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Dive into the research topics where Nicolas Schleinitz is active.

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Featured researches published by Nicolas Schleinitz.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2008

Infections in 252 Patients with Common Variable Immunodeficiency

Eric Oksenhendler; Laurence Gérard; Claire Fieschi; Marion Malphettes; Gaël Mouillot; Roland Jaussaud; Jean-François Viallard; Martine Gardembas; Lionel Galicier; Nicolas Schleinitz; Felipe Suarez; Pauline Soulas-Sprauel; E. Hachulla; Arnaud Jaccard; Anaëlle Gardeur; Ioannis Theodorou; Claire Rabian; Patrice Debré

BACKGROUND Common variable immunodeficiency is characterized by recurrent infections and defective immunoglobulin production. METHODS The DEFI French national study prospectively enrolled adult patients with primary hypogammaglobulinemia. Clinical events before inclusion were retrospectively analyzed at that time. RESULTS From April 2004 through April 2007, 341 patients were enrolled, 252 of whom had received a diagnosis of common variable immunodeficiency; of those, 110 were male, 142 were female, and 228 were white. The median age at first symptoms was 19 years. The median age at common variable immunodeficiency diagnosis was 33.9 years. The median delay for diagnosis was 15.6 years for the 138 patients with initial symptoms before 1990 and 2.9 years for the 114 patients with initial symptoms from 1990 to the time of the study. The most frequent initial symptoms were upper respiratory tract infections: bronchitis (in 38% of patients), sinusitis (36%), pneumonia (31%), and/or bronchiectasis (14%). Overall, 240 patients had respiratory symptoms. Pneumonia was reported in 147 patients; Streptococcus pneumoniae and Haemophilus influenzae were documented in 46 and 17 cases, respectively. Recurrent or chronic diarrhea was reported in 118 patients. Giardia (35 cases), Salmonella (19), and Campylobacter (19) infections were more frequent in patients with undetectable serum immunoglobulin A (P<.001). Sixteen patients developed opportunistic infections. Persistent infections and requirement for antibiotics despite immunoglobulin substitution correlated with severe defect of memory switched B cells (P=.003) but not with immunoglobulin G trough levels (P=.55). CONCLUSION Although reduced within the past decade, the delay of diagnosis of common variable immunodeficiency remains unacceptable. Recurrence of upper respiratory tract infection or pneumonia should lead to systematic evaluation of serum immunoglobulin.


Medicine | 2012

Igg4-related Systemic Disease: Features and Treatment Response in a French Cohort

M. Ebbo; Laurent Daniel; M. Pavic; P. Sève; M. Hamidou; Emmanuel Andres; S. Burtey; L. Chiche; Jacques Serratrice; Maïté Longy-Boursier; M. Ruivard; Julien Haroche; Bertrand Godeau; Anne-Bérengère Beucher; Jean-Marie Berthelot; Thomas Papo; Jean-Loup Pennaforte; A. Benyamine; Noémie Jourde; Cédric Landron; P. Roblot; Olivier Moranne; Christine Silvain; Brigitte Granel; Fanny Bernard; V. Veit; K. Mazodier; E. Bernit; Hugues Rousset; José Boucraut

AbstractIgG4-related systemic disease is now recognized as a systemic disease that may affect various organs. The diagnosis is usually made in patients who present with elevated IgG4 in serum and tissue infiltration of diseased organs by numerous IgG4+ plasma cells, in the absence of validated diagnosis criteria. We report the clinical, laboratory, and histologic characteristics of 25 patients from a French nationwide cohort. We also report the treatment outcome and show that despite the efficacy of corticosteroids, a second-line treatment is frequently necessary. The clinical findings in our patients are not different from the results of previous reports from Eastern countries. Our laboratory and histologic findings, however, suggest, at least in some patients, a more broad polyclonal B cell activation than the skewed IgG4 switch previously reported. These observations strongly suggest the implication of a T-cell dependent B-cell polyclonal activation in IgG4-related systemic disease, probably at least in part under the control of T helper follicular cells.


Journal of Clinical Immunology | 2010

B-cell and T-cell phenotypes in CVID patients correlate with the clinical phenotype of the disease.

