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Dive into the research topics where Isabelle Thuret is active.

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Featured researches published by Isabelle Thuret.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2004

Early versus Deferred Antiretroviral Multidrug Therapy in Infants Infected with HIV Type 1

Albert Faye; Jérôme Le Chenadec; Catherine Dollfus; Isabelle Thuret; Danièle Douard; Ghislaine Firtion; Eric Lachassinne; Martine Levine; Joelle Nicolas; Fabrice Monpoux; Joëlle Tricoire; Christine Rouzioux; Marc Tardieu; Marie Jeanne Mayaux; Stéphane Blanche

BACKGROUND The clinical impact of early antiretroviral multidrug therapy on the risk of early-onset severe human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) disease has not been evaluated on a large scale. METHODS We evaluated the risk of early-onset events associated with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), particularly the risk of encephalopathy, among infants in the French Perinatal Cohort, according to whether antiretroviral multidrug therapy was initiated before or after the age of 6 months. RESULTS Of 83 HIV-infected infants born in 1996 (when HAART became available) or later, 40 received early treatment on or before the age of 6 months, and 43 received deferred multidrug therapy after the age of 6 months. In the group that received early multidrug therapy, no child developed an opportunistic infection or an encephalopathy during the first 24 months of life. In the deferred multidrug therapy group, 6 infants presented with a total of 7 AIDS-associated events (P=.01), 3 of which were encephalopathies (P=.08). The small number of events prevented the identification of clinical and biological markers that accurately predict progression of early-onset severe HIV disease. CONCLUSION In this observational study, infants who received multidrug therapy before 6 months of age did not have the early-onset severe form of childhood HIV disease. Further studies are needed to find accurate early markers of disease progression in this age group.


Haematologica | 2014

Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation in thalassemia major and sickle cell disease: indications and management recommendations from an international expert panel

Emanuele Angelucci; Susanne Matthes-Martin; Donatella Baronciani; Françoise Bernaudin; Sonia Bonanomi; Maria Domenica Cappellini; Jean Hugues Dalle; Paolo Di Bartolomeo; Cristina Díaz de Heredia; Roswitha Dickerhoff; Claudio Giardini; Eliane Gluckman; Ayad Achmed Hussein; Naynesh Kamani; Milen Minkov; Franco Locatelli; Vanderson Rocha; Petr Sedlacek; Frans Smiers; Isabelle Thuret; Isaac Yaniv; Marina Cavazzana; Christina Peters

Thalassemia major and sickle cell disease are the two most widely disseminated hereditary hemoglobinopathies in the world. The outlook for affected individuals has improved in recent years due to advances in medical management in the prevention and treatment of complications. However, hematopoietic stem cell transplantation is still the only available curative option. The use of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation has been increasing, and outcomes today have substantially improved compared with the past three decades. Current experience world-wide is that more than 90% of patients now survive hematopoietic stem cell transplantation and disease-free survival is around 80%. However, only a few controlled trials have been reported, and decisions on patient selection for hematopoietic stem cell transplantation and transplant management remain principally dependent on data from retrospective analyses and on the clinical experience of the transplant centers. This consensus document from the European Blood and Marrow Transplantation Inborn Error Working Party and the Paediatric Diseases Working Party aims to report new data and provide consensus-based recommendations on indications for hematopoietic stem cell transplantation and transplant management.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2003

Lymphocyte-Predominant Hodgkin’s Lymphoma in Children: Therapeutic Abstention After Initial Lymph Node Resection—A Study of the French Society of Pediatric Oncology

B. Pellegrino; M.J. Terrier-Lacombe; Odile Oberlin; Thierry Leblanc; Yves Perel; Yves Bertrand; C. Beard; C. Edan; Claudine Schmitt; Dominique Plantaz; Hélène Pacquement; Jean-Pierre Vannier; C. Lambilliote; Gérard Couillault; A. Babin-Boilletot; Isabelle Thuret; F. Demeocq; Guy Leverger; G. Delsol; Judith Landman-Parker

