P. Guilpain
University of Montpellier
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Featured researches published by P. Guilpain.
Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2013
Cloé Comarmond; Christian Pagnoux; Mehdi Khellaf; Jean-François Cordier; Mohamed Hamidou; Jean-François Viallard; F. Maurier; Stéphane Jouneau; Boris Bienvenu; Xavier Puéchal; O. Aumaître; Guillaume Le Guenno; Alain Le Quellec; Ramiro Cevallos; Olivier Fain; Bertrand Godeau; R. Seror; Alfred Mahr; P. Guilpain; P. Cohen; Achille Aouba; Luc Mouthon; Loïc Guillevin
OBJECTIVE Earlier studies of eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis (Churg-Strauss) (EGPA), with limited patient numbers and followup durations, demonstrated that clinical presentation at diagnosis, but not outcome, differed according to antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA) status. This study was undertaken to describe the main characteristics of a larger patient cohort and their long-term outcomes. METHODS A retrospective study of EGPA patients in the French Vasculitis Study Group cohort who satisfied the American College of Rheumatology criteria and/or Chapel Hill definitions was conducted. Patient characteristics and outcomes were compared according to ANCA status and year of diagnosis. RESULTS We identified 383 patients diagnosed between 1957 and June 2009 (128 [33.4%] before 1997 or earlier) and followed up for a mean±SD of 66.8±62.5 months. At diagnosis, their mean±SD age was 50.3±15.7 years, and 91.1% had asthma (duration 9.3±10.8 years). Main manifestations included peripheral neuropathy (51.4%); ear, nose, and throat (ENT) signs (48.0%); skin lesions (39.7%); lung infiltrates (38.6%); and cardiomyopathy (16.4%). Among the 348 patients tested at diagnosis for ANCA, the 108 ANCA-positive patients (31.0%) had significantly more frequent ENT manifestations, peripheral neuropathy, and/or renal involvement, but less frequent cardiac manifestations, than the ANCA-negative patients. Vasculitis relapses occurred in 35.2% of the ANCA-positive versus 22.5% of the ANCA-negative patients (P=0.01), and 5.6% versus 12.5%, respectively, died (P<0.05). The 5-year relapse-free survival rate was 58.1% (95% confidence interval [95% CI] 45.6-68.6) for ANCA-positive and 67.8% (95% CI 59.8-74.5) for ANCA-negative patients (P=0.35). Multivariable analysis identified cardiomyopathy, older age, and diagnosis during or prior to 1996 as independent risk factors for death and lower eosinophil count at diagnosis as predictive of relapse. CONCLUSION The characteristics and long-term outcomes of EGPA patients differ according to their ANCA status. Although EGPA relapses remain frequent, mortality has declined, at least since 1996.
Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2009
Y Allenbach; R. Seror; Christian Pagnoux; L Teixeira; P. Guilpain; L. Guillevin
Objective: To determine the frequency and risk factors of venous thromboembolic events (VTE) in Wegener’s granulomatosis (WG), microscopic polyangiitis (MPA) and, the so far unstudied, Churg–Strauss syndrome (CSS) and polyarteritis nodosa (PAN). Methods: Retrospective, systematic analysis and comparisons were made between the characteristics of patients in the VTE group and non-VTE group. 1130 patients with WG, MPA, CSS or PAN were identified from the French Vasculitis Study Group cohort. Results: During a mean follow-up of 58.4 (45.8) months, 83 VTE occurred in 74 (6.5%) patients, with a median vasculitis–VTE diagnosis interval of 5.8 months (−3 to +156). VTE occurred in seven of 285 (2.5%) patients with PAN, 19 of 232 (8.2%) with CSS, 30 of 377 (8%) with WG and 18 of 236 (7.6%) with MPA. Multivariate analysis retained age, male sex or previous VTE or stroke with motor deficit as being associated with a higher VTE risk. The adjusted odds ratio (95% confidence interval) for VTE was 2.88 (1.27 to 6.50) for patients with WG, MPA or CSS compared with PAN (p = 0.01). Conclusions: Our results suggest that, like WG and MPA, patients with CSS are at a greater risk of VTE, than those with PAN. The reasons for this difference remain to be elucidated.
Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2010
Luc Mouthon; Caroline Mestre-Stanislas; Alice Bérezné; François Rannou; P. Guilpain; M. Revel; Christian Pagnoux; Loïc Guillevin; Jacques Fermanian; Serge Poiraudeau
Objective: To assess the impact of digital ulcers (DUs) on disability and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in systemic sclerosis (SSc). Methods: Two hundred and thirteen patients with SSc were evaluated at four annual meetings of a patient society between 2004 and 2007 (n = 177) or during hospital stay (n = 36). HRQoL was assessed by the SF-36, global disability by the health assessment questionnaire (HAQ), hand disability by the Cochin Hand Function Scale (CHFS) and global hand and wrist mobility by the Kapandji index. Results: Sixty-seven patients (31.4%) had at least one DU at the time of evaluation. Patients with DUs showed significantly more pitting scars (p<0.001) and calcinosis (p<0.0001) than others. Patients with DU had significantly greater HAQ (mean (SD) 1.218 (0.723) vs 0.930 (0.717), p = 0.008), CHFS (mean (SD) 27.38 (20.68) vs 16.73 (18.19), p<0.0001) and aesthetic prejudice (mean (SD) 6.1 (2.2) vs 3.9 (2.5), p<0.0001) scores than others. Hand and wrist mobility were significantly diminished in patients with DU (mean (SD) Kapandji score 75.3 (22.8) vs 81.7 (19.2), p<0.0001). The presence of a DU did not significantly alter the physical component but influenced the mental component (mean (SD) 43.38 (12.53) vs 39.58 (9.54), p = 0.026) of the SF36. Conclusion: Patients with SSc with DUs have reduced wrist and hand mobility, increased global and hand disabilities and decreased mental component of HRQoL.
Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2007
A Servettaz; P. Guilpain; Claire Goulvestre; C Chéreau; C Hercend; Carole Nicco; L. Guillevin; B Weill; Luc Mouthon; Frédéric Batteux
Objectives: To investigate the role of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the development of the various patterns of systemic sclerosis (SSc) and the mechanisms of ROS production by endothelial cells and fibroblasts. Methods: Production of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), nitric oxide (NO) and cellular proliferation were determined following incubation of endothelial cells and fibroblasts with 56 SSc and 30 healthy sera. Correlations were established between those markers, the type and the severity of the clinical involvements, and the response to treatment. The factors leading to ROS production were determined. Results: H2O2 production by endothelial cells and fibroblasts was higher after incubation with SSc sera than with normal sera (p<0.001) and with sera from SSc patients with severe complications than sera from other patients (p<0.05). Sera from patients with lung fibrosis triggered the proliferation of fibroblasts more than other SSc sera (p<0.001), whereas sera from patients with vascular complications exerted no proliferative effect on fibroblasts, but inhibited endothelial cell growth (p<0.05) and induced NO overproduction (p<0.05). Bosentan reduced NO release by 32%, whereas N-acetylcystein potentiated 5-fluorouracil (5FU) to inhibit fibroblast proliferation by 78%. Those serum-mediated effects did not involve antibodies but advanced oxidation protein products that selectively triggered cells to produce H2O2 or NO. Conclusions: SSc sera induce the production of different types of ROS that selectively activate endothelial cells or fibroblasts, leading to vascular or fibrotic complications. Assaying serum-induced ROS production allows clinical activity of the disease to be followed and appropriate treatments to be selected.
Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2011
Cécile Espy; Willy Morelle; Niloufar Kavian; Philippe A. Grange; Claire Goulvestre; Vivian Viallon; Christiane Chéreau; Christian Pagnoux; Jean-Claude Michalski; L. Guillevin; Bernard Weill; Frédéric Batteux; P. Guilpain
OBJECTIVE To investigate whether the glycosylation and sialylation levels of anti-proteinase 3 (anti-PR3) antibodies could affect their pathogenicity, and whether these levels could be correlated with the activity of granulomatosis with polyangiitis (Wegeners) (GPA). METHODS Forty-two serum samples positive for anti-PR3 antibodies from 42 patients with active or weakly active/inactive GPA were included. Anti-PR3 antibodies were assayed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, and their levels of glycosylation and sialylation were assessed by enzyme-linked lectin assay. The glycosylation and sialylation levels of IgG purified from the serum of healthy donors and patients with active, remitted, or weakly active disease were assessed by permethylation and mass spectrometry analysis of glycans, following neuraminidase digestion. The neutrophil oxidative burst induced by purified IgG was assayed by spectrofluorimetry. RESULTS The mean sialylation ratio of anti-PR3 antibodies was significantly lower in patients with active disease than in patients with weakly active or inactive disease, and this was inversely correlated with the Birmingham Vasculitis Activity Score (BVAS) (P < 0.0001). Similar results were obtained using the BVAS/GPA. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve for the sialylation ratio of anti-PR3 antibodies, as a test to determine the activity of GPA, was 0.82 (P = 0.0006). The characterization of N-glycans showed a decrease in 2,6-linked sialylated N-glycans and an increase in dHex₁ Hex₃ HexNAc₄ (mass/charge 1,836) agalactosylated structures in purified IgG from patients with active disease compared with controls. The anti-PR3 antibody-induced oxidative burst of neutrophils was inversely correlated with the sialylation levels of anti-PR3 IgG. CONCLUSION The sialylation level of anti-PR3 antibodies contributes to the clinical activity of GPA, by modulating the oxidative burst of neutrophils induced by these autoantibodies.
Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2010
Andrew Wang; P. Guilpain; Benjamin F. Chong; Sandrine Chouzenoux; L. Guillevin; Yong Du; Xin J. Zhou; Fangming Lin; Anna-Marie Fairhurst; Christopher Boudreaux; Christian Roux; Edward K. Wakeland; Laurie S. Davis; Frédéric Batteux; Chandra Mohan
OBJECTIVE CXCR4 is a chemokine with multiple effects on the immune system. In murine lupus models, we demonstrated that monocytes, neutrophils, and B cells overexpressed CXCR4 and that its ligand, CXCL12, was up-regulated in diseased kidneys. We undertook this study to determine whether CXCR4 expression was increased in peripheral blood leukocytes from patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and whether CXCL12 expression was increased in kidneys from patients with SLE. METHODS Peripheral blood leukocytes from 31 SLE patients, 8 normal controls, and 9 patients with rheumatoid arthritis were prospectively analyzed by flow cytometry for CXCR4 expression. Biopsy samples (n = 14) from patients with lupus nephritis (LN) were immunostained with anti-CXCL12 antibody. RESULTS CD19+ B cells and CD4+ T cells from SLE patients displayed a >2-fold increase (P = 0.0001) and >3-fold increase (P < 0.0001), respectively, in median CXCR4 expression compared with that in controls (n = 7-8). Moreover, CXCR4 expression on B cells was 1.61-fold higher in patients with SLE Disease Activity Index (SLEDAI) scores >10 (n = 8) than in patients with SLEDAI scores ≤10 (n = 16) (P = 0.0008), 1.71-fold higher in patients with class IV LN (n = 5) than in patients with other classes of LN (n = 7) (P = 0.02), and 1.40-fold higher in patients with active neuropsychiatric SLE (NPSLE) (n = 6) than in patients with inactive NPSLE (n = 18) (P = 0.01). CXCL12 was significantly up-regulated in the tubules and glomeruli of kidneys in patients with LN (n = 14), with the percentage of positive cells correlating positively with the severity of LN. CONCLUSION CXCR4 appears to be up-regulated in multiple leukocyte subsets in SLE patients. The heightened expression of CXCR4 on B cells in active NPSLE and of CXCL12 in nephritic kidneys suggests that the CXCR4/CXCL12 axis might be a potential therapeutic target for SLE patients with kidney and/or central nervous system involvement.
Presse Medicale | 2006
Amélie Servettaz; Christian Agard; Mathieu C. Tamby; P. Guilpain; Loïc Guillevin; Luc Mouthon
Points essentiels La sclerodermie systemique est une affection rare qui se traduit par des lesions de fibrose et une hyperreactivite vasculaire. Des dysfonctionnements des cellules endotheliales, des fibroblastes et des lymphocytes ont ete identifies. Le dysfonctionnement des fibroblastes se caracterise par une activation incontrolee de la voie du Transforming Growth Factor-s (TGF-s), une synthese inadaptee de Connective Tissue Growth Factor (CTGF) et de radicaux libres, favorisant la synthese de matrice extracellulaire en exces. Les cellules endotheliales synthetisent en exces de l’endotheline 1, vasoconstricteur puissant, produisent de grandes quantites de NO-synthase inductible et subissent une apoptose precoce. Le stress oxydatif semble jouer un role majeur dans la progression de la sclerodermie systemique. Des taux eleves d’interleukine 4, cytokine profibrosante, sont trouves dans le plasma et le derme de malades atteints de sclerodermie systemique. Des autoanticorps sont detectables dans le serum de la majorite des patients sclerodermiques. Certains sont diriges contre des proteines nucleaires ubiquitaires bien identifiees mais n’ont pas de role pathogenique demontre. D’autres autoanticorps reconnaissent les cellules endotheliales et/ou les fibroblastes et pourraient avoir un role pathogene.