Gaël Mouillot; Maryvonnick Carmagnat; Laurence Gérard; Jean-Luc Garnier; Claire Fieschi; Nicolas Vince; Lionel Karlin; Jean-François Viallard; Roland Jaussaud; Julien Boileau; Jean Donadieu; Martine Gardembas; Nicolas Schleinitz; Felipe Suarez; E. Hachulla; Karen Delavigne; Martine Morisset; Serge Jacquot; Nicolas Just; Lionel Galicier; Dominique Charron; Patrice Debré; Eric Oksenhendler; Claire Rabian

BackgroundCommon variable immunodeficiency (CVID) is a heterogeneous disorder characterized by recurrent infections and defective immunoglobulin production.MethodsThe DEFI French national prospective study investigated peripheral T-cell and B-cell compartments in 313 CVID patients grouped according to their clinical phenotype, using flow cytometry.ResultsIn patients developing infection only (IO), the main B-cell or T-cell abnormalities were a defect in switched memory B cells and a decrease in naive CD4+ T cells associated with an increase in CD4+CD95+ cells. These abnormalities were more pronounced in patients developing lymphoproliferation (LP), autoimmune cytopenia (AC), or chronic enteropathy (CE). Moreover, LP and AC patients presented an increase in CD21low B cells and CD4+HLA-DR+ T cells and a decrease in regulatory T cells.ConclusionIn these large series of CVID patients, the major abnormalities of the B-cell and T-cell compartments, although a hallmark of CVID, were only observed in half of the IO patients and were more frequent and severe in patients with additional lymphoproliferative, autoimmune, and digestive complications.


Haematologica | 2010

Analysis of a French cohort of patients with large granular lymphocyte leukemia: a report on 229 cases

Benoît Bareau; J Rey; Mohamed Hamidou; Jean Donadieu; Jeff Morcet; Oumedaly Reman; Nicolas Schleinitz; Olivier Tournilhac; Mikael Roussel; Thierry Fest; Thierry Lamy

Background Large granular lymphocyte leukemia is a rare lymphoproliferative disorder associated with autoimmune diseases and impaired hematopoiesis. This study describes the clinical and biological characteristics of 229 patients with T-cell or NK-cell large granular lymphocyte leukemia. Design and Methods The diagnosis was based on a large granular lymphocyte expansion (> 0.5×109/L) lasting more than 6 months. Monoclonal T-cell receptor γ gene rearrangement was detected in all the cases of T-cell large granular lymphocyte leukemia. Patients with chronic NK-cell lymphocytosis had an indolent disease, while those with multiorgan large granular lymphocyte infiltration and an aggressive clinical disease were considered to have NK-cell large granular lymphocyte leukemia. Results The diagnosis of T-cell large granular lymphocyte leukemia was confirmed in 201 cases, chronic NK-cell lymphocytosis in 27 cases and NK-cell large granular lymphocyte leukemia in one case. Associated autoimmune diseases or other neoplasms were present in 74 and 32 cases, respectively. One hundred patients (44%) required treatment, mainly for neutropenia-associated infections (n=45), symptomatic autoimmune diseases (n =24), transfusion-dependant anemia (n=18), and other causes (n=13). Patients were treated with steroids (n= 33), methotrexate (n=62), cytoxan (n=32), or cyclosporine (n=24) either as first-, second-, third- or fourth-line therapy. The overall response rate at 3 months and complete response rate for the various treatments were as follows: steroids (12% and 3%), methotrexate (55% and 21%), cytoxan (66% and 47%), cyclosporine (21% and 4%), respectively. Four out of 13 patients responded to splenectomy. Eleven out of 15 patients responded to cytoxan after methotrexate treatment had failed. The mean number of treatments was 3.4 (range, 1–7). There were 15 large granular lymphocyte leukemia-related deaths. Conclusions Patients with T-cell large granular lymphocyte leukemia and chronic NK-cell lymphocytosis have similar clinical and biological features and responses to treatment. First-line therapy with cytoxan should be tested in a prospective trial.


