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Dive into the research topics where Olivier Hermine is active.

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Featured researches published by Olivier Hermine.


European Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2007

Standards and standardization in mastocytosis: Consensus Statements on Diagnostics, Treatment Recommendations and Response Criteria

Peter Valent; Cem Akin; Luis Escribano; Manuela Födinger; Karin Hartmann; Knut Brockow; Mariana Castells; Wolfgang R. Sperr; Hanneke C. Kluin-Nelemans; N. A. T. Hamdy; Olivier Lortholary; J. Robyn; J. van Doormaal; Karl Sotlar; Alexander W. Hauswirth; Michel Arock; Olivier Hermine; Andrzej Hellmann; Massimo Triggiani; Marek Niedoszytko; Lawrence B. Schwartz; Alberto Orfao; H.-P. Horny; Dean D. Metcalfe

Although a classification for mastocytosis and diagnostic criteria are available, there remains a need to define standards for the application of diagnostic tests, clinical evaluations, and treatment responses. To address these demands, leading experts discussed current issues and standards in mastocytosis in a Working Conference. The present article provides the resulting outcome with consensus statements, which focus on the appropriate application of clinical and laboratory tests, patient selection for interventional therapy, and the selection of appropriate drugs. In addition, treatment response criteria for the various clinical conditions, disease‐specific symptoms, and specific pathologies are provided. Resulting recommendations and algorithms should greatly facilitate the management of patients with mastocytosis in clinical practice, selection of patients for therapies, and the conduct of clinical trials.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2012

Treatment of Older Patients with Mantle-Cell Lymphoma

Hanneke C. Kluin-Nelemans; Eva Hoster; Olivier Hermine; Jan Walewski; Marek Trneny; Christian H. Geisler; Stephan Stilgenbauer; Catherine Thieblemont; Ursula Vehling-Kaiser; J. Doorduijn; Bertrand Coiffier; Roswitha Forstpointner; H. Tilly; Lothar Kanz; Pierre Feugier; Michal Szymczyk; Michael Hallek; Stephan Kremers; G. Lepeu; Laurence Sanhes; Josée M. Zijlstra; Reda Bouabdallah; Pieternella J. Lugtenburg; Margaret Macro; Michael Pfreundschuh; Vit Prochazka; F. Di Raimondo; Vincent Ribrag; Michael Uppenkamp; Marc André

BACKGROUND The long-term prognosis for older patients with mantle-cell lymphoma is poor. Chemoimmunotherapy results in low rates of complete remission, and most patients have a relapse. We investigated whether a fludarabine-containing induction regimen improved the complete-remission rate and whether maintenance therapy with rituximab prolonged remission. METHODS We randomly assigned patients 60 years of age or older with mantle-cell lymphoma, stage II to IV, who were not eligible for high-dose therapy to six cycles of rituximab, fludarabine, and cyclophosphamide (R-FC) every 28 days or to eight cycles of rituximab, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone (R-CHOP) every 21 days. Patients who had a response underwent a second randomization to maintenance therapy with rituximab or interferon alfa, each given until progression. RESULTS Of the 560 patients enrolled, 532 were included in the intention-to-treat analysis for response, and 485 in the primary analysis for response. The median age was 70 years. Although complete-remission rates were similar with R-FC and R-CHOP (40% and 34%, respectively; P=0.10), progressive disease was more frequent with R-FC (14%, vs. 5% with R-CHOP). Overall survival was significantly shorter with R-FC than with R-CHOP (4-year survival rate, 47% vs. 62%; P=0.005), and more patients in the R-FC group died during the first remission (10% vs. 4%). Hematologic toxic effects occurred more frequently in the R-FC group than in the R-CHOP group, but the frequency of grade 3 or 4 infections was balanced (17% and 14%, respectively). In 274 of the 316 patients who were randomly assigned to maintenance therapy, rituximab reduced the risk of progression or death by 45% (in remission after 4 years, 58%, vs. 29% with interferon alfa; hazard ratio for progression or death, 0.55; 95% confidence interval, 0.36 to 0.87; P=0.01). Among patients who had a response to R-CHOP, maintenance therapy with rituximab significantly improved overall survival (4-year survival rate, 87%, vs. 63% with interferon alfa; P=0.005). CONCLUSIONS R-CHOP induction followed by maintenance therapy with rituximab is effective for older patients with mantle-cell lymphoma. (Funded by the European Commission and others; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00209209.).


