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Dive into the research topics where Tomek Kofman is active.

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Featured researches published by Tomek Kofman.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2016

B7–1 Blockade Does Not Improve Post–Transplant Nephrotic Syndrome Caused by Recurrent FSGS

Marianne Delville; Emilie Baye; Antoine Durrbach; Vincent Audard; Tomek Kofman; Laura Braun; J. Olagne; Clément Nguyen; Georges Deschênes; Bruno Moulin; Michel Delahousse; Gwenaëlle Kesler-Roussey; Séverine Beaudreuil; Frank Martinez; Marion Rabant; Philippe Grimbert; Morgan Gallazzini; Fabiola Terzi; Christophe Legendre; Guillaume Canaud

FSGS is a common glomerular disorder that has a high propensity for recurrence after kidney transplant. The pathophysiology of FSGS is unknown, but podocytes seem to be the target of one or several circulating factors that lead to cytoskeleton reorganization and proteinuria. Research on podocytes has identified B7-1 as an important factor in podocyte biology and a new therapeutic target in renal disease. Indeed, in four patients with recurrent FSGS after transplant, treatment with the B7-1 blocker abatacept was associated with proteinuria remission. Here, we prospectively treated nine patients with recurrent FSGS after transplant using either abatacept or belatacept, a B7-1 blocker with higher affinity, and did not induce proteinuria remission. Furthermore, we did not detect B7-1 expression by immunofluorescence in podocytes of biopsy specimens from these or other kidney grafts or podocytes of native kidney biopsy specimens. In conclusion, B7-1 blockade did not induce FSGS remission after transplant in our study.


American Journal of Kidney Diseases | 2014

APOL1 Polymorphisms and Development of CKD in an Identical Twin Donor and Recipient Pair

Tomek Kofman; Vincent Audard; Céline Narjoz; Olivier Gribouval; Marie Matignon; Claire Leibler; Dominique Desvaux; Philippe Lang; Philippe Grimbert

We report an occurrence of progressive loss of transplant function and ultimately transplant failure after living related kidney transplantation involving monozygotic twin brothers of Afro-Caribbean origin who were both heterozygous for the G1 and G2 kidney disease risk alleles in the APOL1 gene, which encodes apolipoprotein L-I. A 21-year-old man with end-stage kidney disease of unknown cause received a kidney from his brother, who was confirmed as a monozygotic twin by microsatellite analysis. Thirty months after transplantation, the patient presented with proteinuria and decreased estimated glomerular filtration rate; a biopsy of the transplant showed typical focal segmental glomerulosclerosis lesions. He received steroid therapy, but progressed to kidney failure 5 years later. The twin brother had normal kidney function without proteinuria at the time of transplantation; however, 7 years later, he was found to have decreased estimated glomerular filtration rate (40mL/min/1.73m(2)) and proteinuria (protein excretion of 2.5g/d). APOL1 genotyping revealed that both donor and recipient were heterozygous for the G1 and G2 alleles. This case is in stark contrast to the expected course of kidney transplantation in identical twins and suggests a role for APOL1 polymorphisms in both the donor and recipient.


Transplant International | 2012

Recurrence from primary and secondary glomerulopathy after renal transplant

Guillaume Canaud; Vincent Audard; Tomek Kofman; Philippe Lang; Christophe Legendre; Philippe Grimbert

Glomerulonephritis is the primary cause of end‐stage renal failure in 30–50% of kidney transplant recipients and recurrence of the initial disease is an important determinant of long‐term graft outcome after transplantation. Although renal transplantation remains the best treatment option for patients with end stage renal diseases in most cases, diagnosis and management of recurrences of glomerulopathies are critical for the optimization and improvement of long‐term kidney transplant graft survival and provide a unique opportunity to explore the pathogenesis of native kidney disease. This review aims to update knowledge for a large panel of recurrent primary and secondary glomerulonephritis after kidney transplantation, excluding diabetic nephropathy including primary focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis, membranous nephropathy, IgA nephropathy, membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis, lupus, vasculitis but also less usual secondary nephropathy related to sarcoidosis, AA and AL amyloidosis, monoclonal immunoglobulin deposition disease, and fibrillary glomerulonephritis.


