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Dive into the research topics where Luc Bracoud is active.

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Featured researches published by Luc Bracoud.


Stroke | 2008

Tissue Microstructural Changes Are Independently Associated With Cognitive Impairment in Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy

Anand Viswanathan; Pratik V. Patel; Rosanna Rahman; R. N. Kaveer Nandigam; Catherine Kinnecom; Luc Bracoud; Jonathan Rosand; Hugues Chabriat; Steven M. Greenberg; Eric E. Smith

Background and Purpose— Cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) is a major cause of lobar intracerebral hemorrhage and cognitive impairment and is associated with white matter hyperintensities and cerebral microbleeds. MRI diffusion tensor imaging detects microstructural tissue damage in advanced CAA even in areas that appear normal on conventional MRI. We hypothesized that higher global mean apparent diffusion coefficient (mean ADC), reflecting a higher amount of chronic tissue disruption caused by CAA, would be independently associated with CAA-related cognitive impairment. Methods— Preintracerebral hemorrhage cognitive impairment was systematically assessed using a standardized questionnaire (IQCODE) in 49 patients. Volume of white matter hyperintensities, number of microbleeds, and mean ADC were determined from MRIs obtained within 14.0±22.5 days of intracerebral hemorrhage cognitive impairment. White matter hyperintensities and mean ADC were measured in the hemisphere uninvolved by intracerebral hemorrhage to avoid confounding. Results— Preintracerebral hemorrhage cognitive impairment was identified in 10 of 49 subjects. Mean ADC was the only variable associated with preintracerebral hemorrhage cognitive impairment and was elevated in those with preintracerebral hemorrhage cognitive impairment compared with those without (12.4×10−4 versus 11.7×10−4 mm2/s; P=0.03). Mean ADC positively correlated with age but not white matter hyperintensities or number of microbleeds. In logistic regression controlling for age and visible cerebral atrophy, mean ADC was independently associated with preintracerebral hemorrhage cognitive impairment (OR per 1×10−4 mm2/s increase=2.45, 95% CI 1.11 to 5.40, P=0.04). Conclusions— Mean ADC is independently associated with preintracerebral hemorrhage cognitive impairment in CAA. The lack of correlation with other MRI markers of CAA suggests that mean ADC may be sensitive to distinct aspects of CAA pathology and its tissue consequences. These results suggest that global MRI diffusion changes are sensitive to clinically relevant microstructural alterations and may be useful markers of CAA-related tissue damage.


The Lancet | 2016

Efficacy and safety of tau-aggregation inhibitor therapy in patients with mild or moderate Alzheimer's disease: a randomised, controlled, double-blind, parallel-arm, phase 3 trial

Serge Gauthier; Howard Feldman; Lon S. Schneider; Gordon Wilcock; Giovanni B. Frisoni; Jiri Hardlund; Hans J Moebius; Peter Bentham; Karin A Kook; Damon Wischik; Bjoern Schelter; Charles S. Davis; Roger T. Staff; Luc Bracoud; Kohkan Shamsi; John M. D. Storey; Charles R. Harrington; Claude M. Wischik