PURPOSE To clarify treatment strategy for lymphocyte-predominant Hodgkins lymphoma (LPHL), the French Society of Pediatric Oncology initiated a prospective, nonrandomized study in 1988. Patients received either standard treatment for Hodgkins lymphoma or were not treated beyond initial adenectomy. PATIENTS AND METHODS From 1988 to 1998, 27 patients were available for study. Twenty-four patients were male, and median age was 10 years (range, 4 to 16 years). Twenty-two, two, and three patients had stage I, II, and III disease, respectively. Thirteen patients (stage I, n = 11; stage III, n = 2) received no further treatment after initial surgical adenectomy (SA). Fourteen patients received combined treatment (CT; n = 10), involved-field radiotherapy alone (n = 1), or chemotherapy alone (n = 3). The two groups were comparable for clinical status, treatment, and follow-up. RESULTS Twenty-three of 27 patients achieved complete remission (CR). With a median follow-up time of 70 months (range, 32 to 214 months), overall survival to date is 100%, and overall event-free survival (EFS) is 69% +/- 10% (SA, 42% +/- 16%; CT, 90% +/- 8.6%; P <.04). If we considered only the patients in CR after initial surgery (n = 12), EFS was no longer significantly different between the two groups. Patients with residual mass after initial surgery (n = 15) had worse EFS if they did not receive complementary treatment (P <.05). CONCLUSION Although based on a small number of patients, our study showed that (1). no further therapy is a valid therapeutic approach in LPHL patient in CR after initial lymph node resection, and (2). complementary treatment diminishes relapse frequency but has no impact on survival.


Blood | 2014

Mutations in TRNT1 cause congenital sideroblastic anemia with immunodeficiency, fevers, and developmental delay (SIFD)

Pranesh Chakraborty; Klaus Schmitz-Abe; Erin K. Kennedy; Hapsatou Mamady; Turaya Naas; Danielle Durie; Dean R. Campagna; Ashley Lau; Anoop K. Sendamarai; Daniel H. Wiseman; Alison May; Stephen Jolles; Philip Connor; Colin Powell; Matthew M. Heeney; Patricia-Jane Giardina; Robert J. Klaassen; Caroline Kannengiesser; Isabelle Thuret; Alexis A. Thompson; Laura Marques; Stephen Hughes; Denise Bonney; Sylvia S. Bottomley; Robert Wynn; Ronald M. Laxer; Caterina P. Minniti; John Moppett; Victoria Bordon; Michael T. Geraghty

Mutations in genes encoding proteins that are involved in mitochondrial heme synthesis, iron-sulfur cluster biogenesis, and mitochondrial protein synthesis have previously been implicated in the pathogenesis of the congenital sideroblastic anemias (CSAs). We recently described a syndromic form of CSA associated with B-cell immunodeficiency, periodic fevers, and developmental delay (SIFD). Here we demonstrate that SIFD is caused by biallelic mutations in TRNT1, the gene encoding the CCA-adding enzyme essential for maturation of both nuclear and mitochondrial transfer RNAs. Using budding yeast lacking the TRNT1 homolog, CCA1, we confirm that the patient-associated TRNT1 mutations result in partial loss of function of TRNT1 and lead to metabolic defects in both the mitochondria and cytosol, which can account for the phenotypic pleiotropy.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2003

Outcome in Children With Relapsed Acute Myeloid Leukemia After Initial Treatment With the French Leucémie Aiquë Myéloïde Enfant (LAME) 89/91 Protocol of the French Society of Pediatric Hematology and Immunology

Nathalie Aladjidi; Anne Auvrignon; Thierry Leblanc; Yves Perel; Antoine Bénard; Pierre Bordigoni; Virginie Gandemer; Isabelle Thuret; Jean Hugues Dalle; Christophe Piguet; Brigitte Pautard; André Baruchel; Guy Leverger

PURPOSE After present first-line therapies for childhood acute myeloid leukemia (AML), nearly 40% of patients still relapse. The goals of this retrospective study were to determine whether these children could be treated successfully with a salvage regimen and to establish the optimal therapeutic strategy. PATIENTS AND METHODS In the multicentric, prospective, Leucémie Aiquë Myéloïde Enfant 89/91 protocol, 106 of the 308 children enrolled between 1988 and 1998 relapsed. Initial treatment after the first complete remission (CR1) had been allogenic HLA-identical bone marrow transplantation (BMT; n = 21) or chemotherapy (n = 85). Treatment procedures were scheduled according to the choice of each participating institution. RESULTS When reinduction therapy was attempted, second complete remission (CR2) was obtained in 71% of patients (68 of 96 patients). BMT was performed in 53 (78%) of these 68 patients (autograft, mainly harvested in CR1, n = 25; matched sibling-donor BMT, n = 12; or alternative-donor BMT, n = 16). The 5-year overall survival (OS) rate for all 106 patients was 33%, and the disease-free survival (DFS) rate for children in CR2 was 45%. Multivariate analysis of re-treated children showed that the 5-year OS was higher if the CR1 had been longer than 12 months compared with less than 12 months (54% v 24%, respectively; P =.001) and lower if maintenance therapy had been given after CR1 compared with chemotherapy without maintenance therapy or HLA-identical BMT (12% v 40% v 52%, respectively; P =.002). For patients attaining CR2, the 5-year DFS rate was not significantly different for matched sibling-donor BMT (60%), autograft (47%), or alternative-donor BMT (44%). CONCLUSION After aggressive first-line therapy, one third of unselected, relapsing AML children could be cured. Further prospective trials are warranted to define the optimal reinduction regimen and megadose chemotherapy and to evaluate the late effects of these therapies.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2002

