Maryse Cartigny
university of lille
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Featured researches published by Maryse Cartigny.
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2011
Laurent Maïmoun; Pascal Philibert; Benoit Cammas; Françoise Audran; Philippe Bouchard; P. Fénichel; Maryse Cartigny; Catherine Pienkowski; Michel Polak; Nicos N. Skordis; Inas Mazen; Gönül Öcal; Merih Berberoglu; Rachel Reynaud; Clarisse Baumann; Sylvie Cabrol; Dominique Simon; Kabangu K. Kayemba-Kay's; Marc de Kerdanet; François Kurtz; Bruno Leheup; Claudine Heinrichs; Sylvie Tenoutasse; Guy Van Vliet; Annette Grüters; Marumudi Eunice; Ariachery C. Ammini; Mona Hafez; Zeev Hochberg; Sylvia S. Einaudi
CONTEXT In 46,XY disorders of sex development, 5α-reductase deficiency is rare and is not usually the first-intention diagnosis in newborn ambiguous genitalia, contrary to partial androgen insensitivity syndrome. Yet the cause of ambiguous genitalia may guide sex assignment, and rapid, precise diagnosis of 5α-reductase deficiency is essential. OBJECTIVE The aim of the study was to describe relevant data for clinical diagnosis, biological investigation, and molecular determination from 55 patients with srd5A2 mutations identified in our laboratory over 20 yr to improve early diagnosis. SETTING The study was performed at Montpellier University Hospital. PATIENTS We studied a cohort of 55 patients with srd5A2 gene mutations. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S) Genetic analysis of srd5A2 was conducted. RESULTS Clitoromegaly (49.1%) and microphallus with various degrees of hypospadias (32.7%) were frequent phenotypes. Female external genitalia (7.3%) and isolated micropenis (3.6%) were rare. Seventy-two percent of patients were initially assigned to female gender; five of them (12.5%) switched to male sex in peripuberty. Over 72% of patients were considered for 5α-reductase deficiency diagnosis when the testosterone/dihydrotestosterone cutoff was 10. In 55 patients (with 20 having a history of consanguinity), we identified 33 different mutations. Five have never been reported: p.G32S, p.Y91H, p.G104E, p.F223S, and c.461delT. Homozygous mutations were present in 69.1% of cases, compound heterozygous mutations in 25.5%, and compound heterozygous mutations alone with the V89L polymorphism in 5.4%. Exons 1 and 4 were most affected, with 35.8 and 21.7% mutant alleles per exon, respectively. CONCLUSIONS In the largest cohort to date, we demonstrate a wide spectrum of phenotypes and biological profiles in patients with 5α-reductase deficiency, whatever their geographical or ethnic origins.
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2015
Claire Bouvattier; Laure Esterle; Peggy Renoult-Pierre; Aude Brac de la Perriere; F. Illouz; V. Kerlan; Véronique Pascal-Vigneron; D. Drui; Sophie Christin-Maitre; Françoise Galland; Thierry Brue; Yves Reznik; Frank Schillo; Denis Pinsard; Xavier Piguel; Gérard Chabrier; Bénédicte Decoudier; Philippe Emy; I. Tauveron; Marie-Laure Raffin-Sanson; Jérôme Bertherat; Jean-Marc Kuhn; Philippe Caron; Maryse Cartigny; Olivier Chabre; Yves Morel; Philippe Touraine; Véronique Tardy-Guidollet; Jacques Young
CONTEXT Outcomes of congenital adrenal hyperplasia due to classic 21-hydroxylase deficiency (21OHD) have been widely studied in children and women, but less so in men. OBJECTIVE The objective was to analyze data from a network of metropolitan French teaching hospitals on the clinical outcome of classic 21OHD in a large sample of congenital adrenal hyperplasia/21OHD-genotyped adult men, and particularly the impact of 21OHD on the gonadotrope axis, testicular function, and fertility. METHODS From April 2011 to June 2014, tertiary endocrinology departments provided data for 219 men with 21OHD (ages, 18-70 y; 73.6% salt wasters, 26.4% simple virilizers). Testicular sonography was performed in 164 men, and sperm analysis was performed in 71 men. RESULTS Mean final height was 7.8 cm lower than in a reference population. Obesity was more common, and mean blood pressure was lower than in the reference population. None of the patients were diabetic, and lipid status was generally normal. Blood electrolyte status was normal in the vast majority of men, despite markedly elevated ACTH and renin levels. Serum progesterone, 17-hydroxyprogesterone, and androstenedione levels were above normal in the vast majority of cases. Hormonal profiling variously showed a normal gonadotrope-testicular axis, gonadotropin deficiency, or primary testicular insufficiency. Testicular sonography revealed testicular adrenal rest tumors (TARTs) in 34% of 164 men. Serum inhibin B and FSH levels were significantly lower and higher, respectively, in patients with TARTs. Severe oligospermia or azoospermia was found in 42% of patients and was significantly more prevalent in men with TARTs (70%) than in men with normal testes (3.6%; P < .0001). Among men living with female partners, TARTs were significantly more prevalent in those who had not fathered children. CONCLUSION We report the spectrum of testicular/gonadotrope axis impairment in the largest cohort of 21OHD men studied to date. Our results suggest that French men with 21OHD managed in specialized centers frequently have impaired exocrine testicular function but that its reproductive implications are often overlooked.
