Thierry Généreau
Pasteur Institute
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Featured researches published by Thierry Généreau.
Arthritis & Rheumatism | 1999
Thierry Généreau; Olivier Lortholary; Ma Pottier; U. Michon-Pasturel; Thierry Ponge; Benoît de Wazières; E. Liozon; Laurent Pinede; E. Hachulla; P. Roblot; Jh Barrier; Serge Herson; Loïc Guillevin
OBJECTIVE To describe the clinical, biologic, and histologic features of temporal artery biopsy (TAB)-localized systemic necrotizing vasculitides (SNV), and to assess their frequency among elderly patients undergoing TAB for suspected giant cell (temporal) arteritis (GCA). METHODS The frequency of a TAB localization of SNV was prospectively assessed in a multicenter study of elderly patients undergoing TAB for suspected GCA. All patients with SNV fulfilling the American College of Rheumatology criteria for a specific vasculitic syndrome and with evidence of vasculitis on TAB were included in a retrospective, descriptive study. RESULTS SNV was diagnosed based on the TAB in 1.4% of the patients with suspected GCA and in 4.5% of the positive (inflamed) TAB specimens. We retrospectively selected 27 patients (18 female, 9 male; mean +/- SD age 62+/-15 years, range 22-79 years) with SNV and TAB-localized vasculitis. Only 2 of these patients were known to have SNV before TAB localization. Twenty-two patients (81%) had cephalic symptoms, including jaw claudication in 33%, clinically abnormal temporal arteries in 33%, and neuro-ophthalmologic symptoms in 11%. All patients had systemic symptoms suggestive of SNV and histologically proven NV in the TAB specimens (70%) or elsewhere in other biopsy sites (74%). Abnormal biologic results suggestive of SNV were present in 17 patients (63%). For 4 patients, the TAB-documented involvement led to initial misdiagnoses of GCA, and systemic manifestations that developed under steroid therapy revealed the correct diagnosis. The final diagnoses of the patients were polyarteritis nodosa (PAN) (n = 11), Churg-Strauss syndrome (n = 6), micropoly-angiitis (n = 3), Wegeners granulomatosis (n = 3), hepatitis B virus-related PAN (n = 2), hepatitis C virus-related cryoglobulinemic vasculitis (n = 1), and rheumatoid vasculitis (n = 1). CONCLUSION TAB-localized SNV presents a major diagnostic dilemma because it can mimic GCA. Careful analysis of clinical, biologic, and histologic data should lead to the correct diagnosis and help guide the clinicians choice of appropriate therapy.
Lupus | 1999
Christophe Tournigand; Thierry Généreau; Murielle Prudent; Marie-Claude Diemert; Serge Herson; Olivier Chosidow
A 14-year-old girl developed maculopapular rash, myalgias, arthralgias and myocarditis with elevated anti-nuclear and anti-double-stranded DNA antibodies. She was taking minocycline for acne and all symptoms resolved when this treatment was stopped. The patient has no evidence of disease one year after onset of symptoms. Clinicians should be aware of minocyclines responsibility in inducing lupus-like disease.