BACKGROUND Leuco-methylthioninium bis(hydromethanesulfonate; LMTM), a stable reduced form of the methylthioninium moiety, acts as a selective inhibitor of tau protein aggregation both in vitro and in transgenic mouse models. Methylthioninium chloride has previously shown potential efficacy as monotherapy in patients with Alzheimers disease. We aimed to determine whether LMTM was safe and effective in modifying disease progression in patients with mild to moderate Alzheimers disease. METHODS We did a 15-month, randomised, controlled double-blind, parallel-group trial at 115 academic centres and private research clinics in 16 countries in Europe, North America, Asia, and Russia with patients younger than 90 years with mild to moderate Alzheimers disease. Patients concomitantly using other medicines for Alzheimers disease were permitted to be included because we considered it infeasible not to allow their inclusion; however, patients using medicines carrying warnings of methaemoglobinaemia were excluded because the oxidised form of methylthioninium in high doses has been shown to induce this condition. We randomly assigned participants (3:3:4) to 75 mg LMTM twice a day, 125 mg LMTM twice a day, or control (4 mg LMTM twice a day to maintain blinding with respect to urine or faecal discolouration) administered as oral tablets. We did the randomisation with an interactive web response system using 600 blocks of length ten, and stratified patients by severity of disease, global region, whether they were concomitantly using Alzheimers disease-labelled medications, and site PET capability. Participants, their study partners (generally carers), and all assessors were masked to treatment assignment throughout the study. The coprimary outcomes were progression on the Alzheimers Disease Assessment Scale-Cognitive Subscale (ADAS-Cog) and the Alzheimers Disease Co-operative Study-Activities of Daily Living Inventory (ADCS-ADL) scales from baseline assessed at week 65 in the modified intention-to-treat population. This trial is registered with Clinicaltrials.gov (NCT01689246) and the European Union Clinical Trials Registry (2012-002866-11). FINDINGS Between Jan 29, 2013, and June 26, 2014, we recruited and randomly assigned 891 participants to treatment (357 to control, 268 to 75 mg LMTM twice a day, and 266 to 125 mg LMTM twice a day). The prespecified primary analyses did not show any treatment benefit at either of the doses tested for the coprimary outcomes (change in ADAS-Cog score compared with control [n=354, 6·32, 95% CI 5·31-7·34]: 75 mg LMTM twice a day [n=257] -0·02, -1·60 to 1·56, p=0·9834, 125 mg LMTM twice a day [n=250] -0·43, -2·06 to 1·20, p=0·9323; change in ADCS-ADL score compared with control [-8·22, 95% CI -9·63 to -6·82]: 75 mg LMTM twice a day -0·93, -3·12 to 1·26, p=0·8659; 125 mg LMTM twice a day -0·34, -2·61 to 1·93, p=0·9479). Gastrointestinal and urinary effects were the most common adverse events with both high doses of LMTM, and the most common causes for discontinuation. Non-clinically significant dose-dependent reductions in haemoglobin concentrations were the most common laboratory abnormality. Amyloid-related imaging abnormalities were noted in less than 1% (8/885) of participants. INTERPRETATION The primary analysis for this study was negative, and the results do not suggest benefit of LMTM as an add-on treatment for patients with mild to moderate Alzheimers disease. Findings from a recently completed 18-month trial of patients with mild Alzheimers disease will be reported soon. FUNDING TauRx Therapeutics.


JAMA Neurology | 2015

Targeting prodromal Alzheimer disease with avagacestat: A randomized clinical trial

Vladimir Coric; Stephen Salloway; Christopher H. van Dyck; Bruno Dubois; Niels Andreasen; Mark Brody; Craig Curtis; Hilkka Soininen; Stephen Thein; Thomas Shiovitz; Gary Pilcher; Steven H. Ferris; Susan Colby; Wendy Kerselaers; Randy C. Dockens; Holly Soares; Stephen Kaplita; Feng Luo; Chahin Pachai; Luc Bracoud; Mark A. Mintun; Joshua D. Grill; Ken Marek; John Seibyl; Jesse M. Cedarbaum; Charles F. Albright; Howard Feldman; Robert M. Berman