International Journal of Andrology | 2010
Laurent Maïmoun; Pascal Philibert; Benoit Cammas; Françoise Audran; Catherine Pienkowski; François Kurtz; C. Heinrich; Maryse Cartigny; Charles Sultan
The observation of ambiguous genitalia in the newborn signals a medical, surgical and psychological emergency. The most crucial decision will be the choice of sex assignment. Rapid and precise diagnosis is thus essential. In XY newborns with normal/high plasma testosterone (T), partial androgen insensitivity syndrome (PAIS) is usually the first diagnosis evoked, which implies an androgen receptor (AR) defect. The diagnosis of steroid-5-alpha-reductase deficiency is rarely considered by the paediatrician. We report three new SRD5A2 gene mutations in four newborns from France, Morocco and Turkey. The newborns presented with ambiguous genitalia and normal plasma T values and the initial diagnosis\PAIS. In all four cases, normal sequences of the complete AR gene excluded this diagnosis and raised the hypothesis of 5α-reductase deficiency. The entire coding region (5 exons) of the SRD5A2 gene was assessed by PCR and direct sequencing analysis. For patient 1, we identified a new homozygous 2bp deletion in exon 1 (c.122_123delAG). Patient 2 had a known homozygous mutation, p.G115D, in exon 2. New compound heterozygous mutations in exon 4 (p.A215V) and exon 5 (p.X255Q) were found in patient 3. Patient 4 presented a new substitution in exon 1 (p.S14R) associated with a known polymorphism (p.V89L). Our data confirm our previous experience and clearly demonstrate that a 5-α reductase defect should be considered in all XY newborns with ambiguous genitalia and normal plasma T secretion, whatever their geographic area or ethnic group; moreover, this defect was not linked to specific phenotype. Early molecular diagnosis is indispensable for the crucial decision of the newborns sex of rearing.
Clinical Genetics | 2017
Cindy Colson; Estelle Aubry; Maryse Cartigny; Amélie‐Anne Rémy; Hélène Franquet; Xavier Leroy; Géraldine Kéchid; Christine Lefevre; R. Besson; Martine Cools; Anne Françoise Spinoit; Charles Sultan; Sylvie Manouvrier; Pascal Philibert; Jamal Ghoumid
Steroidogenic factor 1 (encoded by SF1/NR5A1) is a transcription factor with multiple target genes involved in the development and function of multiple steroidogenic and non‐steroidogenic tissues. NR5A1 mutations lead to several phenotypes, including sex reversal, spermatogenesis failure, premature ovarian failure and adrenocortical insufficiency. The implication of NR5A1 mutations in spleen development anomalies was recently highlighted. We provide new evidence of this involvement, describing a novel heterozygous non‐sense NR5A1 mutation in a 46,XY‐DSD with polysplenia female proband and her father, who had hypospadias and asplenia.
European Journal of Human Genetics | 2017
Jamal Ghoumid; Florence Petit; Odile Boute-Benejean; Frédéric Frénois; Maryse Cartigny; Clémence Vanlerberghe; Thomas Smol; Roseline Caumes; Nicolas de Roux; Sylvie Manouvrier-Hanu
CHES (cerebellar hypoplasia with endosteal sclerosis) syndrome (OMIM#213002) associates hypomyelination, cerebellar atrophy, hypogonadism and hypodontia. So far, only five patients have been described. The condition is of neonatal onset. Patients have severe psychomotor delay and moderate to severe intellectual disability. Inheritance is assumed to be autosomal recessive due to recurrence in sibs, consanguinity of parents and absence of vertical transmission. CHES syndrome is reminiscent of 4H-leukodystrophy, a recessive-inherited affection due to variations in genes encoding subunits of the RNA polymerase III (POLR3A–POLR3B–POLR1C). POLR3B variants have been identified in one CHES patient. Here we report on a novel CHES patient, carrying compound heterozygous variations in POLR3B. This report confirms affiliation of CHES to POLR3-related disorders and suggests that CHES syndrome represents a severe form of 4H-leukodystrophy.
Journal of Pediatric Urology | 2010
Patricia Bartaire; R. Besson; Maryse Cartigny; Sylvie Manouvrier-Hanu; Jacques Weil; V. Houfflin-Debarge
Purpose Improvements in ultrasound technology and practice of fetal karyotype lead to diagnose different types of Disorder of Sexual Development (DSD) during the prenatal period: abnormalities of fetal genitalia, sex chromosome mosaicism with Y material and discrepancy between phenotypic and chromosomal sex. Material and Methods We retrospectively studied DSD patients born between 1997 and 2007 referred to the Lille University Hospital either to the Multidisciplinary Prenatal Diagnosis Centre in case of prenatal diagnosis, or to the paediatric, surgical and genetic teams in case of postnatal diagnosis. Results We collected 30 pregnancies with fetal DSD. In 20 cases, an abnormality of the fetal genitalia was suspected (Median fetal age was 23.5 weeks’ gestation at diagnosis). In 2 cases, a recurrence risk of a familial form of syndromic DSD was monitored. In 8 cases, karyotype revealed sex chromosome mosaicism or discrepancy between phenotypic and chromosomal sex. Review by the referral center detected 5 false-positives and confirmed 25 cases of prenatal DSD. Examination at birth ascertained 22 cases. Finally 22/108 (20%) of the all DSD registered in our center were diagnosed prenatally. Conclusions Prenatal identification of DSD must lead to a multidisciplinary and standardized management: we propose a decision-making algorithm to provide prenatal investigations.
International Journal of Pediatric Endocrinology | 2017
Pierre Bougnères; Claire Bouvattier; Maryse Cartigny; Lina Michala
Archive | 2016
Christine Lefevre; Jacques Weill; Harmony Mazoyer; Maryse Cartigny
Archive | 2016
Robert Novo; Maryse Cartigny; Christine Lefevre; Jacques Weill
Archive | 2016
Madeleine Gottrand; Estelle Aubry; Aurelien Aumar; Robert Caiazzo; Maryse Cartigny; Marie Pigeyre; François Pattou; Iva Gueorguieva