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Featured researches published by Martine Gayraud.


Medicine | 1999

Churg-Strauss syndrome. Clinical study and long-term follow-up of 96 patients.

Loïc Guillevin; Pascal Cohen; Martine Gayraud; François Lhote; B. Jarrousse; Philippe Casassus

Churg-Strauss syndrome (CSS) is a systemic vasculitis characterized by the presence of asthma, hypereosinophilia, and necrotizing vasculitis with extravascular eosinophil granulomas. In this retrospective study of 96 patients between 1963 and 1995, we analyzed clinical manifestations, identified prognostic factors, and assessed the long-term outcome. CSS was diagnosed when asthma, hypereosinophilia > 1,500/mm3 or > 10%, and clinical manifestations consistent with systemic vasculitis, with or without histologic evidence, were present. Asthma was the most frequently observed manifestation at presentation, with mononeuritis multiplex the second. Other common manifestations were weight loss, fever, myalgia, skin involvement, paranasal sinusitis, arthralgia, pulmonary infiltrate, and gastrointestinal involvement. Mean eosinophilia at presentation was 7.193 +/- 6.706/mm3; ANCA, present in 20 of 42 (47.6%) patients, predominantly gave the perinuclear labeling pattern. All the patients were treated with corticosteroids alone or in combination with cyclophosphamide or plasma exchanges. Clinical remission was obtained in 91.5%; 22 (25.6%) patients relapsed. Twenty-three patients died during follow-up: 11 of these deaths were directly due to vasculitis. The presence of severe gastrointestinal tract or myocardial involvement was significantly associated with a poor clinical outcome. The long-term prognosis of CSS is good and does not differ from that of polyarteritis nodosa, although most patients need low doses of oral corticosteroids for persistent asthma, even many years after clinical recovery from vasculitis.


Medicine | 1996

PROGNOSTIC FACTORS IN POLYARTERITIS NODOSA AND CHURG-STRAUSS SYNDROME : A PROSPECTIVE STUDY IN 342 PATIENTS

Loïc Guillevin; François Lhote; Martine Gayraud; Pascal Cohen; B. Jarrousse; Olivier Lortholary; Nadine Thibult; Philippe Casassus

We undertook this study to determine the clinical, biologic, immunologic, and therapeutic factors associated with the prognoses of polyarteritis nodosa (PAN) and Churg-Strauss syndrome (CSS). Three hundred forty-two patients (260 with PAN, 82 with CSS) followed from 1980 to 1993 were included in a prospective study on prognostic factors. Two hundred eighty-eight of these patients were included in the prospective studies on PAN and CSS. Items to be considered for analysis were collected at the time of diagnosis, during the acute phase of the disease. A survival curve was plotted for each clinical and biologic symptom observed in PAN or CSS. Each treatment arm of the prospective therapeutic trials was also tested: 1) prednisone (CS) + oral cyclophosphamide (CYC) + plasma exchanges (PE) versus CS E, 2) CS + PE versus CS, 3) CS + oral CY versus CS + pulse CY, 4) CS + pulse CY + PE versus CS + pulse CY in severe PAN and CSS, and 5) PE + antiviral agents after short-term CS in hepatitis B virus-related PAN. Of the parameters thus evaluated, the following had significant prognostic value and were responsible for higher mortality: proteinuria > 1 g/d (p < 0.0001; relative risk [RR] 3.6), renal insufficiency with serum creatinine > 1.58 mg/DL (p < 0.02; RR 1.86), GI tract involvement (p < 0.008. RR 2.83 for surgery). Cardiomyopathy and CNS involvement were associated with a RR of mortality of 2.18 and 1.76, respectively; these were not statistically significant. Similar survival rates were obtained with the prospectively tested therapies. The five-factors score (FFS) we established considered the prognostic factors creatinemia, proteinuria, cardiomyopathy, GI tract involvement, and CNS signs. Multivariate analysis showed that proteinuria (due to vascular or glomerular disease) and GI tract involvement were independent prognostic factors. When FFS = 0 (none of the 5 prognostic factors present), mortality at 5 years was 11.9%; when FFS = 1 (1 of the 5 factors present), mortality was 25.9% (p < 0.005); when FFS > 2 (3 or more of the 5 factors present), mortality was 45.95% (p < 0.0001 between 0 and 2, p < 0.05 between 1 and 2). We conclude that an initial assessment of PAN or CSS severity enables outcome and mortality to be predicted. The FFS is a good predictor of death and can be used to help the clinician choose the most adequate treatment. Renal and GI signs are the most serious prognostic factors.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 1999

Microscopic polyangiitis: clinical and laboratory findings in eighty-five patients.

