J. Carbone
Complutense University of Madrid
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Featured researches published by J. Carbone.
AIDS | 2000
J. Carbone; Juana Gil; José M. Benito; Joaquin Navarro; Angeles Munoz-Fernandez; Joaquín Bartolomé; José M. Zabay; Francisco López; Eduardo Fernández-Cruz
ObjectiveTo identify subsets of CD4 T lymphocytes that can predict the development of AIDS and to assess whether increased levels of these cellular markers could provide additional independent prognostic information to the CD4 T cell count and plasma HIV-1-RNA levels. Design and methodsIn a prospective study, a cohort of 85 HIV-positive intravenous drug users [clinical categories of the CDC classification A (n = 48) and B (n = 37)] were followed for a period of 37 ± 13 months. Memory and activated CD4 and CD8 T cells were quantitated by three-colour flow cytometry at baseline and expressed as a percentage of total CD4 and CD8 lymphocytes. Clinical evaluations were performed at 6 month intervals. The relationships between these lymphocyte subsets and progression to AIDS were studied using Kaplan–Meier plots and proportional hazards regression models. ResultsAfter adjustment for the level of CD4 T cells and plasma HIV-1-RNA levels, the elevation in the subset CD4+CD38+DR+ was the marker within the functionally distinct subsets of CD4 T lymphocytes with additional prognostic value in bivariate Cox regression models. In multivariate models, increased percentages of CD4+CD38+DR+ T cells provided the strongest independent prognostic information for progression to AIDS (relative hazard, 1.07;P < 0.0001). ConclusionOur results suggest that high levels of CD4+CD38+HLA-DR+ T cells reflect the increasing degree of CD4 T cell activation during the progression of HIV infection, and could be used together with the CD4 T cell and HIV-RNA levels to evaluate more accurately the progressive cellular immune impairment associated with the risk of progression to AIDS.
American Journal of Reproductive Immunology | 2012
Manuela Moraru; J. Carbone; Diana Alecsandru; Marcela Castillo-Rama; Aurea García-Segovia; Juana Gil; Bárbara Alonso; Angel Aguaron; Rocío Ramos-Medina; Juan Martı́nez de Marı́a; Desamparados Oliver-Miñarro; Margarita Rodríguez-Mahou; Virginia Ortega; Pedro Caballero; Elena Meliá; Juan Vidal; Malena Cianchetta-Sívori; Carmen Esteban; Loreto Vargas-Henny; Jonathan Dale; Luis Ortiz-Quintana; Eduardo Fernández-Cruz; Silvia Sánchez-Ramón
Natural killer (NK, CD3− CD56+/CD16+) and NKT‐like cells (CD3+ CD56+/CD16+) activity is considered among the key factors for reproductive success. In the absence of immunological screening, beneficial effects of intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) in preventing recurrent reproductive failure (RRF) have not been reported. Here, we analyse the IVIG influence on pregnancy success in women with RRF and circulating NK or/and NKT‐like cells expansion.
Lupus | 2006
Micheloud D; L Nuño; Margarita Rodríguez-Mahou; Silvia Sánchez-Ramón; M C Ortega; Angel Aguaron; E Junco; J. Carbone; Eduardo Fernández-Cruz; Luis Carreño; Francisco Javier López-Longo
We report one case of pregnancy-onset severe diffuse proliferative nephritis in a patient with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), who was successfully treated with a combination of anti-tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha, plasmapheresis and high-dose intravenous gammaglobulin. No flares were observed either in clinical symptoms or in laboratory examinations during pregnancy or after delivery. Her autoantibodies except fluorescent anti-nuclear antibodies were negative. We suggest that a combination of anti-TNF-alpha, plasmapheresis and high-dose intravenous gammaglobulin may be a safe and effective therapy for pregnant patients suffering severe lupus nephritis.