Medicine | 2014

Minimal Change Nephrotic Syndrome Associated With Non-hodgkin Lymphoid Disorders: A Retrospective Study of 18 Cases

Tomek Kofman; Shao-Yu Zhang; Christiane Copie-Bergman; Anissa Moktefi; Quentin Raimbourg; Hélène François; Alexandre Karras; Emmanuelle Plaisier; Bernard Painchart; Guillaume Favre; Dominique Bertrand; Emmanuel Gyan; Marc Souid; Damien Roos-Weil; Dominique Desvaux; Philippe Grimbert; Corinne Haioun; Philippe Lang; Djillali Sahali; Vincent Audard

AbstractFew studies have examined the occurrence of minimal change nephrotic syndrome (MCNS) in patients with non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). We report here a series of 18 patients with MCNS occurring among 13,992 new cases of NHL. We analyzed the clinical and pathologic characteristics of this association, along with the response of patients to treatment, to determine if this association relies on a particular disorder. The most frequent NHLs associated with MCNS were Waldenström macroglobulinemia (33.3%), marginal zone B-cell lymphoma (27.8%), and chronic lymphocytic leukemia (22.2%). Other lymphoproliferative disorders included multiple myeloma, mantle cell lymphoma, and peripheral T-cell lymphoma. In 4 patients MCNS occurred before NHL (mean delay, 15 mo), in 10 patients the disorders occurred simultaneously, and in 4 patients MCNS was diagnosed after NHL (mean delay, 25 mo). Circulating monoclonal immunoglobulins were present in 11 patients. A nontumoral interstitial infiltrate was present in renal biopsy specimens from 3 patients without significant renal impairment. Acute kidney injury resulting from tubular lesions or renal hypoperfusion was present in 6 patients. MCNS relapse occurred more frequently in patients treated exclusively by steroid therapy (77.8%) than in those receiving steroids associated with chemotherapy (25%). In conclusion, MCNS occurs preferentially in NHL originating from B cells and requires an aggressive therapeutic approach to reduce the risk of MCNS relapse.


Transplant International | 2017

C1q binding is not an independent risk factor for kidney allograft loss after an acute antibody-mediated rejection episode: a retrospective cohort study

Anissa Moktefi; Juliette Parisot; Dominique Desvaux; Florence Canoui-Poitrine; Isabelle Brocheriou; Julie Peltier; Vincent Audard; Tomek Kofman; Caroline Suberbielle; Philippe Lang; Eric Rondeau; Philippe Grimbert; Marie Matignon

After kidney transplantation, C4d is an incomplete marker of acute antibody‐mediated rejection (AMR) and C1q‐binding donor‐specific antibodies (DSA) have been associated with allograft survival. However, the impact on allograft survival of C1q+ DSA after clinical AMR has not been studied yet. We analysed retrospectively in clinical AMR C4d staining and C1q‐binding impact on allograft survival. We compared clinical, histological and serological features of C4d− and C4d+ AMR, C1q+ and C1q− DSA AMR and analysed C4d and C1q‐binding impact on allograft survival. Among 500 for‐cause kidney allograft biopsies, 48 fulfilled AMR criteria. C4d+ AMR [N = 18 (37.5%)] have significantly higher number class I DSA (P = 0.02), higher microvascular score (P = 0.02) and more transplant glomerulopathy (P = 0.04). C1q+ AMR [N = 20 (44%)] presented with significantly more class I and class II DSA (P = 0.005 and 0.04) and C4d+ staining (P = 0.01). Graft losses were significantly higher in the C4d+ group (P = 0.04) but similar in C1q groups. C4d+ but not C1q+ binding was an independent risk factor for graft loss [HR = 2.65; (1.11–6.34); P = 0.028]. In our cohort of clinical AMR, C4d+ staining but not C1q+ binding is an independent risk factor for graft loss. Allograft loss and patient survival were similar in C1q+ and C1q− AMR.


Medicine | 2015

Membranous Nephropathy Associated With Immunological Disorder-Related Liver Disease: A Retrospective Study of 10 Cases.