Blood | 2011

Romiplostim safety and efficacy for immune thrombocytopenia in clinical practice: 2-year results of 72 adults in a romiplostim compassionate-use program

Mehdi Khellaf; Marc Michel; Philippe Quittet; Jean-François Viallard; Magda Alexis; Françoise Roudot-Thoraval; Stéphane Cheze; Jean-Marc Durand; François Lefrère; Lionel Galicier; Olivier Lambotte; Gérard Panelatti; Borhane Slama; Gandhi Damaj; Gérard Sébahoun; Emmanuel Gyan; Xavier Delbrel; Nathalie Dhedin; Bruno Royer; Nicolas Schleinitz; Jean-François Rossi; Matthieu Mahévas; Laetitia Languille; Philippe Bierling; Bertrand Godeau

Romiplostim, a thrombopoietic agent with demonstrated efficacy against immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) in prospective controlled studies, was recently licensed for adults with chronic ITP. Only France has allowed romiplostim compassionate use since January 2008. ITP patients could receive romiplostim when they failed to respond to successive corticosteroids, intravenous immunoglobulins, rituximab, and splenectomy, or when splenectomy was not indicated. We included the first 80 patients enrolled in this program with at least 2 years of follow-up. Primary platelet response (platelet count ≥ 50 × 10(9)/L and double baseline) was observed in 74% of all patients. Long-term responses (2 years) were observed in 47 (65%) patients, 37 (79%) had sustained platelet responses with a median platelet count of 106 × 10(9)/L (interquartile range, 75-167 × 10(9)/L), and 10 (21%) were still taking romiplostim, despite a median platelet count of 38 × 10(9)/L (interquartile range, 35-44 × 10(9)/L), but with clinical benefit (lower dose and/or fewer concomitant treatment(s) and/or diminished bleeding signs). A high bleeding score and use of concomitant ITP therapy were baseline factors predicting romiplostim failure. The most frequently reported adverse events were: arthralgias (26%), fatigue (13%), and nausea (7%). Our results confirmed that romiplostim use in clinical practice is effective and safe for severe chronic ITP. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT01013181.


International Journal of Rheumatology | 2012

Pathologies Associated with Serum IgG4 Elevation

M. Ebbo; A. Grados; E. Bernit; Frédéric Vély; José Boucraut; Jean-Robert Harlé; Laurent Daniel; Nicolas Schleinitz

Statement of Purpose. IgG4-related disease (IgG4-RD) is usually associated to an increase of serum IgG4 levels. However other conditions have also been associated to high serum IgG4 levels. Methods. All IgG subclasses analyses performed in our hospital over a one-year period were analyzed. When IgG4 level were over 1.35 g/L, the patients clinical observation was analyzed and both final diagnosis and reason leading to IgG subclasses analysis were recorded. Only polyclonal increases of IgG4 were considered. Summary of the Results. On 646 IgG subclass analysis performed, 59 patients had serum IgG4 over 1.35 g/L. The final diagnosis associated to serum IgG4 increase was very variable. Most patients (25%) presented with repeated infections, 13.5% with autoimmune diseases, and 10% with IgG4-RD. Other patients presented with cancer, primary immune deficiencies, idiopathic interstitial lung disease, cystic fibrosis, histiocytosis, or systemic vasculitis and 13.5% presented with various pathologies or no diagnosis. Mean IgG4 levels and IgG4/IgG ratio were higher in IgG4-RD than in other pathologies associated to elevated IgG4 levels. Conclusions. Our study confirms that elevation of serum IgG4 is not specific to IgG4-RD. Before retaining IgG4-RD diagnosis in cases of serum IgG4 above 1.35 g/L, several other pathological conditions should be excluded.


Oncologist | 2009

Cancer Awareness in Atypical Thrombotic Microangiopathies

Lucie Oberic; Marc Buffet; Mickael Schwarzinger; Agnès Veyradier; Karine Clabault; Sandrine Malot; Nicolas Schleinitz; Dominique Valla; Lionel Galicier; Leila Bengrine-Lefevre; Norbert-Claude Gorin; Paul Coppo