Clinical and Experimental Immunology | 2013
Gabriel Wong; Sigune Goldacker; C. Winterhalter; Bodo Grimbacher; Helen Chapel; Mary Lucas; D. Alecsandru; D. McEwen; Isabella Quinti; H. Martini; Reinhold E. Schmidt; D. Ernst; Teresa Espanol; A. Vidaller; J. Carbone; Eduardo Fernández-Cruz; Vassilis Lougaris; Alessandro Plebani; Necil Kutukculer; Luis Ignacio Gonzalez-Granado; R. Contreras; S. Kiani-Alikhan; M. A. A. Ibrahim; Jiří Litzman; A. Jones; Hubert B. Gaspar; Lennart Hammarström; Ulrich Baumann; Klaus Warnatz; Aarnoud Huissoon
Splenectomy has been used in patients with common variable immunodeficiency disorders (CVID), mainly in the context of refractory autoimmune cytopenia and suspected lymphoma, but there are understandable concerns about the potential of compounding an existing immunodeficiency. With increasing use of rituximab as an alternative treatment for refractory autoimmune cytopenia, the role of splenectomy in CVID needs to be re‐examined. This retrospective study provides the largest cohesive data set to date describing the outcome of splenectomy in 45 CVID patients in the past 40 years. Splenectomy proved to be an effective long‐term treatment in 75% of CVID patients with autoimmune cytopenia, even in some cases when rituximab had failed. Splenectomy does not worsen mortality in CVID and adequate immunoglobulin replacement therapy appears to play a protective role in overwhelming post‐splenectomy infections. Future trials comparing the effectiveness and safety of rituximab and splenectomy are needed to provide clearer guidance on the second‐line management of autoimmune cytopenia in CVID.
Transplant Infectious Disease | 2006
Elizabeth Sarmiento; J. Rodríguez-Molina; Juan Fernández-Yáñez; J. Palomo; R. Urrea; Patricia Muñoz; Emilio Bouza; Eduardo Fernández-Cruz; J. Carbone
Abstract: Infectious complication represents a significant source of morbidity and mortality in heart transplant recipients. To assess humoral immunity markers that can predict the development of infection, 38 consecutive recipients of heart transplants performed at a single center were prospectively studied. Induction therapy included daclizumab. Immunoglobulin (IgG, IgA, IgM) and complement factors (C3, C4, and factor B) were performed by nephelometry in peripheral blood samples obtained before transplantation, and 7 days and 1 month after transplantation. During a mean follow‐up of 16.9 months, 13 patients had at least one episode of infection (34.2%). Eight of these were cytomegalovirus (CMV) infections treated with intravenous ganciclovir, 2 were bacterial pneumonia, 1 patient had bacterial septicemia, 1 patient had urinary tract infection, and 1 patient had pulmonary nocardiosis. No significant association was found between infection and age, sex, immunosuppression, CMV serostatus of donor and recipient, or treated rejection episodes. Pre‐transplant IgG (below median value=1140 mg/dL; relative risk [RR] 3.69; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.01–13.54; P=0.04) and post‐transplant IgG levels at day 7 (below median value=679 mg/dL; RR 11.21; CI 1.04–89.48; P=0.022) were associated with an increase in the risk for developing infections. Early monitoring of immunoglobulin levels might help to identify the risk for developing infection in heart transplantation.
Lupus | 1999
J. Carbone; Maria Orera; Margarita Rodríguez-Mahou; C Rodríguez-Pérez; Silvia Sánchez-Ramón; Seoane E; J. J. Rodríguez; J M Zabay; Eduardo Fernández-Cruz
We have performed a prospective study to determine the prevalence of immunological abnormalities and the evolution from primary antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) into systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) in women who had had unexplained repeated pregnancy loss (PL) and APS. Of 105 women with abortions or fetal deaths, 33(31%) fulfilled criteria for APS. Among these patients with primary APS, 24% had antinuclear antibodies (ANA), 91% had elevated circulating immune complexes (CIC), 70% had low total haemolytic complement (CH100), 52% had low levels of complement 4 (C4) and 30% had low levels of complement 3 (C3), in a significantly higher prevalence than women whose pregnancies were successful (control group). Through out a 6 y follow-up, 3 (9%) of the patients with APS who had autoimmune related abnormalities when entered into the study developed features of lupus like disease (LLD) or fullblown SLE. Our findings suggest that women with unexplained repeated PL with APS who presented with positive ANA, high levels of CIC, low levels of CH100, C3 and C4, may define a subset of patients exhibiting immunological alterations similar to those of SLE. These parameters may help in the assessment of prognosis in APS patients with PL. Those patients should be carefully surveyed with regard to the development of connective tissue diseases.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2005
J. Carbone; A. Escudero; M. Mayayo; M. Ballesteros; A. Perez-Corral; Silvia Sánchez-Ramón; Elizabeth Sarmiento; Micheloud D; Eduardo Fernández-Cruz
Abstract: Immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP), alone or in combination with autoimmune hemolytic anemia (Evans syndrome) and/or autoimmune neutropenia, is frequent in patients with common variable immunodeficiency (CVID). A 34‐year‐old man with CVID had long‐standing unresponsive ITP. The patient had a 9‐year history of CVID on substitutive therapy with intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG). The clinical course of CVID was complicated with refractory fistulizing inflammatory bowel disease, nodular regenerative hyperplasia of the liver, splenomegaly, severe portal hypertension, and hypercatabolism of IgG. ITP was refractory to medical therapy, including different combinations of corticosteroids, high‐dose IVIG, azathioprine, and vincristine. Splenectomy was not performed because of severe portal hypertension. He received a total five doses of rituximab, a monoclonal antibody directed against CD20 antigen, at a dose of 375 mg/m2. After an initially slow response, his platelet count increased to more than 50,000/μL by the fourth week of infusion. Therapy was well tolerated, and B lymphocytes were effectively depleted from the peripheral blood. The patient was completely tapered off glucocorticoids and maintained platelets at above 40,000/μL. The patient has not taken immunosuppressive agents for 11 months. Early treatment with rituximab might be an option for patients with CVID and ITP that do not respond to other treatments or for patients for whom a splenectomy is contraindicated.