Maxime Dauvergne; Anissa Moktefi; Marion Rabant; Cécile Vigneau; Tomek Kofman; S. Burtey; Christophe Corpechot; Thomas Stehlé; Dominique Desvaux; Nathalie Rioux-Leclercq; Philippe Rouvier; Bertrand Knebelmann; Jean-Jacques Boffa; Thierry Frouget; Eric Daugas; Mathieu Jablonski; Karine Dahan; Isabelle Brocheriou; Philippe Remy; Philippe Grimbert; Philippe Lang; Oliver Chazouilleres; Dil Sahali; Vincent Audard

Abstract The association between membranous nephropathy (MN) and immunological disorder-related liver disease has not been extensively investigated, and the specific features of this uncommon association, if any, remain to be determined. We retrospectively identified 10 patients with this association. We aimed to describe the clinical, biological, and pathological characteristics of these patients and their therapeutic management. The possible involvement of the phospholipase A2 receptor (PLA2R) in these apparent secondary forms of MN was assessed by immunohistochemistry with renal and liver biopsy specimens. The mean delay between MN and liver disease diagnoses was 3.9 years and the interval between the diagnosis of the glomerular and liver diseases was <1.5 years in 5 patients. MN was associated with a broad spectrum of liver diseases including primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC), autoimmune hepatitis (AIH), and primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC). AIH whether isolated (n = 3) or associated with PBC (n = 2) or PSC (n = 2) was the most frequent autoimmune liver disease. Circulating PLA2R antibodies were detected in 4 out of 9 patients but the test was performed under specific immunosuppressive treatment in 3 out of 9 patients. Seven of the 9 patients with available renal tissue specimens displayed enhanced expression of PLA2R in glomeruli whereas PLA2R was not expressed in liver parenchyma from these patients or in normal liver tissue. The study of immunoglobulin (Ig) subclasses of deposits in glomeruli revealed that the most frequent pattern was the coexistence of IgG1 and IgG4 immune deposits with IgG4 predominating. Detection of PLA2R antibodies in glomeruli but not in liver parenchyma is a common finding in patients with MN associated with autoimmune liver disease, suggesting that these autoantibodies are not exclusively detected in idiopathic MN.


Transplant International | 2018

Safety of renal transplantation in patients with bipolar or psychotic disorders: a retrospective study

Tomek Kofman; Franck Pourcine; Florence Canoui-Poitrine; Nassim Kamar; Paolo Malvezzi; Hélène François; Emmanuelle Boutin; Vincent Audard; Philippe Lang; Frank Martinez; Christophe Legendre; Marie Matignon; Philippe Grimbert

Solid organ transplantation societies recommend a relative contraindication of transplantation for people with bipolar or psychotic disorders. Very few data are available on the outcome of kidney transplantation and the increased risk of kidney disease in those patients. We conducted a retrospective multicenter cohort study (1979–2014) including kidney allograft recipients with either bipolar (BD) or psychotic disorders prior to transplant. Objectives were kidney allograft and patient outcomes compared to a matched control group without psychiatric disorders and the evolution of psychiatric disorder at 60 months after transplantation. Forty‐seven patients including 25 women were identified, 34 with BD and 13 with psychotic disorder. Patients’ overall cumulative death rates at 60 months were not significantly different in both groups [12.2%; 95% confidence interval: (4.5–24.1) in the group with psychiatric disorder versus 5.2%; (1.7–11.7) in control group P = 0.11] as for cumulative allograft loss rates [11.7% (3.5–25.2) vs. 9.4% (4.4–16.8) in control group (P = 0.91)]. Twenty‐three patients (16 with BD and seven with psychotic disorder) experienced at least one psychiatric relapse [incidence rate: 1.8/100 persons‐ months; 95% CI; (1.2–2.7)] totaling 13 hospitalizations within 60 months of follow‐up. Four patients stopped immunosuppressive therapy leading to allograft loss in three. Our study suggests that patients with BD or psychotic disorders have to be considered for renal transplantation with close psychiatric follow‐up after transplant.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Intravenous immunoglobulin therapy in kidney transplant recipients with de novo DSA: Results of an observational study

Marie Matignon; C. Pilon; Morgane Commereuc; Cynthia J. Grondin; Claire Leibler; Tomek Kofman; Vincent Audard; José L. Cohen; Florence Canoui-Poitrine; Philippe Grimbert; Stanislaw M. Stepkowski