Loïc Guillevin; Bernard Durand‐Gasselin; Ramiro Cevallos; Martine Gayraud; François Lhote; Patrice Callard; Jacques Amouroux; Philippe Casassus; B. Jarrousse

OBJECTIVE To retrospectively analyze the clinical symptoms, laboratory findings, and outcomes in patients with microscopic polyangiitis (MPA) who were enrolled in various clinical trials conducted by the French Vasculitis Study Group. METHODS A cohort of 85 patients meeting the Chapel Hill criteria for MPA participated in the study. Seventy-one of them were included in prospective therapeutic trials. Eighty-one diagnoses were biopsy proven. In the other patients, diagnosis was based on clinical findings. RESULTS Forty-seven men and 38 women, with a mean +/- SD age of 56.8 +/- 14.6 years, met the criteria for MPA. Their main clinical symptoms were renal manifestations (78.8%), weight loss (72.9%), skin involvement (62.4%), fever (55.3%), mononeuritis multiplex (57.6%), arthralgias (50.6%), myalgias (48.2%), hypertension (34.1%), lung involvement (24.7%; alveolar hemorrhage 11.8%), and cardiac failure (17.6%). The mean +/- SD serum creatinine level before treatment was 2.59 +/- 2.96 mg/dl; 47 patients had renal insufficiency (serum creatinine > 1.36 mg/dl). Eight patients underwent dialysis at the time of diagnosis, and long-term dialysis was necessary for 10 patients. Antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA) were present in 38 of 51 patients (74.5%), of whom 33 had a perinuclear staining pattern (pANCA) and 5 had a cytoplasmic pattern. Antibodies to proteinase 3 were present in 4 patients and antibodies to myeloperoxidase were detected in 31, as determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Of the 30 patients who underwent renal and celiac angiography, 4 had microaneurysms. Of the 29 patients (34.1%) who had relapses, 8 died during or after the relapse. During followup, 28 of the 85 patients (32.9%) died. The mean +/- SD duration of followup of the group was 69.9 +/- 60.6 months. Deaths were less frequent when patients had been treated with steroids and immunosuppressive drugs (13 patients [24.1%]) than with steroids alone (15 patients [48.4%]) (P < 0.01). The 5-year survival rate was 74%. CONCLUSION This study demonstrated that MPA is a multisystemic disease in which renal symptoms are frequent, but the disease is also associated with general symptoms, arthritis, mononeuritis multiplex, and other manifestations that are also seen in various vasculitides. The rarity of abnormal angiogram findings and the high frequency of pANCA are characteristic of MPA. In most cases, the outcome is comparable with those of other systemic vasculitides, but relapses are frequent.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2001

Long‐term followup of polyarteritis nodosa, microscopic polyangiitis, and Churg‐Strauss syndrome: Analysis of four prospective trials including 278 patients

Martine Gayraud; Loïc Guillevin; Philippe Le Toumelin; Pascal Cohen; François Lhote; Philippe Casassus; B. Jarrousse