American Journal of Reproductive Immunology | 2014
Rocío Ramos-Medina; Aurea García-Segovia; Juana Gil; J. Carbone; Ángel Aguarón de la Cruz; Ansgar Seyfferth; Bárbara Alonso; Jorge Alonso; Juan Antonio León; Diana Alecsandru; Elena Meliá; Elena Carrillo de Albornoz; Daniel Ordoñez; Isabel Santillán; Victoria Verdú; José Ruiz de Morales; Marcos López-Hoyos; Arturo López Larios; Almudena Sampalo; Pedro Caballero; Luis Ortiz Quintana; Eduardo Fernández-Cruz; Silvia Sánchez-Ramón
Recurrent reproductive failure (RRF) has been associated with expansion of circulating NK cells, key cells for maternal tolerance, decidual vasculogenesis and embryo growth. This study reports our experience in intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg) therapy of a large cohort of women with RRF with expanded circulating NK and/or NKT‐like cells (blood NKT cells are a heterogeneous subset of T cells that share properties of both T cells and NK cells).
Expert Review of Anti-infective Therapy | 2011
J. Carbone; Nadia del Pozo; Antonio Gallego; Elizabeth Sarmiento
Immunosuppressive and biologic therapies are costly and can involve a considerable risk of infection. Noninvasive diagnostic tools for early prediction of infection before and after administration of these therapies are of major interest. Serial longitudinal immune monitoring would provide data on immunocompetence and complement clinical follow-up protocols. Biomarkers of immune response may be useful to identify patients at risk of developing infection and who could be candidates for immunosuppressant dose reduction. This article focuses on the potential use of biomarkers of immune response to predict development of infection after immunosuppressive and biologic therapies in selected settings of autoimmune disease (rituximab for treatment of rheumatoid arthritis) and solid organ transplantation.
Transplant Infectious Disease | 2008
J. Carbone; Dariela Micheloud; M. Salcedo; D. Rincón; R. Bañares; G. Clemente; Julia Jensen; Elizabeth Sarmiento; J. Rodriguez-Molina; Eduardo Fernández-Cruz
Abstract: Orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) is a successful therapy for patients with end‐stage liver disease, and infection remains a significant cause of morbidity and mortality for patients undergoing this procedure. To assess humoral and cellular immunity markers as potential risk factors for development of infection, 46 consecutive liver transplant recipients (hepatitis C virus cirrhosis [n=17], alcoholic liver disease [n=15], hepatocellular carcinoma [n=9], autoimmune hepatitis [n=2], and other [n=3]) performed at a single center were prospectively studied. Maintenance therapy included tacrolimus (n=37) or cyclosporine (n=9) and prednisone. During follow‐up, 27 patients had at least 1 episode of infection (58.7%). Pre‐OLT immunoglobulin G (IgG) hypergammaglobulinemia (relative risk [RR] 2.78; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.17–6.60, P=0.02), pre‐OLT IgA hypergammaglobulinemia (RR 2.77, CI=1.24–6.19, P=0.012), and pre‐OLT C3 hypocomplementemia (RR 3.02, CI=1.21–7.55, P=0.018) were associated with an increased risk for development of infection. Monitoring of Ig and complement levels might help to identify the risk of developing infection in OLT.