Background Approximately 25% of kidney transplant recipients develop de novo anti-HLA donor-specific antibodies (dnDSA) leading to acute antibody-mediated rejection (ABMR) in 30% of patients. Preemptive therapeutic strategies are not available. Methods We conducted a prospective observational study including 11 kidney transplant recipients. Inclusion criteria were dnDSA occurring within the first year after transplant and normal allograft biopsy. All patients were treated with high-dose IVIG (2 g/kg 0, 1 and 2 months post-dnDSA). The primary efficacy outcome was incidence of clinical and subclinical acute ABMR within 12 months after dnDSA detection as compared to a historical control group (IVIG-). Results Acute ABMR occurred in 2 or 11 patients in the IVIG+ group and in 1 of 9 patients in the IVIG- group. IVIG treatment did not affect either class I or class II DSA, as observed at the end of the follow-up. IVIG treatment significantly decreased FcγRIIA mRNA expression in circulating leukocytes, but did not affect the expression of any other markers of B cell activation. Conclusions In this first pilot study including kidney allograft recipients with early dnDSA, preemptive treatment with high-dose IVIG alone did not prevent acute ABMR and had minimal effects on DSA outcome and B cell phenotype.


Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2018

Anticardiolipin antibodies and 12-month graft function in kidney transplant recipients: a prognosis cohort survey

Marion Gauthier; Florence Canoui-Poitrine; Esther Guery; Dominique Desvaux; Sophie Hüe; Guillaume Canaud; Thomas Stehlé; Philippe Lang; Tomek Kofman; Philippe Grimbert; Marie Matignon

Background In kidney transplant recipients, anticardiolipin (ACL) antibodies without antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) are found in up to 38% of patients and could be associated with thrombotic events (TEs). However, the prognostic role of ACL regarding kidney transplant and patients outcomes have still not been well defined. Methods We conducted an observational, monocentric, retrospective cohort study including 446 kidney transplant recipients and standardized follow-up: 36-month allograft and patient survival, 12-month estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) and 3- and 12-month screening biopsies. Results ACL tests were run on 247 patients, 101 were positive (ACL+ group, 41%) and 146 were negative (ACL- group, 59%). Allografts and patient survival within 36 months as TE were similar between both groups [hazard ratio (HR) = 1.18 and HR = 0.98, respectively]. The 12-month eGFR was significantly lower in the ACL+ group [median (95% confidence interval) 48.5 (35.1-60.3) versus 51.9 (39.1-65.0) mL/min/1.73 m2, P= 0.042]. ACL+ was independently associated with eGFR decrease (P = 0.04). In 12-month screening biopsies, tubular atrophy was significantly more severe in the ACL+ group compared with the ACL- group (P = 0.02). Conclusions ACL without APS before kidney transplantation is an independent risk factor of eGFR decline within the first year post-transplant without over-incidence of TEs. Specific immunosuppressive therapy including mammalian target of rapamycin inhibitors should be discussed in the future.


Medicine | 2016

Successful Treatment of Lung Calciphylaxis With Sodium Thiosulfate in a Patient With Sickle Cell Disease: A Case Report.

Romain Arrestier; Caroline Dudreuilh; Philippe Remy; Ghada Boulahia; Bouteina Bentaarit; Claire Leibler; Amir Adedjouma; Tomek Kofman; Marie Matignon; Dil Sahali; Roger Dufresne; Jean-François Deux; Charlotte Colin; Philippe Grimbert; Philippe Lang; Pablo Bartolucci; Bernard Maitre; Jeanne Tran Van Nhieu; Vincent Audard

AbstractCalciphylaxis is a small vessel vasculopathy, characterized by medial wall calcification that develops in a few patients with chronic renal failure. The prognosis of skin calciphylaxis has improved considerably since the introduction of sodium thiosulfate (STS), but it remains unclear whether this therapy is effective against organ lesions related to calciphylaxis. Pulmonary calciphylaxis is a usually fatal medical condition that may occur in association with skin involvement in patients with end-stage renal disease.We report here the case of a 49-year-old woman homozygous sickle cell disease patient on chronic hemodialysis with biopsy-proven systemic calciphylaxis involving the lungs and skin. On admission, ulcerative skin lesions on the lower limbs and bilateral pulmonary infiltrates on chest computerized tomography scan were the main clinical and radiological findings. Skin and bronchial biopsies demonstrated calciphylaxis lesions. The intravenous administration of STS in association with cinacalcet for 8 consecutive months led to a clear improvement in skin lesions and thoracic lesions on chest computerized tomography scan.This case suggests for the first time that organ lesions related to calciphylaxis, and particularly lung injury, are potentially reversible. This improvement probably resulted from the combination of 3 interventions (more frequent dialysis, cinacalcet, and STS), rather than the administration of STS alone.

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Alexandre Karras

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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