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Dive into the research topics where Vincent Audard is active.

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Featured researches published by Vincent Audard.


American Journal of Transplantation | 2011

Feasibility, reproducibility, risks and benefits of face transplantation: a prospective study of outcomes.

L. Lantieri; M. Hivelin; Vincent Audard; Marc-David Benjoar; Jean-Paul Meningaud; Frank Bellivier; Nicolas Ortonne; Jean-Pascal Lefaucheur; A. Gilton; C. Suberbielle; Jean Marty; Philippe Lang; Philippe Grimbert

Composite tissue allotransplantations can be indicated when autologous transfers fail to restore human appearance. We report the reproducibility, difficulties, serious adverse events and outcomes of our patients. Five patients were included in a registered clinical research protocol after thorough screenings assessed by an independent expert committee systematically discussing the alternative options. One patient suffered from plexiform neurofibromas, two from third degree burns and two from gunshot injuries. They were included on a national waiting list with a dedicated face procurement procedure. Transplants were harvested from heart beating brain‐dead donors before other tissues and organs. Induction immunosuppressive therapy included antithymocyte globulins, steroids, mycophenolate mophetil and tacrolimus. Maintenance therapy included the last three ones associated with extracorporeal‐photopheresis. Four patients were transplanted with 7‐ to 38‐month follow‐up. One could not due to multiple panel reactive antibodies after 18 months on waiting list. Acute cellular rejections were controlled by conventional treatment. Opportunistic infections affected all patients and lead one patient to die two month after the transplantation. Voluntary facial activity appeared from 3 to 5 month. Face transplantation has been reproducible under conventional immunosuppression. Major improvements in facial aesthetic and function allowed patients to recover social relations and improved their quality of life.


American Journal of Transplantation | 2006

Risk factors and long-term outcome of transplant renal artery stenosis in adult recipients after treatment by percutaneous transluminal angioplasty.

Vincent Audard; Marie Matignon; F. Hemery; R. Snanoudj; P. Desgranges; M. C. Anglade; H. Kobeiter; Antoine Durrbach; B. Charpentier; Philippe Lang; Philippe Grimbert

Transplant renal artery stenosis (TRAS) is a common complication of kidney transplantation but attempts to identify predisposing risk factors for TRAS have yielded conflicting results. In order to determine the predisposing factors for transplant (TRAS), we retrospectively reviewed the records of 29 renal allograft recipients with TRAS treated with percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA). The TRAS group was compared with a case‐control group of 58 patients. Predisposing factors for TRAS included CMV infection (41.4% vs. 12.1% p = 0.0018) and initial delayed graft function (DGF) (48.3% vs. 15.5% p = 0.0018), respectively in the TRAS and the control group. Acute rejection occurred more frequently in patients from the TRAS group (48.3%) compared with the control group (27.6%), although the difference was not significant (p = 0.06). In a multivariate analysis, only CMV infection (p = 0.005) and DGF (p = 0.009) appear to be significantly and independently associated with TRAS. The long‐term graft survival was significantly higher in the control group, compared with the TRAS group (p = 0.03). Our study suggests that CMV infection and DGF are two reliable risk factors for TRAS. Despite treatment by PTA with primary successful results, TRAS significantly affects long‐term graft outcome.


Transplant International | 2007

Renal transplantation from extended criteria cadaveric donors: problems and perspectives overview.

Vincent Audard; Marie Matignon; Karine Dahan; Philippe Lang; Philippe Grimbert

The critical shortage of organs available for renal transplantation has led to the consideration of alternative strategies for increasing the donor pool. Recently, the cadaveric kidney donor pool extended to donors who might have been deemed unsuitable in early times, leading to the concept of marginal donors and more recently to the notion of expanded criteria donors. Such organs are eligible for organ donation but, because of extreme age and other clinical characteristics, are expected to produce allograft at risk for diminished post‐transplant function. Thus, the challenge is now to reduce the difference between graft outcome from patients grafted with marginal and ‘optimal’ donors. This implies appropriate transplantation strategies during pre‐, peri‐ and post‐transplantation phases including reduction of cold ischemia time, recipient selection, adaptation of immunosuppressive drug regimens, increase in nephron mass by dual kidney transplantation, and improvement in the graft selection process using histological criteria. This review summarizes current definition of a marginal donor and provides some guidance for clinical management of such transplant.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2003

Truncation of C-mip (Tc-mip), a new proximal signaling protein, induces c-maf Th2 transcription factor and cytoskeleton reorganization.