Impact of Addition of Maintenance Therapy to Intensive Induction and Consolidation Chemotherapy for Childhood Acute Myeloblastic Leukemia: Results of a Prospective Randomized Trial, LAME 89/91

Yves Perel; Anne Auvrignon; Thierry Leblanc; Jean-Pierre Vannier; Gérard Michel; Brigitte Nelken; Virginie Gandemer; Claudine Schmitt; Jean-Pierre Lamagnere; Lionel de Lumley; Brigitte Bader-Meunier; Gérard Couillaud; G. Schaison; Judith Landman-Parker; Isabelle Thuret; Jean-Hugues Dalle; André Baruchel

PURPOSE To determine whether the use of maintenance therapy (MT) delivered after intensive induction and consolidation therapy confers any advantage in childhood acute myeloid leukemia (AML). PATIENTS AND METHODS A total of 268 children with AML were registered in the Leucámie Aiquë Myéloïde Enfant (LAME) 89/91 protocol. This regimen included an intensive induction phase (mitoxantrone plus cytarabine) and, for patients without allograft, two consolidation courses, one containing timed-sequential high-dose cytarabine, asparaginase, and amsacrine. In the LAME 89 pilot study, patients were given an additional MT consisting of mercaptopurine and cytarabine for 18 months. In the LAME 91 trial, patients were randomized to receive or not receive MT. RESULTS A total of 241 (90%) of 268 patients achieved a complete remission. The overall survival and event-free survival at 6 years were 60% +/- 6% and 48% +/- 6%, respectively. For the complete responders after consolidation therapy, the 5-year disease-free survival was not significantly different in MT-negative and in MT-positive randomized patients (respectively, 60% +/- 19% v 50% +/- 15%; P =.25), whereas the 5-year overall survival was significantly better in MT-negative randomized patients (81% +/- 13% v 58% +/- 15%; P =.04) due to a higher salvage rate after relapse. CONCLUSION More than 50% of patients can be cured of AML in childhood. Either drug intensity or each of the induction and postremission phases may have contributed to the outstanding improvement in outcome. Low-dose MT is not recommended. Exposure to this low-dose MT may contribute to clinical drug resistance and treatment failure in patients who experience relapse.


Bone Marrow Transplantation | 2007

Health status and quality of life in long-term survivors of childhood leukaemia: the impact of haematopoietic stem cell transplantation.

Gérard Michel; Pierre Bordigoni; Simeoni Mc; Catherine Curtillet; Hoxha S; Robitail S; Isabelle Thuret; Pall-Kondolff S; Chambost H; Orbicini D; Pascal Auquier

We compared late side effects and quality of life (QoL) in 430 survivors of childhood acute leukaemia based on whether they had undergone haematopoietic cell transplantation (n=142) or not (n=288). Mean age was 18.2 years and mean follow-up duration was 11.9 years. Multivariate logistic regression analyses were performed to compare the risk of each type of late effect in the two groups. Based on age, VSP-A or SF36 questionnaires were used to assess QoL. For each QoL dimension, multiple linear regression was done to construct models of association with the treatment group. Transplanted patients experienced more side effects, including height growth failure, gonadal dysfunction, hypothyroidism and cataract. Children and adolescents in the two treatment groups reported similar QoL levels for almost all dimensions except a better perception of school work by young transplanted children and more difficulties in relating to the medical staff for transplanted adolescents. In adults, two differences in physical domain of QoL were detected but the calculated effect sizes were less than 0.2 in each case, suggesting an uncertain clinical significance. In spite of a higher risk of physical adverse events in the transplanted group, very few clinically significant differences in QoL are detectable.