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2010

Meta-Analysis on the Use of Zidovudine and Interferon-Alfa in Adult T-Cell Leukemia/Lymphoma Showing Improved Survival in the Leukemic Subtypes

Ali Bazarbachi; Y. Plumelle; Juan Carlos Ramos; Patricia Tortevoye; Zaher K. Otrock; Graham R. Taylor; Antoine Gessain; William J. Harrington; Gérard Panelatti; Olivier Hermine

PURPOSE Human T-cell lymphotropic virus type-I-associated adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATL) is an aggressive, chemotherapy-resistant malignancy. Multiple small studies using zidovudine (AZT) and interferon-alfa (IFN-α) have shown response in patients with ATL. However, the impact of this innovative antiviral treatment strategy on long-term survival remains undetermined. PATIENTS AND METHODS We report a meta-analysis of antiviral therapy of ATL. Medical records of 254 patients with ATL who were treated in the United States, the United Kingdom, Martinique, and continental France were individually reviewed. RESULTS According to Shimoyama classification, there were 116 patients with acute ATL, 18 patients with chronic ATL, 11 patients with smoldering ATL, and 100 patients with ATL lymphoma. In 231 patients with available survival data, first-line therapy was recorded in 207 patients. Five-year overall survival rates were 46% for 75 patients who received first-line antiviral therapy (P = .004), 20% for 77 patients who received first-line chemotherapy, and 12% for 55 patients who received first-line chemotherapy followed by antiviral therapy. Patients with acute, chronic, and smoldering ATL significantly benefited from first-line antiviral therapy, whereas patients with ATL lymphoma experienced a better outcome with chemotherapy. In acute ATL, achievement of complete remission with antiviral therapy resulted in 82% 5-year survival. Antiviral therapy in chronic and smoldering ATL resulted in 100% 5-year survival. Multivariate analysis confirmed that first-line antiviral therapy significantly improves overall survival of patients with ATL (hazard ratio, 0.47; 95% CI, 0.27 to 0.83; P = .021). CONCLUSION These results confirm the high efficacy of AZT and IFN, which should now be considered the gold standard first-line therapy in leukemic subtypes of ATL.


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2010

Pediatric Mastocytosis Is a Clonal Disease Associated with D816V and Other Activating c-KIT Mutations

C. Bodemer; Olivier Hermine; Fabienne Palmerini; Ying Yang; Catherine Grandpeix-Guyodo; Phillip S. Leventhal; S. Hadj-Rabia; Laurent Nasca; S. Georgin-Lavialle; Annick Cohen-Akenine; Jean-Marie Launay; Stéphane Barete; Frédéric Féger; Michel Arock; Benoı̂t Catteau; Beatrix Sans; J.-F. Stalder; François Skowron; Luc Thomas; Gérard Lorette; P. Plantin; Pierre Bordigoni; O. Lortholary; Yves de Prost; Alain Moussy; Hagay Sobol; Patrice Dubreuil

Adult mastocytosis is an incurable clonal disease associated with c-KIT mutations, mostly in exon 17 (D816V). In contrast, pediatric mastocytosis often spontaneously regresses and is considered a reactive disease. Previous studies on childhood mastocytosis assessed only a few patients and focused primarily on codon 816 mutations, with various results. In this study, we analyzed the entire c-KIT sequence from cutaneous biopsies of 50 children with mastocytosis (ages 0-16 years). A mutation of codon 816 (exon 17) was found in 42% of cases, and mutations outside exon 17 were observed in 44%. Unexpectedly, half of the mutations were located in the fifth Ig loop of c-KITs extracellular domain, which is encoded by exons 8 and 9. All mutations identified in this study were somatic and caused a constitutive activation of c-KIT. There was no clear phenotype-genotype correlation, no clear relationship between the mutations and familial versus spontaneous disease, and no significant change in the relative expression of the c-KIT GNNK+ and GNNK isoforms. These findings strongly support the idea that, although pediatric mastocytosis can spontaneously regress, it is a clonal disease most commonly associated with activating mutations in c-KIT.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Masitinib (AB1010), a Potent and Selective Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor Targeting KIT

Patrice Dubreuil; Sébastien Letard; Marco A. Ciufolini; Laurent Gros; Martine Humbert; Nathalie Casteran; Laurence Borge; Bérengère Hajem; Anne Lermet; Wolfgang Sippl; Edwige Voisset; Michel Arock; Christian Auclair; Phillip S. Leventhal; Colin Mansfield; Alain Moussy; Olivier Hermine

