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Featured researches published by M. Alexandre.


Archives of Dermatology | 2011

Rituximab for Patients With Refractory Mucous Membrane Pemphigoid

Christelle Le Roux-Villet; Catherine Prost-Squarcioni; M. Alexandre; Fr éd éric Caux; Francis Pascal; Serge Doan; Marie-Dominique Brette; Isaac Soued; Éric Gabison; Fran çoise Aucouturier; R émi Letestu; Liliane Laroche; Herv é Bachelez

BACKGROUND Mucous membrane pemphigoid (MMP) still represents a potentially life- and sight-threatening disease. In a subset of patients with severe MMP, conventional immunosuppressants are ineffective or contraindicated. OBSERVATIONS Twenty-five patients with severe refractory MMP, including 5 with mucous membrane-dominant epidermolysis bullosa acquisita, received 1 or 2 cycles of rituximab (375 mg/m(2) weekly for 4 weeks). Twenty-one of the patients were receiving concomitant therapy with dapsone and/or sulfasalazine therapy, which was maintained during rituximab cycles. Complete responses in all affected sites (ocular and/or extraocular) were obtained in 17 patients (68%) by a median time of 12 weeks after the first cycle, and 5 additional patients responded completely after a second cycle, yielding an 88% complete response rate. In all but 1 of the 10 patients with ocular lesions, their eyes became noninflammatory within a mean of 10 weeks. Among the 3 patients (12%) who developed severe infectious complications, 2 (8%) died; they had been receiving concomitant conventional immunosuppressants and high-dose corticosteroids and were hypogammaglobulinemic. Treatment with immunosuppressants was discontinued for all other patients, and no other infection was observed. Ten patients experienced relapse after a mean of 4 (range, 1-16) months after achieving complete responses. CONCLUSIONS Rituximab appears to have rapid and dramatic efficacy in patients with severe, refractory MMP. The occurrence of severe infections in patients receiving concomitant conventional immunosuppressants supports using rituximab without other immunosuppressants. Controlled prospective studies are warranted to define an optimal treatment protocol.


The Lancet | 2017

First-line rituximab combined with short-term prednisone versus prednisone alone for the treatment of pemphigus (Ritux 3): a prospective, multicentre, parallel-group, open-label randomised trial

Pascal Joly; Maud Maho-Vaillant; Catherine Prost-Squarcioni; Vivien Hebert; Estelle Houivet; Sébastien Calbo; Frédérique Caillot; Marie Laure Golinski; B. Labeille; C. Picard-Dahan; C. Paul; M.-A. Richard; Jean David Bouaziz; Sophie Duvert-Lehembre; Philippe Bernard; F. Caux; M. Alexandre; Saskia Ingen-Housz-Oro; Pierre Vabres; E. Delaporte; Gaelle Quereux; Alain Dupuy; S. Debarbieux; M. Avenel-Audran; Michel D'Incan; C. Bedane; N. Beneton; D. Jullien; Nicolas Dupin; L. Misery

BACKGROUND High doses of corticosteroids are considered the standard treatment for pemphigus. Because long-term corticosteroid treatment can cause severe and even life-threatening side-effects in patients with this disease, we assessed whether first-line use of rituximab as adjuvant therapy could improve the proportion of patients achieving complete remission off-therapy, compared with corticosteroid treatment alone, while decreasing treatment side-effects of corticosteroids. METHODS We did a prospective, multicentre, parallel-group, open-label, randomised trial in 25 dermatology hospital departments in France (Ritux 3). Eligible participants were patients with newly diagnosed pemphigus aged 18-80 years being treated for the first time (not at the time of a relapse). We randomly assigned participants (1:1) to receive either oral prednisone alone, 1·0 or 1·5 mg/kg per day tapered over 12 or 18 months (prednisone alone group), or 1000 mg of intravenous rituximab on days 0 and 14, and 500 mg at months 12 and 18, combined with a short-term prednisone regimen, 0·5 or 1·0 mg/kg per day tapered over 3 or 6 months (rituximab plus short-term prednisone group). Follow-up was for 3 years (study visits were scheduled weekly during the first month of the study, then monthly until month 24, then an additional visit at month 36). Treatment was assigned through central computer-generated randomisation, with stratification according to disease-severity (severe or moderate, based on Harmans criteria). The primary endpoint was the proportion of patients who achieved complete remission off-therapy at month 24 (intention-to-treat analysis). This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00784589. FINDINGS Between May 10, 2010, and Dec 7, 2012, we enrolled 91 patients and randomly assigned 90 to treatment (90 were analysed; 1 patient withdrew consent before the random assignment). At month 24, 41 (89%) of 46 patients assigned to rituximab plus short-term prednisone were in complete remission off-therapy versus 15 (34%) of 44 assigned to prednisone alone (absolute difference 55 percentage points, 95% CI 38·4-71·7; p<0·0001. This difference corresponded to a relative risk of success of 2·61 (95% CI 1·71-3·99, p<0·0001), corresponding to 1·82 patients (95% CI 1·39-2·60) who would need to be treated with rituximab plus prednisone (rather than prednisone alone) for one additional success. No patient died during the study. More severe adverse events of grade 3-4 were reported in the prednisone-alone group (53 events in 29 patients; mean 1·20 [SD 1·25]) than in the rituximab plus prednisone group (27 events in 16 patients; mean 0·59 [1·15]; p=0·0021). The most common of these events in both groups were diabetes and endocrine disorder (11 [21%] with prednisone alone vs six [22%] with rituximab plus prednisone), myopathy (ten [19%] vs three [11%]), and bone disorders (five [9%] vs five [19%]). INTERPRETATION Data from our trial suggest that first-line use of rituximab plus short-term prednisone for patients with pemphigus is more effective than using prednisone alone, with fewer adverse events. FUNDING French Ministry of Health, French Society of Dermatology, Roche.