IMPORTANCE Early identification of Alzheimer disease (AD) is important for clinical management and affords the opportunity to assess potential disease-modifying agents in clinical trials. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a randomized trial to prospectively enrich a study population with prodromal AD (PDAD) defined by cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) biomarker criteria and mild cognitive impairment (MCI) symptoms. OBJECTIVES To assess the safety of the γ-secretase inhibitor avagacestat in PDAD and to determine whether CSF biomarkers can identify this patient population prior to clinical diagnosis of dementia. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS A randomized, placebo-controlled phase 2 clinical trial with a parallel, untreated, nonrandomized observational cohort of CSF biomarker-negative participants was conducted May 26, 2009, to July 9, 2013, in a multicenter global population. Of 1358 outpatients screened, 263 met MCI and CSF biomarker criteria for randomization into the treatment phase. One hundred two observational cohort participants who met MCI criteria but were CSF biomarker-negative were observed during the same study period to evaluate biomarker assay sensitivity. INTERVENTIONS Oral avagacestat or placebo daily. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURE Safety and tolerability of avagacestat. RESULTS Of the 263 participants in the treatment phase, 132 were randomized to avagacestat and 131 to placebo; an additional 102 participants were observed in an untreated observational cohort. Avagacestat was relatively well tolerated with low discontinuation rates (19.6%) at a dose of 50 mg/d, whereas the dose of 125 mg/d had higher discontinuation rates (43%), primarily attributable to gastrointestinal tract adverse events. Increases in nonmelanoma skin cancer and nonprogressive, reversible renal tubule effects were observed with avagacestat. Serious adverse event rates were higher with avagacestat (49 participants [37.1%]) vs placebo (31 [23.7%]), attributable to the higher incidence of nonmelanoma skin cancer. At 2 years, progression to dementia was more frequent in the PDAD cohort (30.7%) vs the observational cohort (6.5%). Brain atrophy rate in PDAD participants was approximately double that of the observational cohort. Concordance between abnormal amyloid burden on positron emission tomography and pathologic CSF was approximately 87% (κ = 0.68; 95% CI, 0.48-0.87). No significant treatment differences were observed in the avagacestat vs placebo arm in key clinical outcome measures. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Avagacestat did not demonstrate efficacy and was associated with adverse dose-limiting effects. This PDAD population receiving avagacestat or placebo had higher rates of clinical progression to dementia and greater brain atrophy compared with CSF biomarker-negative participants. The CSF biomarkers and amyloid positron emission tomography imaging were correlated, suggesting that either modality could be used to confirm the presence of cerebral amyloidopathy and identify PDAD. TRIAL REGISTRATION clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00890890.


Stroke | 2014

Genome-Wide Genotyping Demonstrates a Polygenic Risk Score Associated With White Matter Hyperintensity Volume in CADASIL

Christian Opherk; Mariya Gonik; Marco Duering; Rainer Malik; Eric Jouvent; Dominique Hervé; Poneh Adib-Samii; Steve Bevan; Luigi Pianese; Serena Silvestri; Maria Teresa Dotti; Nicola De Stefano; Michael Liem; Elles M.J. Boon; Francesca Pescini; Chahin Pachai; Luc Bracoud; Bertram Müller-Myhsok; Thomas Meitinger; Natalia S. Rost; Leonardo Pantoni; Saskia A. J. Lesnik Oberstein; Antonio Federico; Michele Ragno; Hugh S. Markus; Elisabeth Tournier-Lasserve; Jonathan Rosand; Hugues Chabriat; Martin Dichgans

Background and Purpose— White matter hyperintensities (WMH) on MRI are a quantitative marker for sporadic cerebral small vessel disease and are highly heritable. To date, large-scale genetic studies have identified only a single locus influencing WMH burden. This might in part relate to biological heterogeneity of sporadic WMH. The current study searched for genetic modifiers of WMH volume in cerebral autosomal-dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL), a monogenic small vessel disease. Methods— We performed a genome-wide association study to identify quantitative trait loci for WMH volume by combining data from 517 CADASIL patients collected through 7 centers across Europe. WMH volumes were centrally analyzed and quantified on fluid attenuated inversion recovery images. Genotyping was performed using the Affymetrix 6.0 platform. Individuals were assigned to 2 distinct genetic clusters (cluster 1 and cluster 2) based on their genetic background. Results— Four hundred sixty-six patients entered the final genome-wide association study analysis. The phenotypic variance of WMH burden in CADASIL explained by all single nucleotide polymorphisms in cluster 1 was 0.85 (SE=0.21), suggesting a substantial genetic contribution. Using cluster 1 as derivation and cluster 2 as a validation sample, a polygenic score was significantly associated with WMH burden (P=0.001) after correction for age, sex, and vascular risk factors. No single nucleotide polymorphism reached genome-wide significance. Conclusions— We found a polygenic score to be associated with WMH volume in CADASIL subjects. Our findings suggest that multiple variants with small effects influence WMH burden in CADASIL. The identification of these variants and the biological pathways involved will provide insights into the pathophysiology of white matter disease in CADASIL and possibly small vessel disease in general.


NeuroImage | 2008

Measurement of brain atrophy in subcortical vascular disease: a comparison of different approaches and the impact of ischaemic lesions.