Background The stem cell factor receptor, KIT, is a target for the treatment of cancer, mastocytosis, and inflammatory diseases. Here, we characterise the in vitro and in vivo profiles of masitinib (AB1010), a novel phenylaminothiazole-type tyrosine kinase inhibitor that targets KIT. Methodology/Principal Findings In vitro, masitinib had greater activity and selectivity against KIT than imatinib, inhibiting recombinant human wild-type KIT with an half inhibitory concentration (IC50) of 200±40 nM and blocking stem cell factor-induced proliferation and KIT tyrosine phosphorylation with an IC50 of 150±80 nM in Ba/F3 cells expressing human or mouse wild-type KIT. Masitinib also potently inhibited recombinant PDGFR and the intracellular kinase Lyn, and to a lesser extent, fibroblast growth factor receptor 3. In contrast, masitinib demonstrated weak inhibition of ABL and c-Fms and was inactive against a variety of other tyrosine and serine/threonine kinases. This highly selective nature of masitinib suggests that it will exhibit a better safety profile than other tyrosine kinase inhibitors; indeed, masitinib-induced cardiotoxicity or genotoxicity has not been observed in animal studies. Molecular modelling and kinetic analysis suggest a different mode of binding than imatinib, and masitinib more strongly inhibited degranulation, cytokine production, and bone marrow mast cell migration than imatinib. Furthermore, masitinib potently inhibited human and murine KIT with activating mutations in the juxtamembrane domain. In vivo, masitinib blocked tumour growth in mice with subcutaneous grafts of Ba/F3 cells expressing a juxtamembrane KIT mutant. Conclusions Masitinib is a potent and selective tyrosine kinase inhibitor targeting KIT that is active, orally bioavailable in vivo, and has low toxicity.


Oncogene | 2005

Vital functions for lethal caspases

Sophie Launay; Olivier Hermine; Michaela Fontenay; Guido Kroemer; Eric Solary; Carmen Garrido

Caspases are a family of cysteine proteases expressed as inactive zymogens in virtually all animal cells. These enzymes play a central role in most cell death pathways leading to apoptosis but growing evidences implicate caspases also in nonapoptotic functions. Several of these enzymes, activated in molecular platforms referred to as inflammasomes, play a role in innate immune response by processing some of the cytokines involved in inflammatory response. Caspases are requested for terminal differentiation of specific cell types, whether this differentiation process leads to enucleation or not. These enzymes play also a role in T and B lymphocyte proliferation and, in some circumstances, appear to be cytoprotective rather than cytotoxic. These pleiotropic functions implicate caspases in the control of life and death but the fine regulation of their dual effect remains poorly understood. The nonapoptotic functions of caspases implicate that cells can restrict the proteolytic activity of these enzymes to selected substrates. Deregulation of the pathways in which caspases exert these nonapoptotic functions is suspected to play a role in the pathophysiology of several human diseases.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2002

Shortened First-Line High-Dose Chemotherapy for Patients With Poor-Prognosis Aggressive Lymphoma

Christian Gisselbrecht; Eric Lepage; Thierry Molina; Bruno Quesnel; Georges Fillet; P. Lederlin; Bertrand Coiffier; Hervé Tilly; Jean Gabarre; Francoise Guilmin; Olivier Hermine; Felix Reyes

PURPOSE Randomized trial LNH93-3 was conducted on patients who had poor-prognosis aggressive lymphoma and were younger than 60 years with two to three factors of the age-adjusted International Prognostic Index to evaluate the benefit of early high-dose therapy (HDT) with autologous stem-cell transplantation (ASCT). PATIENTS AND METHODS Patients were randomized between doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, vindesine, bleomycin, and prednisone (ACVBP) chemotherapy followed by sequential consolidation and an experimental shortened treatment consisting of three cycles with escalated doses of cyclophosphamide, epirubicin, vindesine, bleomycin, and prednisone and collection of peripheral-blood stem cells. On day 60, HDT was administered with 1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea, etoposide, cytarabine, and melphalan followed by ASCT. RESULTS Eligible patients (n = 370) with aggressive lymphoma were analyzed. For ACVBP (181 patients) and HDT (189 patients), respective complete remission rates were 64% and 63%. With a median follow-up of 60 months, 5-year overall survival and event-free survival for ACVBP and HDT were 60% +/- 8% and 46% +/- 8% (P =.007) and 52 +/- 8% and 39 +/- 8% (P =.01), respectively. Survival was independently affected by age greater than 40 years (P =.0003), T-cell phenotype (P =.009), bone marrow involvement (P =.003), and HDT treatment group (P =.04). CONCLUSION Early HDT with ASCT in high-risk patients was inferior to the ACVBP chemotherapy regimen. These results indicate that the received dose-intensity before HDT was too low when compared with ACVBP and HDT and was given too early.