Medicine | 2006

A prospective study of upper aerodigestive tract manifestations of mucous membrane pemphigoid.

M. Alexandre; Marie-Dominique Brette; Francis Pascal; Paul Tsianakas; Sylvie Fraitag; Serge Doan; F. Caux; Alain Dupuy; Michel Heller; Nicole Lièvre; Virginia Lepage; Louis Dubertret; Liliane Laroche; Catherine Prost-Squarcioni

Abstract: We conducted a prospective study between 1995 and 2002 to investigate nose and throat (NT) manifestations of mucous membrane pemphigoid (MMP). One hundred ten consecutive patients with clinical, histologic, and immunologic criteria of MMP were seen in 2 referral centers for bullous diseases. They were systematically asked about the existence of persistent NT symptoms. Patients who had any were examined with a flexible nasopharyngolaryngoscope by the same otorhinolaryngologist. When possible, NT mucous membrane (MM) biopsies were taken for direct immunofluorescence (IF) assays to determine lesion specificity. Thirty-eight (35%) patients (23 F/15 M; mean age, 58.5 yr) had the following NT symptoms: 35 (92%) nasal, 19 (50%) pharyngeal, and 10 (26%) laryngeal. Five (13%) had acute dyspnea. Thirty-three (87%) of the 38 symptomatic patients had lesions at physical examination: 30 (79%) nasal, 6 (16%) pharyngeal, and 19 (50%) laryngeal. Laryngeal involvement was asymptomatic in 11 patients. Lesions were mainly atrophic rhinitis and oropharyngeal and epiglottal erosions. Nasal valves, choanae, pharynx, and/or larynx were severely scarred in 7 (18%) patients, causing the death of 3. Direct IF showed malpighian epithelium associated with linear immune deposits (IgG, IgA, or C3) along the chorioepithelial junction in all 18 biopsies performed, including those of 4 symptomatic patients without lesions at physical examination. The presence of severe ophthalmologic lesions (p = 0.02) and ≥3 sites involved other than NT (p = 0.02) were predictive of laryngeal involvement. In contrast, laryngeal symptoms, disease duration, HLA DQB1*0301, and smoking were not significantly associated with laryngeal lesions. In conclusion, at least 35% of MMP patients had NT involvement. Atrophic rhinitis was the most frequent lesion. The most severe were the laryngeal lesions that were significantly associated with severe ocular involvement and disseminated disease, and could be fatal. Our results highlight the necessity of a multidisciplinary approach to MMP management to assure early diagnosis of NT involvement, to guide therapeutic choices, and to improve patient survival and functional outcomes. Abbreviations: BMZ = basement membrane zone, BP = bullous pemphigoid, EBA = epidermolysis bullosa acquisita, HLA = human leukocyte antigen, IEM = immunoelectron microscopy, IF = immunofluorescence, MM = mucous membrane, MMP = mucous membrane pemphigoid, NT = nose and throat, SSS = salt-split skin.


British Journal of Dermatology | 2013

Oral cyclophosphamide without corticosteroids to treat mucous membrane pemphigoid

E.M. Munyangango; C. Le Roux-Villet; S. Doan; Francis Pascal; I. Soued; M. Alexandre; Michel Heller; Nicole Lièvre; F. Aucouturier; F. Caux; Liliane Laroche; Catherine Prost-Squarcioni

Background  Mucous membrane pemphigoid (MMP) still represents a potentially life‐ and sight‐threatening disease. Immunosuppressants, such as cyclophosphamide (CYC), are indicated for patients with severe and/or refractory MMP.


