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Dive into the research topics where Yves Mouton is active.

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Featured researches published by Yves Mouton.


AIDS | 1997

Impact of protease inhibitors on AIDS-defining events and hospitalizations in 10 French AIDS reference centres

Yves Mouton; Serge Alfandari; Michel Valette; François Cartier; Pierre Dellamonica; Guy Humbert; Jean Marie Lang; Patrice Massip; Denis Mechali; Pascale Leclercq; Jacques Modaï; Henri Portier

Objective:To assess the clinical and economic consequences of the use of protease inhibitors in the treatment of HIV infection. Design:Multicentric, observational, retrospective cohort study. Setting:Ten AIDS reference centres in France. Patients:All patients followed in each centre from September 1995 through October 1996. Main outcome measures:AIDS-defining events, death, health-care resources use, administration of antiretroviral therapy. Results:Data from 7749 patients in 10 centres showed a drop in hospitalization days by 35%, new AIDS cases by 35%, and deaths by 46%. In the same period, the proportion of patients receiving antiretrovirals rose from 36 to 53% including highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), which rose from 0.3 to 18%. Overall cost evaluation showed a slight increase of monthly treatment cost of US


AIDS | 2000

Symptomatic hyperlactataemia: an emerging complication of antiretroviral therapy.

Yann Gérard; L. Maulin; Yazdan Yazdanpanah; Xavier De La Tribonniere; Corinne Amiel; Claude-Alain Maurage; Sophie Robin; Bernard Sablonnière; Chantal Dhennain; Yves Mouton

12 per patient. Comparison of the three centres that used HAART earliest to the three centres that used it latest showed a clear benefit to early HAART with a drop in hospitalization days by 41%, new AIDS cases by 41% and deaths by 69%. The proportion of patients with HAART rose to 27% and monthly health-care cost decreased by US


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2006

Culture of Percutaneous Bone Biopsy Specimens for Diagnosis of Diabetic Foot Osteomyelitis: Concordance with Ulcer Swab Cultures

E. Senneville; Hugues Melliez; Eric Beltrand; Laurence Legout; M. Valette; Marie Cazaubie; Muriel Cordonnier; Michäle Caillaux; Yazdan Yazdanpanah; Yves Mouton

248 852 (i.e., by US


Clinical Therapeutics | 2006

Effectiveness and tolerability of prolonged linezolid treatment for chronic osteomyelitis: a retrospective study.

E. Senneville; Laurence Legout; M. Valette; Yazdan Yazdanpanah; Eric Beltrand; M. Caillaux; Henri Migaud; Yves Mouton

101 per patient per month). Late prescribing centres experienced a less marked effect with a drop in hospitalization days by 22%, new AIDS cases by 31%, and deaths by 32.5%. Proportion of patients with HAART rose to 12% and monthly health-care costs increased by US


Journal of Infection | 1997

Procalcitonin as a marker of bacterial sepsis in patients infected with HIV-1

Y. Gerard; D. Hober; M. Assicot; S. Alfandari; F. Ajana; J.M. Bourez; Ch. Chidiac; Yves Mouton; Claude Bohuon; P. Wattre

113 578 (i.e., by US


BMJ | 2004

Clinical efficacy of antiretroviral combination therapy based on protease inhibitors or non-nucleoside analogue reverse transcriptase inhibitors: indirect comparison of controlled trials

Yazdan Yazdanpanah; Daouda Sissoko; Matthias Egger; Yves Mouton; Marcel Zwahlen; Geneviève Chêne

38 per patient per month). Conclusions:This study supports the extensive use of HAART in HIV-infected patients.