British Journal of Haematology | 1998

Prognostic factors for survival and response after high-dose therapy and autologous stem cell transplantation in systemic AL amyloidosis: a report on 21 patients

Philippe Moreau; Véronique Leblond; Priscille Bourquelot; Thierry Facon; Anne Huynh; Denis Caillot; Olivier Hermine; Michel Attal; M. Hamidou; Gérard Nedellec; Augustin Ferrant; Bruno Audhuy; Régis Bataille; Noel Milpied; Jean-Luc Harousseau

We retrospectively investigated the feasibility and the toxicity of autologous stem cell transpantation (ASCT) in 21 cases of systemic amyloidosis (AL). The conditioning regimens consisted of high‐dose melphalan (HDM) alone (n = 18) or in combination with 12 Gy total body irradiation (n = 3). Toxic death rate was high: 9/21 patients (43%) died within the first month following ASCT, and 10/12 surviving patients achieved a response. With a median follow‐up of 14 months, the OS and the EFS rates at 4 years were 57.1% (±10.8) and 29.9% (±14.5) respectively for the whole group. The major prognostic factor for both response and survival was the number of clinical manifestations at the time of ASCT, of the following five criteria, i.e. creatinine clearance <30 ml/min, nephrotic syndrome with urinary protein excretion > 3000 mg/24 h, congestive heart failure, neuropathy, or hepatomegaly associated with alkaline phosphatase level > 200 IU/l. For patients presenting with two or more clinical manifestations the 4‐year OS and EFS were both 11.1% compared with 91.7% and 46.3% respectively in patients with fewer than two clinical manifestations at the time of ACST. We conclude that ASCT is feasible in AL in a subset of patients with fewer than two clinical manifestations at the time of ASCT. Given the severe extra‐haematological toxicity, ASCT should not be considered in other cases.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2001

Identification of Prognostic Factors in 61 Patients With Posttransplantation Lymphoproliferative Disorders

Véronique Leblond; Nathalie Dhedin; Marie-France Mamzer Bruneel; Sylvain Choquet; Olivier Hermine; Raphael Porcher; Stéphanie Nguyen Quoc; Frederic Davi; Frédéric Charlotte; Richard Dorent; Benoit Barrou; Jean-Paul Vernant; Martine Raphael; Vincent Levy

PURPOSE Prognostic studies of posttransplantation lymphoproliferative disorders (PTLDs) are hindered by the small number of cases at each transplant center. We analyzed prognostic factors and long-term outcome according to clinical manifestations, pathologic features, and treatment and investigated the prognostic value of the non-Hodgkins lymphoma International Prognostic Index (IPI) in 61 patients with PTLD. PATIENTS AND METHODS We studied 61 patients in two institutions who developed PTLD and analyzed factors influencing the complete remission and survival rates. RESULTS In univariate analysis, factors predictive of failure to achieve complete remission were performance status (PS) > or = (P =.0001) and nondetection of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) in the tumor (P =.01). Only a negative link with PS > or = 2 was observed in multivariate analysis. In univariate analysis, factors predictive of lower survival were PS > or = 2, the number of sites (one v > one), primary CNS localization, T-cell origin, monoclonality, nondetection of EBV, and treatment with chemotherapy. The IPI failed to identify a patient subgroup with better survival and was less predictive of the response rate than was a specific index using two risk factors (PS and number of involved sites), which defined three groups of patients: low-risk patients whose median survival time has not yet been reached, intermediate-risk patients with a median survival time of 34 months, and high-risk patients with a median survival time of 1 month. CONCLUSION PS and the number of involved sites defined three risk groups in our population. The value of these prognostic factors needs to be confirmed in larger cohorts of patients treated in prospective multicenter studies.


Oncogene | 2003

Effect of tyrosine kinase inhibitor STI571 on the kinase activity of wild-type and various mutated c-kit receptors found in mast cell neoplasms.

Yael Zermati; Paulo De Sepulveda; Frédéric Féger; Sebastion Létard; Joelle Kersual; Nathalie Casteran; Guy Gorochov; Michel Dy; Antoni Ribadeau Dumas; Karim Dorgham; Christophe Parizot; Yann Bieche; Michel Vidaud; Olivier Lortholary; Michel Arock; Olivier Hermine; Patrice Dubreuil

Systemic mastocytosis (SM) is a rare disease caused by an abnormal mast cell accumulation in various tissues. Two classes of constitutive activating c-kit mutations are found in SM. The most frequent class occurs in the catalytic pocket coding region with substitutions at codon 816 and the other in the intracellular juxtamembrane coding region. Therefore, kinase inhibitors that block mutated c-kit activity might be used as therapeutic agents in SM. Here, we show that STI571 inhibits both wild-type and juxtamembrane mutant c-kit kinase activity, but has no effect on the activity of the D816 V mutant. Accordingly, STI571 selectively decreases the survival of normal mast cell and of mast cell lines either with juxtamembrane c-kit mutations, but not that of tumoral mast cell from patient with SM or of mast cell lines with the D816 V mutation. Therefore, STI571 is not a good candidate to treat SM and specific kinase inhibitors should be designed to inhibit constitutive activating mutations at codon 816.

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Felipe Suarez

Paris Descartes University

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Ali Bazarbachi

American University of Beirut

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Richard Delarue

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Nicole Brousse

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Danielle Canioni

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Bruno Varet

Paris Descartes University

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Vincent Ribrag

Université Paris-Saclay

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Marie-Olivia Chandesris

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Alain Fischer

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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