Journal of The American Academy of Dermatology | 2016

Comparison of 3 type VII collagen (C7) assays for serologic diagnosis of epidermolysis bullosa acquisita (EBA)

Vannina Seta; Françoise Aucouturier; Jonathan Bonnefoy; Christelle Le Roux-Villet; Valérie Pendaries; M. Alexandre; Sabine Grootenboer-Mignot; Michel Heller; Nicole Lièvre; Liliane Laroche; F. Caux; Matthias Titeux; Alain Hovnanian; Catherine Prost-Squarcioni

BACKGROUND Serologic diagnosis of epidermolysis bullosa acquisita (EBA) relies on the detection of circulating autoantibodies to type VII collagen (C7). OBJECTIVE We sought to compare the diagnostic performances of a commercialized enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) using C7 noncollagenous (NC) domains (C7-NC1/NC2 ELISA) and indirect immunofluorescence (IIF) biochip test on NC1-C7-expressing transfected cells (IIFT), with a full-length-C7 ELISA developed in our laboratory. METHODS C7-NC1/NC2 ELISA, IIFT, and full-length-C7 ELISA were run on 77 nonselected consecutive EBA sera. RESULTS C7-NC1/NC2 ELISA, IIFT, and full-length-C7 ELISA were positive, respectively, for: 30%, 27%, and 65% of the 77 sera; 43%, 32%, and 80% of 44 sera labeling the salt-split-skin (SSS) floor (F) by IIF (SSS/F(+)); 9%, 22%, and 47% of 32 SSS/F(-) sera; 28%, 28%, and 58% of classic EBA; 41%, 41%, and 82% of inflammatory EBA; and 18%, 0%, and 55% of mucous-membrane-predominant EBA. Significant differences for all sera were found between: the 2 ELISAs for the 77 sera, SSS/F(+) and SSS/F(-) sera, and IIFT versus full-length-C7 ELISA. LIMITATIONS The retrospective design was a limitation. CONCLUSION C7-NC1/NC2 ELISA and IIFT sensitivities for serologic diagnoses of EBA were low. Full-length-C7 ELISA was significantly more sensitive and could serve as a reference test.


British Journal of Dermatology | 2017

Oesophageal involvement in 26 consecutive patients with mucous membrane pemphigoid

O. Zehou; J.J. Raynaud; C. Le Roux-Villet; M. Alexandre; G. Airinei; Francis Pascal; Michel Heller; Nicole Lièvre; Liliane Laroche; F. Caux; R. Benamouzig; Catherine Prost-Squarcioni

Oesophageal involvement of mucous membrane pemphigoid (MMP) has not yet been thoroughly described.


European Journal of Dermatology | 2012

Long-term efficacy of extracorporeal photochemotherapy in a patient with refractory epidermolysis bullosa acquisita

Barouyr Baroudjian; Christelle Le Roux-Villet; Sabine Bréchignac; M. Alexandre; F. Caux; Catherine Prost-Squarcioni; Liliane Laroche

ejd.2012.1840 Auteur(s) : Barouyr Baroudjian1, Christelle Le Roux-Villet1, Sabine Brechignac2, Marina Alexandre1, Frederic Caux1, Catherine Prost-Squarcioni1, Liliane Laroche1 [email protected] 1 Department of Dermatology French Referral Center for Autoimmune and Toxic Acquired Bullous Dermatoses 2 Department of Hematology, Avicenne Hospital, 125, route de Stalingrad, 93000 Bobigny, France Epidermolysis bullosa acquisita (EBA), a rare, autoimmune, subepidermal, blistering disease, is [...]


Frontiers in Immunology | 2018

Gliptin Accountability in Mucous Membrane Pemphigoid Induction in 24 Out of 313 Patients

Olivier Gaudin; Vannina Seta; M. Alexandre; G. Bohelay; Françoise Aucouturier; Sabine Mignot-Grootenboer; Saskia Ingen-Housz-Oro; Céline Bernardeschi; Pierre Schneider; Benoît Mellottee; F. Caux; Catherine Prost-Squarcioni