Philippe Grimbert; Asta Valanciuté; Vincent Audard; André Pawlak; Sabine Le gouvelo; Philippe Lang; Patrick Niaudet; Albert Bensman; Georges Guellaen; Djillali Sahali

Several arguments suggest that minimal change nephrotic syndrome (MCNS) results from yet unknown systemic disorder of T cell function. By screening a cDNA library from T cell relapse, we identified a new pleckstrin homology (PH) domain-containing protein encoded by a gene located on chromosome 16q24. Two alternative transcripts were identified. The first species (c-mip) was expressed in fetal liver, kidney, and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), but weakly detected in PBMCs from MCNS patients. The second form (Tc-mip, standing for truncated c-maf inducing protein), corresponds to subtracted transcript and lacks the NH2-terminal PH domain. The expression of Tc-mip was restricted to fetal liver, thymus, and MCNS PBMCs where it was specifically recruited in CD4+ T cells subset. Overexpression of Tc-mip in T cell Jurkat induced c-maf, transactivated the interleukin 4 gene and down-regulated the interferon γ expression, characteristic of a Th2 commitment. Moreover, the overexpression of Tc-mip induced Src phosphorylation, T cell clustering, and a cellular redistribution of the cytoskeleton-associated L-plastin, by a PI3 kinase independent pathway. Tc-mip represents therefore the first identified protein, which links proximal signaling to c-maf induction.


Clinical Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2008

Renal Lesions Associated with IgM-Secreting Monoclonal Proliferations: Revisiting the Disease Spectrum

Vincent Audard; Benoit Georges; Philippe Vanhille; Cécile Toly; Benjamin Deroure; Fadi Fakhouri; René Cuvelier; Xavier Belenfant; Brigitte Surin; Pierre Aucouturier; Béatrice Mougenot; Pierre Ronco

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Since the first description of pathology of the kidney in Waldenström disease in 1970, there have been few reports on kidney complications of IgM-secreting monoclonal proliferations. Here, we aimed to revisit the spectrum of renal lesions occurring in patients with a serum monoclonal IgM. DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS Fourteen patients with a circulating monoclonal IgM and a kidney disease related to B cell proliferation were identified retrospectively. Demographic, clinical, and laboratory data were assessed for each patient at the time of kidney biopsy. RESULTS Seven patients had a nephrotic syndrome. Patients without nephrotic syndrome all had impaired renal function. Mean serum creatinine was 238 micromol/L. For five patients, the diagnosis of monoclonal IgM preceded the kidney disease by 28.8 mo (range 12 to 60). Seven patients had Waldenström disease, two had a small B cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma, one had an IgM-excreting multiple myeloma, one had a marginal zone B cell lymphoma, and three had an IgM-related disorder. Renal lesions included (1) intracapillary monoclonal deposits disease with granular, electron-dense IgM thrombi occluding capillary lumens (5); (2) atypical membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (3); (3) lambda light chain amyloidosis (2) associated with mu deposits in one patient; (4) acute tubular necrosis (1); and (5) CD20(+) lymphomatous infiltration (3). Remission of the nephrotic syndrome was attained in three of seven patients, and renal function improved after chemotherapy. CONCLUSIONS Although renal complications of IgM proliferations are rare, a wide spectrum of kidney lesions is observed, without correlation with the type of hematologic disorder.


Clinical Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2013

Acute Renal Infarction: A Case Series

Marie Bourgault; Philippe Grimbert; Catherine Verret; Jacques Pourrat; Michel Herody; Jean Michel Halimi; Alexandre Karras; Zahir Amoura; N. Jourde-Chiche; Hassan Izzedine; Hélène François; Jean-Jacques Boffa; Aurélie Hummel; Pauline Bernadet-Monrozies; Denis Fouque; Florence Canoui-Poitrine; Philippe Lang; Eric Daugas; Vincent Audard