Rheumatology | 2015
Benjamin Terrier; Agnes Dechartres; Charlotte Girard; Stéphane Jouneau; Jean-Emmanuel Kahn; Robin Dhote; Estibaliz Lazaro; Jean Cabane; Thomas Papo; Nicolas Schleinitz; P. Cohen; Edouard Begon; P. Belenotti; Dominique Chauveau; Elisabeth Diot; Thierry Généreau; Mohamed Hamidou; Gilles Hayem; Guillaume Le Guenno; Véronique Le Guern; Marc Michel; G. Moulis; Xavier Puéchal; S. Rivière; M. Samson; François Gonin; Claire Le Jeunne; Pascal Corlieu; Luc Mouthon; Loïc Guillevin
OBJECTIVES Tracheobronchial stenosis (TBS) is noted in 12-23% of patients with granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA), and includes subglottic stenosis and bronchial stenosis. We aimed to analyse the endoscopic management of TBS in GPA and to identify factors associated with the efficacy of endoscopic interventions. METHODS We conducted a French nationwide retrospective study that included 47 patients with GPA-related TBS. RESULTS Compared with patients without TBS, those with TBS were younger, more frequently female and had less frequent kidney, ocular and gastrointestinal involvement and mononeuritis multiplex. Endoscopic procedures included 137 tracheal and 50 bronchial interventions, mainly endoscopic dilatation, local steroid injection and conservative laser surgery, and less frequently stenting. After the first endoscopic procedure, the cumulative incidence of endoscopic treatment failure was 49% at 1 year, 70% at 2 years and 80% at 5 years. Factors significantly associated with a higher cumulative incidence of treatment failure were a shorter time from GPA diagnosis to endoscopic procedure [hazard ratio (HR) 1.08 (95% CI 1.01, 1.14); P = 0.01] and a bronchial stenosis [HR 1.96 (95% CI 1.28, 3.00); P = 0.002]. A prednisone dose ≥30 mg/day at the time of the procedure was associated with a lower cumulative incidence of treatment failure [HR 0.53 (95% CI 0.31, 0.89); P = 0.02]. CONCLUSION TBS represents severe and refractory manifestations with a high rate of restenosis. High-dose systemic CSs at the time of the procedure and increased time from GPA diagnosis to bronchoscopic intervention are associated with a better event-free survival. In contrast, bronchial stenoses are associated with a higher rate of restenosis than subglottic stenosis.
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 1998
Olivier Lortholary; Thierry Généreau; Jean‐Marc Dray; Isabelle Royer; Marc Soilleux; Loïc Guillevin
admission yet able to detect changes in capacity under varying circumstances. Second, the current scope of routine advance care planning discussions is fairly narrow. This study and previous data’’ demonstrated that advance care planning discussions often focus on CPR and other life-support rather than preferences regarding broader and more common future medical circumstances. The third reality is that advance care planning conversations rarely involve physicians and are sometimes conducted by an administrative or clerical staff person. Finally, many facilities currently report reliance on residents’ orientation to person, place, and time as a means of determining capacity. More complicated protocols, particularly if they do not have immediate or clear benefits, may not be well received by already overwhelmed staff. Kapp and Mossman describe the earnest but perhaps fruitless quest for a “capacimeter,” observing there may not be a perfect single in~trument .~ Current methods both for determining decisional capacity and for conducting advance care planning in nursing homes are limited in scope and depth. An understanding of the practical realities of nursing home care is essential in the creation of a standardized tool that ensures the intent of advance care planning to support patient expression of treatment preferences is honored to the greatest extent possible.
Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2002
P. Cherin; S. Pelletier; Antônio Lúcio Teixeira; P. Laforet; Thierry Généreau; A. Simon; Thierry Maisonobe; Bruno Eymard; Serge Herson
Journal of Infection | 2007
Laurence Fardet; Thierry Généreau; Jean-Louis Poirot; Bertrand Guidet; Adrien Kettaneh; Jean Cabane
Clinical Microbiology and Infection | 2006
L. Fardet; Thierry Généreau; J. Cabane; A. Kettaneh
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 1996
Thierry Généreau; Olivier Lortholary; Olivier Bouchaud; Flore Lacassin; P. Vinceneux; Pierre de Truchis; Arnaud Jaccard; Jean-Luc Meynard; Renaud Verdon; Daniel Sereni; Claudie Marche; Coulaud Jp; Loïc Guillevin
Archives of Dermatology | 1999
Thierry Généreau; Olivier Chosidow; Christine Danel; Patrick Cherin; Serge Herson
Annales De Medecine Interne | 1996
François Lhote; Pascal Cohen; Thierry Généreau; M. Gayraud; Loïc Guillevin