Michael O'Sullivan; Eric Jouvent; Philipp G. Saemann; Jean-François Mangin; Anand Viswanathan; Andreas Gschwendtner; Luc Bracoud; Chahin Pachai; Hugues Chabriat; Martin Dichgans

Measurement of brain atrophy has been proposed as a surrogate marker in MS and degenerative dementias. Although cerebral small vessel disease predominantly affects white and subcortical grey matter, recent data suggest that whole brain atrophy is also a good indicator of clinical and cognitive status in this disease. Automated methods to measure atrophy are available that are accurate and reproducible in disease-free brains. However, optimal methods in small vessel disease have not been established and the impact of ischaemic lesions on different techniques has not been explored systematically. In this study, three contrasting techniques -- Statistical Parametric Mapping 5 (SPM5), SIENAX and BrainVisa -- were applied to measure cross-sectional atrophy (brain parenchymal fraction or BPF) in a large (n=143) two-centre cohort of patients with CADASIL, a genetic model of small vessel disease. All three techniques showed similar sensitivity to trends in BPF associated with age and lesion load. No single technique was particularly vulnerable to error as a result of lesions. Provided major errors in registration were excluded by visual inspection, manual correction of segmentations had a negligible impact with mean errors of 0.41% for SIENAX and 0.46% for BrainVisa. BPF correlated strongly with global cognitive function and physical disability, independent of the technique used. Correlation coefficients with the Minimental State Examination score were: BrainVisa 0.58, SIENAX 0.58, SPM5 0.60 (for all, p<0.001). These results suggest that all three methods can be applied reliably in patients with ischaemic lesions. Choice of analysis approach for this kind of clinical question will be determined by factors other than their robustness and precision, such as a desire to explore subtle localised changes using extensions of these processing tools.


Journal of Alzheimer's Disease | 2017

Potential of Low Dose Leuco-Methylthioninium Bis(Hydromethanesulphonate) (LMTM) Monotherapy for Treatment of Mild Alzheimer’s Disease: Cohort Analysis as Modified Primary Outcome in a Phase III Clinical Trial

Gordon Wilcock; Serge Gauthier; Giovanni B. Frisoni; Jianping Jia; Jiri Hardlund; Hans J Moebius; Peter Bentham; Karin A Kook; B. Schelter; Damon Wischik; Charles S. Davis; Roger T. Staff; Vesna Vuksanovic; Trevor S. Ahearn; Luc Bracoud; Kohkan Shamsi; Ken Marek; John Seibyl; Gernot Riedel; John M. D. Storey; Charles R. Harrington; Claude M. Wischik

Background: LMTM is being developed as a treatment for AD based on inhibition of tau aggregation. Objectives: To examine the efficacy of LMTM as monotherapy in non-randomized cohort analyses as modified primary outcomes in an 18-month Phase III trial in mild AD. Methods: Mild AD patients (n = 800) were randomly assigned to 100 mg twice a day or 4 mg twice a day. Prior to unblinding, the Statistical Analysis Plan was revised to compare the 100 mg twice a day as monotherapy subgroup (n = 79) versus 4 mg twice a day as randomized (n = 396), and 4 mg twice a day as monotherapy (n = 76) versus 4 mg twice a day as add-on therapy (n = 297), with strong control of family-wise type I error. Results: The revised analyses were statistically significant at the required threshold of p < 0.025 in both comparisons for change in ADAS-cog, ADCS-ADL, MRI atrophy, and glucose uptake. The brain atrophy rate was initially typical of mild AD in both add-on and monotherapy groups, but after 9 months of treatment, the rate in monotherapy patients declined significantly to that reported for normal elderly controls. Differences in severity or diagnosis at baseline between monotherapy and add-on patients did not account for significant differences in favor of monotherapy. Conclusions: The results are consistent with earlier studies in supporting the hypothesis that LMTM might be effective as monotherapy and that 4 mg twice a day may serve as well as higher doses. A further suitably randomized trial is required to test this hypothesis.