OBJECTIVE To specify the clinical and biological characteristics of thrombotic microangiopathies (TMAs) associated with a recent diagnosis of cancer. PATIENTS AND Methods. Multicenter study involving 14 national centers. Cross-sectional analysis of 20 patients with cancer-associated TMAs included in our national registry from October 2000 to July 2007. Patients were also compared with 134 adult patients with an acquired idiopathic TMA by univariate analysis. RESULTS Patients with a cancer-associated TMA typically displayed severe weight loss, dyspnea, bone pain, as well as disseminated intravascular coagulopathy and massive erythromyelemia (75%, 55%, 50%, 41%, and 85% of cases, respectively). By contrast, these features were observed with a much lower incidence in patients with an idiopathic TMA (8.9%, 19.7%, 0.8%, 7.1%, and 17.5%, respectively). Moreover, median platelet count was higher (48 x 10(9)/l; range, 21-73 x 10(9)/l versus 19 x 10(9)/l; range, 10-38 x 10(9)/l, respectively) and median serum creatinine level was lower (74 microM [range, 68-102] versus 113 microM [range, 80-225], respectively). The activity of the specific von Willebrand factor-cleaving proteinase ADAMTS13 was detectable in 14/17 studied patients. Platelet count improvement was observed in only seven patients and paralleled the response to chemotherapy. Prognosis of patients with cancer-associated TMAs was very poor, with a 30-day and 2-year mortality rate of 50% and 95%, respectively. CONCLUSION Cancer-associated TMAs display specific features at onset that should prompt investigation of an underlying disseminated malignancy. In this context, chemotherapy rather than plasma is mandatory since TMA prognosis parallels that of cancer.


European Journal of Immunology | 2004

Comparative analysis of NK cell subset distribution in normal and lymphoproliferative disease of granular lymphocyte conditions

Véronique Pascal; Nicolas Schleinitz; Corinne Brunet; Sophie Ravet; Elodie Bonnet; Xavier Lafarge; Mhammed Touinssi; Denis Reviron; Jean François Viallard; Jean François Moreau; Julie Déchanet-Merville; Patrick Blanco; Jean Robert Harle; José Sampol; Eric Vivier; Françoise Dignat-George; Pascale Paul

We have characterized the heterogeneity of human blood NK cell subsets defined by expression of KIR, lectin like receptors and NK cell differentiation markers within a cohort of 51 healthy Caucasian individuals. High inter‐individual variability in cell surface expression of most NK cell markers is observed. Range values defining NK cell subsets in healthy donors were further used as references to characterize 14 patients with NK‐type lymphoproliferative disease of granular lymphocytes (NK‐LDGL). Alterations of the KIR repertoire were noted in all NK‐LDGL patients. NK cell expansions were classified as oligoclonal KIR+ or as non‐detectable KIR (ndKIR) using anti‐KIR2DL1/2DS1, anti‐KIR2DL2/2DL3/2DS2, anti‐KIR3DL1 and anti‐KIR2DS4 monoclonal antibodies. A major reduction in the size of the CD56bright NK cell subset was a constant feature of NK‐LDGL. Altered distribution of CD94+, CD161+, and CD162R+ NK cell subsets was also observed in NK‐LDGL patients. Considering the potential role of NK cells in eliminating tumors or virus‐infected cells, the reference values defined in this study should be valuable to characterize both quantitative and qualitative alterations of the NK cell repertoire in pathological conditions and to monitor NK cell reconstitution following hematopoietic transplantation.


Medicine | 2004

Prospective investigation of a large outbreak of meningitis due to echovirus 30 during summer 2000 in marseilles, france.

E. Bernit; Xavier de Lamballerie; Christine Zandotti; Pierre Berger; V. Veit; Nicolas Schleinitz; Philippe de Micco; Jean Robert Harle; Rémi N. Charrel