Archives of Disease in Childhood | 1999

Preliminary report of a toxicity study of hydroxyurea in sickle cell disease

M. de Montalembert; Pierre Begue; Françoise Bernaudin; Isabelle Thuret; Dora Bachir; Marguerite Micheau

AIM To evaluate the tolerance of hydroxyurea in children affected with sickle cell disease. DESIGN Questionnaire study of French physicians likely to treat patients with sickle cell disease. Data were collected on 101 children with sickle cell disease, treated for a median of 22 months, 36 of whom were treated for more than three years. 13 children were younger than 5 years of age at inclusion. RESULTS Hydroxyurea was stopped for medical reasons in 11 patients: 6 failures, 1 pregnancy, 1 cutaneous rash, 1 leg ulcer, 1 lupus. Acute lymphoblastic leukaemia occurred in a girl treated for 1.5 months with hydroxyurea, this short interval arguing against a causative association. One 17 year old boy had paraparesis after 8 years of treatment. CONCLUSIONS No major short or medium term toxicity was related to hydroxyurea in this cohort of 101 children. However, the number of children treated for more than 3 years is too few to make firm conclusions on the long term tolerance of this drug.


Bone Marrow Transplantation | 2000

Immune reconstitution and outcome after unrelated cord blood transplantation: a single paediatric institution experience.

P Giraud; Isabelle Thuret; D Reviron; H Chambost; C Brunet; G Novakovitch; C Farnarier; Gérard Michel

We report the outcome of 12 children who underwent unrelated cord blood transplant (U-CBT) in a single institution between February 1997 and July 1998. The 1 year event-free survival was 67% (95% CI of 26%). Four children died with infectious complication as cause of death in three cases. Immune reconstitution was studied during first year post transplant by assaying total lymphocyte counts, B cells, NK cells and T cell subsets in the eight disease-free surviving patients. We observed a prompt recovery of CD19+ cell number which was greater than 500/μl at 9 months for all patients except the one with severe cGVHD. B cells constituted the predominant lymphocyte subset at 6 and 9 months post transplant with normal or elevated B cell numbers according to normal paediatric range. We noted normal serum immunoglobulin levels at 6 months post transplant for IgA and IgM and at 9 months for IgG. The CD3+ cell count and particularly the CD3+CD8+ T cell subset remained depressed until 12 months post transplant. Six months after unrelated CBT, seven out of eight patients had less than 100 CD3+CD8+ cells/μl. CD3+CD4+ cell recovery was less impaired with all children achieving an absolute count of CD3+CD4+ cells greater than 200/μl during the first year in a median of 5 months. The percentage of NK cells was elevated during the first 6 months after CBT but their absolute count remained within the normal range. Bone Marrow Transplantation (2000) 25, 53–57.


Haematologica | 2010

Complications and treatment of patients with β-thalassemia in France: results of the National Registry

Isabelle Thuret; Corinne Pondarré; Anderson Loundou; Dominique Steschenko; Robert Girot; Dora Bachir; Christian Rose; Vincent Barlogis; Jean Donadieu; Mariane de Montalembert; Isabelle Hagège; Brigitte Pegourie; Claire Berger; Marguerite Micheau; Françoise Bernaudin; Thierry Leblanc; Laurence Lutz; F. Galacteros; Marie-Claude Simeoni; Catherine Badens

Background β-thalassemia is a rare disease in France, encountered mainly in patients originating from Italy and North Africa. In the setting of the recent French plan for rare diseases, a National Registry for thalassemia has been developed since 2005. Epidemiological and clinical data have been collected on living patients with β-thalassemia major or intermedia, including those who underwent hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Design and Methods A standardized questionnaire was sent to clinicians throughout the national professional networks involved in the management of thalassemic patients and data were updated every 18 months. A cross-sectional study was performed in February 2009. Results Data on 378 patients (267 with thalassemia major) with a median age of 20 were recorded. Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation was performed in 52 patients. Stature, rates of parenthood, splenectomy, and cholecystectomy were no different between non-transplanted thalassemia major and thalassemia intermedia patients, after adjustment for age. Among the 215 non-transplanted thalassemia major patients, the median serum ferritin level was 1240 ng/mL and the rates of iron-related complications were 10%, 6%, 10% and 48% for cardiac failure, diabetes, hypothyroidism, and hypogonadism, respectively. From 2005 to 2008, a dramatic switch in chelation treatment, from deferoxamine to deferasirox, was observed. Conclusions The rates of complications of iron overload in French thalassemia major patients appeared similar to those reported in other developed countries in which this condition is not endemic. There were no significant differences in height and parenthood rates between patients with the major and the intermedia forms of the disease, underlining the progress in clinical care. Future developments will focus on mortality and morbidity under oral chelation treatment.

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Gérard Michel

Aix-Marseille University

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Françoise Bernaudin

Children's Memorial Hospital

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Jean-Pierre Vannier

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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