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Renal infarction is an arterial vascular event that may cause irreversible damage to kidney tissues. This study describes the clinical characteristics of patients with renal infarction according to underlying mechanism of vascular injury. DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS This study retrospectively identified 94 patients with renal infarction diagnosed between 1989 and 2011 with the aim of highlighting potential correlations between demographic, clinical, and biologic characteristics and the etiology of renal infarction. Four groups were identified: renal infarction of cardiac origin (cardiac group, n=23), renal infarction associated with renal artery injury (renal injury group, n=29), renal infarction associated with hypercoagulability disorders (hypercoagulable group, n=15), and apparently idiopathic renal infarction (idiopathic group, n=27). RESULTS Clinical symptoms included abdominal and/or flank pain in 96.8% of cases; 46 patients had uncontrolled hypertension at diagnosis. Laboratory findings included increase of lactate dehydrogenase level (90.5%), increase in C-reactive protein level (77.6%), and renal impairment (40.4%). Compared with renal injury group patients, this study found that cardiac group patients were older (relative risk for 1 year increase=1.21, P=0.001) and displayed a lower diastolic BP (relative risk per 1 mmHg=0.94, P=0.05). Patients in the hypercoagulable group had a significantly lower diastolic BP (relative risk=0.86, P=0.005). Patients in the idiopathic group were older (relative risk=1.13, P=0.01) and less frequently men (relative risk=0.11, P=0.02). Seven patients required hemodialysis at the first evaluation, and zero patients died during the first 30 days. CONCLUSIONS This study suggests that the clinical and biologic characteristics of patients can provide valuable information about the causal mechanism involved in renal infarction occurrence.


Science Signaling | 2010

c-mip Impairs Podocyte Proximal Signaling and Induces Heavy Proteinuria

Shao-Yu Zhang; Maud Kamal; Karine Dahan; Andre Pawlak; Virginie Ory; Dominique Desvaux; Vincent Audard; Marina Candelier; Fatima Ben Mohamed; Marie Matignon; Christo Christov; Xavier Decrouy; Véronique Bernard; Gilles Mangiapan; Philippe Lang; Georges Guellaën; Pierre Ronco; Djillali Sahali

Overexpression of the protein c-mip in mice produces phenotypes similar to various idiopathic kidney disorders. Podocyte Disruptor Podocytes are cells with extensions known as foot processes that envelop the capillaries of the glomerulus in the kidney and prevent protein in the bloodstream from entering the urine. In individuals with idiopathic nephrotic syndrome, the podocytes lose their characteristic foot processes (a morphological alteration known as effacement) and protein appears in their urine (a symptom called proteinuria). Zhang et al. found that in some patients with various types of idiopathic nephrotic syndrome, the abundance of a protein known as c-mip was increased in podocytes. Transgenic mice that overexpressed c-mip developed proteinuria and effacement of foot processes. Biochemical analysis indicated that c-mip disrupted the interactions between proteins involved in regulating cytoskeletal reorganization in podocytes. Administration of the bacterial endotoxin lipopolysaccharide (LPS) induces proteinuria in mice, and the authors found that LPS-induced proteinuria was prevented by intravenous injection of a small interfering RNA directed against c-mip. Thus, c-mip may be a potential therapeutic target in the treatment of idiopathic nephrotic syndrome. Idiopathic nephrotic syndrome comprises several podocyte diseases of unknown origin that affect the glomerular podocyte, which controls the permeability of the filtration barrier in the kidney to proteins. It is characterized by the daily loss of more than 3 g of protein in urine and the lack of inflammatory lesions or cell infiltration. We found that the abundance of c-mip (c-maf inducing protein) was increased in the podocytes of patients with various acquired idiopathic nephrotic syndromes in which the podocyte is the main target of injury. Mice engineered to have excessive c-mip in podocytes developed proteinuria without morphological alterations, inflammatory lesions, or cell infiltration. Excessive c-mip blocked podocyte signaling by preventing the interaction of the slit diaphragm transmembrane protein nephrin with the tyrosine kinase Fyn, thereby decreasing phosphorylation of nephrin in vitro and in vivo. Moreover, c-mip inhibited interactions between Fyn and the cytoskeletal regulator N-WASP (neural Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein) and between the adaptor protein Nck and nephrin, potentially accounting for cytoskeletal disorganization and the effacement of foot processes seen in idiopathic nephrotic syndromes. The intravenous injection of small interfering RNA targeting c-mip prevented lipopolysaccharide-induced proteinuria in mice. Together, these results identify c-mip as a key component in the molecular pathogenesis of acquired podocyte diseases.