Alzheimers & Dementia | 2014

ACCURACY OF BMAS HIPPOCAMPUS SEGMENTATION USING THE HARMONIZED HIPPOCAMPAL PROTOCOL

Florent Roche; Joël Schaerer; Sylvain Gouttard; Audrey Istace; Boubakeur Belaroussi; Hui Jing Yu; Luc Bracoud; Chahin Pachai; Charles DeCarli

 Hippocampal volume (HCV) measured with MRI has been widely used as a key biomarker for both improving subject selection and monitoring treatment efficacy in Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) studies. However various hippocampal protocols exist in the literature, each including a different set of subfields and sub-structures, potentially leading to confusion and additional complexity for direct comparison and consistency in reporting study results.


Stroke | 2015

Infarct volume-based subgroup selection in acute ischemic stroke trials.

Anna Kufner; Anke Wouters; Luc Bracoud; Rico Laage; Armin Schneider; Wolf-Rüdiger Schäbitz; M. Hermier; Vincent Thijs; Jochen B. Fiebach

Background and Purpose— We investigated whether hyperintensities with a diameter of at least 3, 3.5, and 4 cm and visible on at least 3 slices on diffusion-weighted imaging enables patient selection with an infarct volume of ≥15 mL. Methods— Consecutive acute stroke patients were screened for the AXIS2 trial and examined according to a standardized magnetic resonance imaging protocol in 65 sites. Diffusion-weighted lesion diameters were measured and compared with volumetric assessments. Results— Out of 238 patients, 86.2% (N=206) had infarct diameter of at least 3 cm. Volumetric assessments showed infarct volume of ≥15 mL in 157 patients. A cut-off value of 3 cm led to 96.8% sensitivity and 33.3% specificity for predicting lesion volume of ≥15 mL. Analogously, a 3.5 cm cut-off led to 96.8% sensitivity and 50.6% specificity and a 4 cm cut-off led to 91.7% sensitivity and 61.7% specificity. Conclusions— Lesion diameter measures may enable multicentric patient recruitment with a prespecified minimal infarct volume. Clinical Trial Registration— URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT00927836.


Alzheimers & Dementia | 2013

Reproducibility of intracranial and hippocampal volume quantification at 1.5T and 3T MRI: Application to ADNI I

Florent Roche; Baljeet Singh; Joël Schaerer; Boubakeur Belaroussi; Sylvain Gouttard; Audrey Istace; Hui Jing Yu; Evan Fletcher; Luc Bracoud; Chahin Pachai; Charles DeCarli

in metabolite levels of the phosphomonoesters phosphocholine (PCho) and phosphoethanolamine (PEtn), and of the phosphodiesters glycerophosphocholine (GPCho) and glycerophosphoethanolamine (GPEtn), inorganic phosphate, phosphocreatine and ATP. Results: High quality 31 P-MRSI spectra with well resolved resonance for phospholipids were obtained (see Figure). Relative levels of PCho, PEtn, GPCho and GPEtn to total phosphorus signal and the ratio of phosphomonoesters to phosphodiesters will be presented for medial temporal lobe, medial prefrontal cortex and posterior cingulate cortex. It is anticipated that data will be presented from a total number of approximately 20 patients. Conclusions: This clinical study will be the first to provide information on brain phospholipid metabolism in multiple brain regions in patients with Alzheimer’s disease. Souvenaid is a registered trademark of N.V. Nutricia.


Alzheimers & Dementia | 2012

Discordance for hippocampal atrophy and amyloid burden in amnestic mild cognitive impairment may identify distinct subgroups of patients

Gerald Novak; Steven Einstein; Spencer Guthrie; Richard Margolin; Hui Jing Yu; Luc Bracoud; Boubakeur Balaroussi; Charles DeCarli; Chahin Pachai

P3-081 CHANGES IN THE VETERANS AFFAIRS SAINT LOUIS UNIVERSITY MENTAL STATUS (SLUMS) EXAM SCORES OVER 7.5 YEARS’ FOLLOW-UP AND RELATED OUTCOMES: THE INFLUENCE OF REVERSIBLE COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENTAND CORRECTION OF SENSORY LOSS Dulce Cruz-Oliver, TheodoreMalmstrom, Nina Tumosa, JohnMorley, 1 Saint Louis University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri, United States; Geriatric Research Education and Clinical Centers, St Louis VAMC, Jefferson Barracks, St. Louis, Missouri, United States; Saint Louis University Medical Center, St. Louis, Missouri, United States.

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