of the cystatin C-based equation (CKD-EPI Scyst) and the combined cystatin and creatinine-based equation (CKD-EPI combined), as recently proposed by the CKD-EPI group. Results:Two hundred and three participants (18% of women) were included. Mean age was 49 ± 10 years. Mean measured GFR (mGFR) was 95 ± 24 ml/min per 1.73 m2. CKD-EPI and CKD-EPI combined significantly outperformed the MDRD equation. The percentage of estimating results within 30% of mGFR was 75, 82 and 81% for the MDRD, CKD-EPI and CKD-EPI combined equation, respectively. Results favoring the CKD-EPI and CKD-EPI combined equation were especially observed for patients with mGFR over 90 ml/min per 1.73 m2. Conclusion:In our European HIV cohort, we confirmed that the creatinine-based CKD-EPI equation should replace the MDRD study equation. However, global performance of this equation remains worse than the performance observed in the general population. This lesser performance is particularly relevant in patients with measured GFR under and around 60 ml/min per 1.73 m2. Moreover, the specific interest of Scyst-based equations is not confirmed in this population.


International Orthopaedics | 2013

Smoking is a risk factor of organ/space surgical site infection in orthopaedic surgery with implant materials

François Durand; Philippe Berthelot; Céline Cazorla; Frédéric Farizon; Frédéric Lucht

PurposeIn recent guidelines, smoking is reported as a factor increasing the risk of surgical site infection (SSI). The accurate analysis of the literature shows that this recommendation relies on low level of evidence in orthopaedic surgery with material implantation (arthroplasty components or implants for internal fixation). This study aimed to assess the attributable risk of smoking on organ/space SSI in orthopaedic surgery with implants.MethodsRisk factors of organ/space SSI were studied in a prospective cohort including 3,908 patients from June 2003 to December 2006.ResultsSmoking was found as a significant risk factor for organ/space SSI. We also observed a significant difference between smokers and non-smokers for surgical wound complications (hematoma, discharge or wound dehiscence) during the period between surgical procedure and discharge from hospital.ConclusionThis is the first large prospective report of a significant association between smoking and organ/space SSI in orthopaedic surgery with implants.


Clinical Microbiology and Infection | 2012

An algorithm based on one or two nasal samples is accurate to identify persistent nasal carriers of Staphylococcus aureus

Paul O. Verhoeven; Florence Grattard; Anne Carricajo; Frédéric Lucht; Céline Cazorla; Olivier Garraud; Bruno Pozzetto; Philippe Berthelot

Persistent Staphylococcus aureus nasal carriers are at high risk of S. aureus infection. The present study delineates a simple strategy aimed at identifying rapidly and accurately this subset of subjects for clinical or epidemiological purposes. Ninety healthy volunteers were each identified as persistent, intermittent or non-nasal carriers of S. aureus by using seven specimens sampled over a 5-week period. By reference to this so-called reference standard, six other strategies aimed at simplifying and speeding the identification of persistent carriers and based on the qualitative or quantitative detection of S. aureus in one to three nasal samples were evaluated by the measure of the area under the curve of receiver operating characteristic diagrams. Among strategies using qualitative results, there was no statistical difference between protocols using seven and three samples. A threshold of 10(3) CFU of S. aureus per swab was found capable of defining persistent nasal carriage with a sensitivity of 83.1% and a specificity of 95.6%. These figures reached 95.5% and 94.9%, respectively, by using an algorithm including one or two nasal specimens according to the threshold of 10(3) CFU of S. aureus in the first swab. The latter two strategies were shown to be costly equivalents. The proposed algorithm-based strategy proved to be relevant to identify properly and consistently persistent nasal carriers of S. aureus. However, as it was built from data of healthy volunteers, it needs to be confirmed prospectively on patients potentially at risk for S. aureus infection.

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