American Journal of Transplantation | 2008

Outcome of Renal Transplantation in Eight Patients with Candida sp. Contamination of Preservation Fluid

Marie Matignon; Françoise Botterel; Vincent Audard; B. Dunogue; Karine Dahan; Philippe Lang; Stéphane Bretagne; Philippe Grimbert

The complications of kidney graft preservation fluid infected by Candida sp. may range in severity from trivial infections to life‐threatening complications, including graft arteritis and anastomotic rupture. Mandatory nephrectomy has recently been proposed as a means of preventing arterial wall rupture in such cases. We describe the clinical features and outcome of renal transplantation from a cadaveric donor in eight recipients with preservation fluid testing positive for Candida sp. Six patients were treated with antifungal drugs. After 1–2 years of follow‐up, including regular imaging, none of the patients had developed arterial aneurysm, and all had a functional allograft and were alive. The contamination of renal graft preservation fluid with Candida sp. may be uneventful and should not systematically lead to removal of the graft. Until other risk factors for vascular complications have been determined, early antifungal treatment and repeated radiological monitoring are advisable for the prevention and/or early detection of such complications.


Transplantation | 2007

The regulatory/cytotoxic graft-infiltrating T cells differentiate renal allograft borderline change from acute rejection.

Philippe Grimbert; Hicham Mansour; Dominique Desvaux; Fran oise Roudot-Thoraval; Vincent Audard; Karine Dahan; Fran ois Berrehar; Catherine Dehoulle-Poillet; Jean Pierre Farcet; Philippe Lang; Sabine Le Gouvello

The interpretation of cellular infiltrate from renal transplant recipients with borderline (BL) changes is still a challenging problem. To analyze the immune phenotype of such infiltrate, we quantified the mRNA expression of Foxp3 and interleukinL-10 and granzyme B (GB) in 15 kidney biopsies with BL changes. Controls were patients presenting type IA acute rejection and nonrejecting patients. Only levels of GB mRNA correlated significantly with response to antirejection therapy. Levels of Foxp3 mRNA in BL changes were intermediate between type IA acute rejection and nonrejecting controls. To determine the balance of alloagressive to graft-protecting T cells, we quantified the Foxp3/GB ratio. BL changes T cells infiltrate expressed a significantly higher Foxp3/GB ratio than that in IA acute rejection. These results suggest that T cell infiltrate from BL change exhibit a tolerogenic rather than a cytotoxic phenotype.


Blood | 2010

Occurrence of minimal change nephrotic syndrome in classical Hodgkin lymphoma is closely related to the induction of c-mip in Hodgkin-Reed Sternberg cells and podocytes.

Vincent Audard; Shao-Yu Zhang; Christiane Copie-Bergman; Catherine Rucker-Martin; Virginie Ory; Marina Candelier; Maryse Baia; Philippe Lang; André Pawlak; Djillali Sahali

It is currently considered that idiopathic minimal change nephrotic syndrome is an immune-mediated glomerular disease. Its association with classical Hodgkin lymphoma minimal change nephrotic syndrome (cHL-MCNS) suggests a molecular link, which remains to be elucidated. We analyzed the expression of cmaf inducing protein (c-mip) in lymphomatous tissues and kidney biopsy samples of patients with cHL-MCNS (n = 8) and in lymphomatous tissues of patients with isolated cHL (n = 9). Because c-mip affects the regulatory loop involving Fyn, we investigated possible structural defects in this signaling pathway, using laser capture microdissection, reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction, and Western blotting. We found that c-mip was selectively expressed in Hodgkin and Reed-Sternberg (HRS) cells and podocytes of patients with cHL-MCNS but is undetectable in patients with isolated cHL. We demonstrated that c-mip was specifically involved in the negative regulation of early proximal signaling through its interaction with phosphoprotein associated with glycosphingolipid-enriched microdomains and Fyn. We showed that the up-regulation of c-mip in cHL-MCNS was associated with a possible Fyn defect in HRS cells and podocytes. Moreover, we showed that c-mip was up-regulated in Fyn-deficient podocytes. c-mip may be a useful marker of cHL-MCNS and its induction reflects the dysregulation of proximal signaling.

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