Infection | 1995

HIGH SERUM PROCALCITONIN LEVEL IN A 4-YEAR-OLD LIVER TRANSPLANT RECIPIENT WITH A DISSEMINATED CANDIDIASIS

Y. Gérard; Yves Mouton; Didier Hober; Pierre Wattré; S. Petitjean; M. Assicot; Claude Bohuon

BackgroundFatal lactic acidosis is a serious complication of therapy with nucleoside analogues. ObjectiveTo examine symptomatic hyperlactataemia in HIV-infected adults treated with antiretroviral drugs. MethodsIn this prospective study, arterial blood lactate levels were measured in patients presenting with unexplained clinical symptoms. When these levels were high, functional respiratory tests (FRT) were carried out. Liver or muscle biopsies were further proposed. Incidences were calculated by comparison with the entire cohort of patients treated in the department. ResultsFourteen HIV-infected adults treated with antiretroviral drugs were identified with symptomatic hyperlactataemia during a 2-year period follow-up study. The incidence of hyperlactataemia was 0.8% per year but reached 1.2% if only patients treated with a regimen including stavudine were considered. Clinical symptoms included abnormal fatigue, tachycardia, abdominal pain, weight loss, peripheral neuropathy, and more specifically exercise-induced dyspnoea occurring despite effective antiretroviral treatment. FRT showed a metabolic deviation towards anaerobiosis with a high lactate/pyruvate ratio. Ultrastructural mitochondrial abnormalities were seen in all four patients for whom this was examined. There was a marked decrease in complex IV activity in muscle biopsies from four of five patients, consistent with a mitochondrial dysfunction. Evolution was favourable in 13 patients, probably because of an early diagnosis. ConclusionsPotentially fatal adverse events occurring during antiretroviral treatment may be avoided by close monitoring of clinical signs and blood lactate levels. If other studies confirm that the cumulative long-term toxicity of antiretroviral drugs results from mitochondrial dysfunction, the incidence of hyperlactataemia and its clinical consequences may become more important.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2004

Introduction of SARS in France, March–April, 2003

Jean-Claude Desenclos; Sylvie van der Werf; Isabelle Bonmarin; D Lévy-Bruhl; Yazdan Yazdanpanah; Bruno Hoen; Julien Emmanuelli; O. Lesens; Michel Dupon; François Natali; Christian Michelet; Jacques Reynes; Benoit Guery; Christine Larsen; Caroline Semaille; Yves Mouton; D. Christmann; M. André; Nicolas Escriou; Anna Burguière; Jean-Claude Manuguerra; Bruno Coignard; Agnes Lepoutre; Christine Meffre; D. Bitar; B Decludt; I Capek; Denise Antona; Didier Che; Magid Herida

BACKGROUND We assessed the diagnostic value of swab cultures by comparing them with corresponding cultures of percutaneous bone biopsy specimens for patients with diabetic foot osteomyelitis. METHODS The medical charts of patients with foot osteomyelitis who underwent a surgical percutaneous bone biopsy between January 1996 and June 2004 in a single diabetic foot clinic were reviewed. Seventy-six patients with 81 episodes of foot osteomyelitis who had positive results of culture of bone biopsy specimens and who had received no antibiotic therapy for at least 4 weeks before biopsy constituted the study population. RESULTS Pathogens isolated from bone samples were predominantly staphylococci (52%) and gram-negative bacilli (18.4%). The distributions of microorganisms in bone and swab cultures were similar, except for coagulase-negative staphylococci, which were more prevalent in bone samples (P < .001). The results for cultures of concomitant foot ulcer swabs were available for 69 of 76 patients. The results of bone and swab cultures were identical for 12 (17.4%) of 69 patients, and bone bacteria were isolated from the corresponding swab culture in 21 (30.4%) of 69 patients. The concordance between the results of cultures of swab and of bone biopsy specimens was 42.8% for Staphylococcus aureus, 28.5% for gram-negative bacilli, and 25.8% for streptococci. The overall concordance for all isolates was 22.5%. No adverse events--such as worsening peripheral vascular disease, fracture, or biopsy-induced bone infection--were observed, but 1 patient experienced an episode of acute Charcot osteoarthropathy 4 weeks after bone biopsy was performed. CONCLUSIONS These results suggest that superficial swab cultures do not reliably identify bone bacteria. Percutaneous bone biopsy seems to be safe for patients with diabetic foot osteomyelitis.