Abstract: Enteroviruses (EVs) are responsible for an array of clinical diseases affecting different systems of the organism. Many cases are asymptomatic; the most severe clinical syndromes caused by EVs are due to infection of the central nervous system and present as aseptic meningitis or encephalitis. We report here a large outbreak of enteroviral meningitis that spread in Marseilles, France, during the year 2000. The dominant strain of the outbreak was genetically identified as a human echovirus 30. The study was conducted prospectively from May to December 2000, with an investigative protocol recording epidemiologic, clinical, and laboratory data. A total of 250 patients with febrile neurologic manifestations were included between May 15 and December 30, 2000. A total of 195 cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples, 114 throat swabs, and 85 stool specimens were processed through viral culture and resulted in respectively 117 (60%), 61 (54%), and 58 (68%) cultures positive for EV; 69/106 (65%) CSF samples tested positive for the presence of EV RNA. None of the throat swab cultures but 5 of the stool cultures in control patients were positive. One hundred thirty-nine (55.6%) patients were considered confirmed cases because they had positive culture or reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) in CSF, and 38 (15.2%) patients were considered probable cases because they had a positive throat and/or stool culture and a negative (or not performed) procedure in CSF. The 177 confirmed and probable cases were not significantly different from the remaining 73 patients in terms of age distribution and epidemiologic, clinical, and biologic characteristics. The median age was 18.4 years (range, 15 d to 84 yr), and 92% of patients were younger than 40 years old. The male:female sex ratio was 1.8:1. We found no evidence of cases spread in nosocomial, household, or institutional settings, or limited community spread. All patients were immunocompetent except 4 adults. Meningoencephalitis represented 5.6% of cases. All but 3 of the 177 patients had a good outcome without sequelae. Two immunocompetent adults with meningoencephalitis had neurologic sequelae and an immunosuppressed adult had a fatal outcome. Upper respiratory symptoms were noted in 18.5% of patients, diarrhea in 11.5%, various types of rash in 4.5%, and myalgia in 3.8%. In CSF, white cell count was elevated in 90% of cases, with a percentage of neutrophils >50% in 55% of cases. Protein level was increased in 43% of cases. In blood, C-reactive protein was elevated in 67% of cases. Other blood parameters were unremarkable. Clinical and laboratory features did not differ from those related to other pathogens that caused meningitis and meningoencephalitis. Hence, unnecessary treatment for other infections is frequently instituted during EV infections. Virologic diagnosis is important to distinguish between EV and other treatable bacterial and viral diseases. Abbreviations: CSF = cerebrospinal fluid; ECV-30 = Echovirus 30; EV = enterovirus.


Medicine | 2013

Correlation of clinicoserologic and pathologic classifications of inflammatory myopathies: study of 178 cases and guidelines for diagnosis.

Carla Fernandez; Nathalie Bardin; André Maues de Paula; Emmanuelle Salort-Campana; A. Benyamine; Jérôme Franques; Nicolas Schleinitz; P.J. Weiller; Jean Pouget; Jean-François Pellissier; Dominique Figarella-Branger

AbstractThe idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IIM) are acquired muscle diseases characterized by muscle weakness and inflammation on muscle biopsy. Clinicoserologic classifications do not take muscle histology into account to distinguish the subsets of IIM. Our objective was to determine the pathologic features of each serologic subset of IIM and to correlate muscle biopsy results with the clinicoserologic classification defined by Troyanov et al, and with the final diagnoses. We retrospectively studied a cohort of 178 patients with clinicopathologic features suggestive of IIM with the exclusion of inclusion body myositis. At the end of follow-up, 156 of 178 cases were still categorized as IIM: pure dermatomyositis, n = 44; pure polymyositis, n = 14; overlap myositis, n = 68; necrotizing autoimmune myopathy, n = 8; cancer-associated myositis, n = 18; and unclassified IIM, n = 4. The diagnosis of IIM was ruled out in the 22 remaining cases. Pathologic dermatomyositis was the most frequent histologic picture in all serologic subsets of IIM, with the exception of patients with anti-Ku or anti-SRP autoantibodies, suggesting that it supports the histologic diagnosis of pure dermatomyositis, but also myositis of connective tissue diseases and cancer-associated myositis. Unspecified myositis was the second most frequent histologic pattern. It frequently correlated with overlap myositis, especially with anti-Ku or anti-PM-Scl autoantibodies. Pathologic polymyositis was rare and more frequently correlated with myositis mimickers than true polymyositis. The current study shows that clinicoserologic and pathologic data are complementary and must be taken into account when classifying patients with IIM patients. We propose guidelines for diagnosis according to both clinicoserologic and pathologic classifications, to be used in clinical practice.

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E. Bernit

Aix-Marseille University

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G. Kaplanski

Aix-Marseille University

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J.-R. Harle

Aix-Marseille University

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M. Ebbo

Aix-Marseille University

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A. Grados

Aix-Marseille University

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Mickael Ebbo

Aix-Marseille University

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