OBJECTIVE To determine the long-term outcome of patients with polyarteritis nodosa (PAN), microscopic polyangiitis (MPA), and Churg-Strauss syndrome (CSS), to compare the long-term outcome with the overall French population, to evaluate the impact on outcome of the type of vasculitis, prognostic factors, and treatments administered at diagnosis, and to analyze treatment side effects and sequelae. METHODS Data from PAN, MPA, and CSS patients (n = 278) who were enrolled between 1980 and 1993 were collected in 1996 and 1997 and analyzed. Two prognostic scoring systems, the Five-Factors Score (FFS) and the Birmingham Vasculitis Activity Score (BVAS), were used to evaluate all patients at the time of diagnosis. RESULTS The mean (+/- SD) followup of the entire population was 88.3 +/- 51.9 months (range 3 days to 192 months). Of the 85 deaths recorded, at least 41 were due to progressive vasculitis or its consequences. Death rates reflected disease severity, as assessed by the FFS (P = 0.004) and the BVAS (P < 0.0002), and the 2 scores were correlated (r = 0.69). Relapses, rarer in hepatitis B virus (HBV)-related PAN (7.9%) than in MPA (34.5%) (P = 0.004), occurred in 56 patients (20.1%) and did not reflect disease severity. Survival curves were similar for the subpopulation of 215 patients with CSS, MPA, and non-HBV-related PAN who were given first-line corticosteroids (CS) with or without cyclophosphamide (CYC). However, CS with CYC therapy significantly prolonged survival for patients with FFS scores > or =2 (P = 0.041). Relapse rates were similar regardless of the treatment regimen; only patients treated with CS alone had uncontrolled disease. CYC was associated with a greater frequency of side effects (P < 0.00001). CONCLUSION Rates of mortality due to PAN (related or unrelated to HBV), MPA, and CSS reflected disease severity and were higher than the mortality rate in the general population (P < 0.0004). Rates of relapse, more common in MPA than HBV-related PAN patients, did not reflect disease severity. Survival rates were better among the more severely ill patients who had received first-line CYC. Based on these findings, we recommend that the intensity of the initial treatment be consistent with the severity of the disease. The use of the FFS and BVAS scores improved the ability to evaluate the therapeutic response.


Revue de Médecine Interne | 1991

Choix des antibiotiques dans les septicémies à yersinia enterocolitica

Martine Gayraud; M. Scavizzi; H. Mollaret; Loïc Guillevin; M. Hornstein

A retrospective study was undertaken to evaluate the effects and outcome of 40 patients with Yersinia enterocolitica septicemia. The clinical response to doxycycle was 83,3 % and to aminglycosides 81,8 %. Among more recent antibiotics, amoxicillin-acid clavulanic has failed in 75 %, third generation cephalosporins in 9,1 % with a slow improvement. The fluoroquinolones have been successful in all cases with a rapid improvement.


Revue de Médecine Interne | 1992

La neuropathie périphérique de la périartérite noueuse. Corrélation anatomo-clinique de 54 observations

R. Cevallos; Martine Gayraud; R. Gherardi; Loïc Guillevin

We review 54 cases of polyarteritis nodosa looking for the type of vessels involved. We studied the renal arteriographies and histological data in PN secondary to a hepatitis B virus and PN of a unknown etiology.


Revue de Médecine Interne | 1991

Tomodensitométrie du massif facial au cours de la granulomatose de Wegener ; étude rétrospective de 14 cas

B. Jarrousse; F. Bouscarat; Michel Brauner; Dominique Valeyre; Martine Gayraud; François Lhote; Loïc Guillevin

CT scans of the paranasal sinuses and orbits of 14 patients with Wegeners granulomatosis (WG) are reviewed. Plain film radiographs of the paranasal sinuses demonstrated non specific findings in 13 patients. CT findings showed nonspecific findings including thickened mucosa, sinus opacification in 13 patients. Six patients had also more specific findings, including bony erosion or destruction, ossification, perforation of the nasal septum, retroorbital mass. CT scan is useful in initial staging and treatment planning of patients with Wegeners granulomatosis and ENT involvement, especially in limited forms affecting upper respiratory tract.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2007

Churg-Strauss syndrome with poor-prognosis factors: A prospective multicenter trial comparing glucocorticoids and six or twelve cyclophosphamide pulses in forty-eight patients

Pascal Cohen; Christian Pagnoux; Alfred Mahr; Jean-Pierre Arène; Luc Mouthon; Véronique Le Guern; M. André; Martine Gayraud; David Jayne; Daniel Engelbert Blockmans; Jean-François Cordier; Loïc Guillevin


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 1993

Antibiotic Treatment of Yersinia enterocolitica Septicemia: A Retrospective Review of 43 Cases

Martine Gayraud; Maurice R. Scavizzi; Henri H. Mollaret; Loïc Guillevin; Michèle J. Hornstein


Medicine | 2002

Polyarteritis nodosa and Churg-Strauss angiitis: characteristics and outcome in 38 patients over 65 years.

Luc Mouthon; Philippe Le Toumelin; Marie Helene Andre; Martine Gayraud; Philippe Casassus; Loïc Guillevin

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Loïc Guillevin

Paris Descartes University

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P. Cohen

Paris Descartes University

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Luc Mouthon

Paris Descartes University

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