Rheumatology | 2013
Julien Marmursztejn; Loïc Guillevin; Regine Trebossen; P. Cohen; P. Guilpain; Christian Pagnoux; Luc Mouthon; Paul Legmann; Olivier Vignaux; Denis Duboc
OBJECTIVE Churg-Strauss syndrome (CSS) cardiac involvement is associated with a poor prognosis. Recently cardiac MRI (CMRI) has emerged as a promising technique to detect early CSS cardiac involvement. However, CMRI-detected myocardial delayed enhancement (MDE) could correspond to fibrosis or inflammation. Fluoro-2-deoxyglucose PET (FDG-PET) was previously used in other systemic diseases to distinguish between them. To determine whether the CMRI-MDE detected in CSS patients reflected fibrosis or myocardial inflammation, patients in CSS remission underwent FDG-PET. METHODS Twenty consecutive CSS patients in remission (BVAS = 0) were recruited. Fourteen patients [eight men, six women; mean (S.D.) age 49 (9) years; mean disease duration 3.5 (2.9) years] with CMRI-detected MDE, and six patients [four men, two women; mean (S.D.) age 44 (15) years; mean disease duration 3.5 (5.3) years] with normal CMRI underwent FDG-PET. Segments with MDE on CMRI were analysed on FDG-PET images, with myocardial FDG hypofixation defining fibrosis and hyperfixation corresponding inflammation. RESULTS Among the 14 patients with MDE on CMRI, FDG-PET showed 10 had hypofixation, 2 had hyperfixation and 2 had normal scans. CSS duration at the time of CMRI was shorter for patients with myocardial inflammation than in those with fibrosis. The six patients with normal CMRI had normal FDG-PET images. CONCLUSION For CSS patients in remission, CMRI detected subclinical active myocardial lesions and could be recommended to assess cardiac involvement. However, because CMRI-detected MDE can reflect fibrosis or inflammation, FDG-PET might help to distinguish between the two.
Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2010
Benjamin Terrier; Mathieu C. Tamby; Luc Camoin; P. Guilpain; Alice Bérezné; Nicolas Tamas; Cédric Broussard; Françoise Hotellier; Marc Humbert; Gérald Simonneau; Loïc Guillevin; Luc Mouthon
Objective: To identify target antigens of antifibroblast antibodies (AFA) in systemic sclerosis (SSc) patients. Patients and Methods: In the first part, sera from 24 SSc patients (12 with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) and 12 without) and 36 idiopathic PAH patients, tested in pooled sera for groups of three, were compared with a sera pool from 14 healthy controls (HC). Serum IgG reactivity was analysed by the use of a two-dimensional electrophoresis and immunoblotting technique with normal human fibroblasts antigens. In the second part, serum IgG reactivity for two groups: 158 SSc, 67 idiopathic PAH and 100 HC; and 35 SSc and 50 HC was tested against α-enolase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae and recombinant human (rHu) α-enolase, respectively, on ELISA. Results: In the first part, α-enolase was identified as a main target antigen of AFA from SSc patients. In the second part, 37/158 (23%) SSc patients, 6/67 (9%) idiopathic PAH patients and 4/100 (4%) HC (p<0.001) had anti-S cerevisiae α-enolase antibodies; 12/35 (34%) SSc patients and 3/50 (6%) HC had anti-rHu α-enolase antibodies (p = 0.001). In SSc, the presence of anti-S cerevisiae α-enolase antibodies was associated with interstitial lung disease (ILD), decreased total lung capacity (73.2% vs 89.7%; p<0.001) and diffusion capacity for carbon monoxide (47.4% vs 62.3%; p<0.001), and antitopoisomerase 1 antibodies (46% vs 21%; p = 0.005) but not anticentromere antibodies (11% vs 34%; p = 0.006). Results were similar with rHu α-enolase testing. Conclusion: In SSc, AFA recognise α-enolase and are associated with ILD and antitopoisomerase antibodies.
Proteomics | 2008
Amélie Servettaz; P. Guilpain; Luc Camoin; Patrick Mayeux; Cédric Broussard; Mathieu C. Tamby; Nicolas Tamas; Srini V. Kaveri; Loïc Guillevin; Luc Mouthon
In order to identify target antigens of anti‐endothelial cell (anti‐EC) antibodies (AECA) in healthy individuals, we have used a proteomic approach combining 2‐DE and immunoblotting. Whole cell protein extracts obtained from human umbilical vein EC (HUVEC) cultures were used as a source of antigens. Serum IgG from 12 healthy blood donors were tested at a concentration of 200 μg/mL. Targeted spots were identified by MS. The HUVEC proteome was composed of 884 protein spots. Among these, 61 ± 25.8 (mean ± SD) spots were recognized by serum IgG from healthy individuals, with marked differences from one individual to another. Among these spots, 11 were recognized by serum IgG from all healthy individuals tested. These spots corresponded to six different proteins with several spots corresponding to different isoforms of the same protein. Target antigens were: cytoskeletal proteins (β‐actin, α‐tubulin, and vimentin); glycolytic enzymes (glucose‐3‐phosphate‐deshydrogenase and α‐enolase); and prolyl‐4‐hydroxylase β subunit, a member of the disulfide isomerase family. This study shows that the repertoire of IgG AECA is heterogeneous among healthy individuals. IgG from all of the healthy individuals tested recognized a restricted set of highly conserved ubiquitous proteins playing key roles in cell biology and maintenance of homeostasis.