Acta Orthopaedica | 2006

Improved aero-anaerobe recovery from infected pros- thetic joint samples taken from 72 patients and col- lected intraoperatively in Rosenow's broth

E. Senneville; Colette Savage; Isabelle Nallet; Yazdan Yazdanpanah; François Giraud; Henri Migaud; Luc Dubreuil; René J. Courcol; Yves Mouton

BACKGROUND Linezolid is an oxazolidinone agent which is apparently well designed for treating chronic osteomyelitis, but data on effectiveness and tolerability as prolonged therapy is currently lacking. OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to assess the effectiveness and tolerability of linezolid in the treatment of chronic osteomyelitis. METHODS The charts of hospitalized patients who had been treated with linezolid for >4 weeks because of chronic osteomyelitis and were followed up for > or =12 months after the end of treatment were retrospectively reviewed for clinical outcome and tolerability. Cure was defined as the absence of clinical, biological, or radiological evidence of infection throughout the posttreatment follow-up. Linezolid tolerability was assessed on the basis of hematologic properties during treatment. RESULTS Of the 66 patients included, all were white (mean [SD] age, 67.7 [18.1] years; 41 men and 25 women; mean [SD] weight, 80.7 [18.6] kg). Thirty-seven (56.1%) patients had infection due to implants including 27 prosthetic joints. Pathogens were predominantly methicillin-resistant staphylococci (49/72 strains, 68.1 %). Every patient was administered N linezolid (600 mg BID) treatment for 6 to 8 days as inpatients, and then, as outpatients, they were switched to PO treatment. Fifty (75.8%) patients received a combination of linezolid and other antimicrobial agents, including rifampin (32 [48.5%]). Surgery was performed in 52 (78.8%) patients. The median hospital stay was 14 days (mean [SD], 19 [11.4] days [range, 7-70 days] ). The median duration of treatment was 13 weeks (mean [SD], 14.3 [8.2] weeks [range, 5-36 weeks]). At the end of treatment, 56 (84.8%) patients were cured, and during the post-treatment follow-up (median duration, 15 months [range, 12-36 months]), 4 relapses occurred, resulting in an overall successful cure for 52 (78.8%) patients. Reversible anemia was reported in 21 patients (31.8%), of whom 16 (24.2%) required blood transfusions. Median time from treatment initiation to anemia onset was 7.3 weeks (range, 4-12 weeks). Peripheral neuropathy was reported in 6 (9.1%) patients, of whom 4 remained symptomatic for up to 24 months after linezolid discontinuation. Other reported adverse events included nausea (6 [9.1%]), diarrhea (1 [1.5%]), and headache (2 [3.0%]), although none of these patients discontinued treatment. CONCLUSIONS In this retrospective chart review, treatment with linezolid as monotherapy or in combination with antimicrobials and/or surgery was associated with cure of chronic osteomyelitis in 84.8% of subjects at 12 weeks after the end of treatment and 78.8% at follow-up. Adverse events were reported in 51.5% of subjects, and 34.8% of subjects discontinued the study because of adverse events. The potential for severe complications justifies close monitoring of these patients.


Journal of Virology | 2000

The Synthetic Immunomodulator Murabutide Controls Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Replication at Multiple Levels in Macrophages and Dendritic Cells

Edith Darcissac; Marie-José Truong; Joëlle Dewulf; Yves Mouton; André Capron; George M. Bahr

Procalcitonin (ProCT) is a recently described marker of severe sepsis. It was decided to assess the value of proCT as a marker of secondary infection in patients infected with HIV-1. ProCT plasma levels were measured by immunoluminometric assay in a prospective study in 155 HIV-infected individuals: 102 asymptomatic and 53 with lever or suspected secondary infections. The baseline plasma level of ProCT was low (0.5 ng/ml +/- 0.37), even in the latest stages of the disease, and did not differ from the values of healthy subjects (0.54 ng/ml +/- 0.08). EDTA-treated whole blood was collected from patients before starting specific antimicrobial therapy. No elevation of ProCT level was detected in HIV-infected patients with evolving secondary infections including PCP (n = 4), cerebral toxoplasmosis (n = 4), viral infections (n = 9), mycobacterial infections (n = 5), localized bacterial (n = 12) and fungal infections (n = 4), malignancies (n = 3), and in various associated infectious and non-infectious febrile events (n = 13). All these plasma values were lower than 2.1 ng/ml. In contrast, high ProCT plasma levels were detected in one HIV-infected patient with a septicaemic Haemophilus influenzae infection (16.5 ng/ml) and another one with a septicaemic Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection (44.1 ng/ ml), ProCT values decreased rapidly under appropriate therapy. ProCT seems to be a specific marker of bacterial sepsis in HIV-infected patients, as no increase in other secondary infections could be detected in those patients. A rapid determination of ProCT level could be useful to confirm or refute bacterial sepsis for a better management of febrile HIV-infected patients.

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