Mucous membrane pemphigoids (MMPs) and bullous pemphigoid (BP) are autoimmune bullous diseases that share physiopathological features: both can result from autoantibodies directed against BP180 or BP230 antigens. An association has been reported between BP and intake of gliptins, which are dipeptidyl peptidase-IV inhibitors used to treat type 2 diabetes mellitus. Clinical and immunological differences have been reported between gliptin-induced BPs and classical BPs: mucosal involvement, non-inflammatory lesions, and target BP180 epitopes other than the NC16A domain. Those findings accorded gliptins extrinsic accountability in triggering MMP onset. Therefore, we examined gliptin intrinsic accountability in a cohort of 313 MMP patients. To do so, we (1) identified MMP patients with gliptin-treated (challenge) diabetes; (2) selected those whose interval between starting gliptin and MMP onset was suggestive or compatible with gliptin-induced MMP; (3) compared the follow-ups of patients who did not stop (no dechallenge), stopped (dechallenge) or repeated gliptin intake (rechallenge); (4) compared the clinical and immunological characteristics of suggestive-or-compatible-challenge patients to 121 never-gliptin-treated MMP patients serving as controls; and (5) individually scored gliptin accountability as the trigger of each patient’s MMP using the World Health Organization-Uppsala Monitoring Center, Naranjo- and Begaud-scoring systems. 17 out of 24 gliptin-treated diabetic MMP patients had suggestive (≤12 weeks) or compatible challenges. Complete remission at 1 year of follow-up was more frequent in the 11 dechallenged patients. One rechallenged patient’s MMP relapsed. These 17 gliptin-treated diabetic MMP patients differed significantly from the MMP controls by more cutaneous, less buccal, and less severe involvements and no direct immunofluorescence IgA labeling of the basement membrane zone. Multiple autoantibody-target antigens/epitopes (BP180–NC16A, BP180 mid- and C-terminal parts, integrin α6β4) could be detected, but not laminin 332. Last, among the 24 gliptin-treated diabetic MMP patients, five had high (I4–I3), 12 had low (I2-I1) and 7 had I0 Begaud intrinsic accountability scores. These results strongly suggest that gliptins are probably responsible for some MMPs. Consequently, gliptins should immediately be discontinued for patients with a positive accountability score. Moreover, pharmacovigilance centers should be notified of these events.


British Journal of Dermatology | 2017

Idiopathic linear IgA bullous dermatosis: prognostic factors based on a case series of 72 adults

J. Gottlieb; S. Ingen-Housz-Oro; M. Alexandre; S. Grootenboer‐Mignot; F. Aucouturier; E. Sbidian; E. Tancrede; P. Schneider; E. Regnier; C. Picard-Dahan; E. Begon; C. Pauwels; K. Cury; S. Hüe; C. Bernardeschi; Nicolas Ortonne; F. Caux; P. Wolkenstein; Olivier Chosidow; Catherine Prost-Squarcioni

Linear IgA bullous dermatosis (LABD) is a clinically and immunologically heterogeneous, subepidermal, autoimmune bullous disease (AIBD), for which the long‐term evolution is poorly described.


Frontiers of Medicine in China | 2018

Mucous Membrane Pemphigoid, Bullous Pemphigoid, and Anti-programmed Death-1/ Programmed Death-Ligand 1: A Case Report of an Elderly Woman With Mucous Membrane Pemphigoid Developing After Pembrolizumab Therapy for Metastatic Melanoma and Review of the Literature

Coralie Zumelzu; M. Alexandre; Christelle Le Roux; Patricia Weber; Alexis Guyot; A. Lévy; Françoise Aucouturier; Sabine Mignot-Grootenboer; F. Caux; Eve Maubec; Catherine Prost-Squarcioni

An 83-year-old patient developed erosions and a blister of the gingival mucous membrane, 6 months after discontinuation of the anti-programmed death-1 (anti PD-1) pembrolizumab therapy administered for 10 months for a metastatic melanoma. A diagnosis of mild mucous membrane pemphigoid (MMP) was made. Complete remission of MMP was rapidly obtained with minimal therapy (doxycycline). MMP remained in complete remission after a 3-month follow-up since discontinuation of the doxycycline therapy and no evidence of relapse of the melanoma was observed after a 14-month follow-up since discontinuation of the pembrolizumab therapy. The widespread use of anti PD-1 and anti-programmed death-ligand-1 (PD-L1) in several malignancies reveals new adverse events. MMP describes a group of chronic, inflammatory, mucous membrane-predominant, subepithelial auto-immune blistering diseases. It is clinically distinct from bullous pemphigoid another autoimmune blistering disease but shares some immunological similarities with it. Twenty-nine cases of bullous pemphigoid associated with anti PD-1/PD-L1 have been reported in the literature and one of MMP. Here, we described the case of a MMP developed after pembrolizumab and discussed the accountability of anti PD-1/PD-L1 in our case and the previous reported bullous pemphigoid and MMP cases using the Begaud system scoring.

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E. Mahé

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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