Publications (3)3.45 Total impact
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Article: [Idiosyncratic drug-induced agranulocytosis].
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ABSTRACT: Idiosyncratic drug-induced agranulocytosis is a potential adverse event of most drugs, rare but life-threatening. Its annual incidence does not exceed 10 cases per million population in Europe and has remained stable over the past two decades. Its pathogenesis is poorly understood. The principal drugs associated with it are antithyroid drugs, antibiotics including trimethoprim, sulfamethoxazole, and beta-lactamines, ticlopidine, sulfasalazine and dipyrone. Clinical presentation is highly variable but a severe infection is observed in more than one third of cases. Poor prognostic factors include a neutrophil count under 100/mm(3), age > 65 years, septicemia or shock, and severe comorbidity. Improvement in the management of infectious complications and the use of hematopoietic growth factors in severe cases helps explain that mortality rate has fallen to less than 5%.La Presse Médicale 09/2008; 37(9):1327-33. · 0.67 Impact Factor -
Article: Confirmation of a novel recurrent association: BCR-ABL t(9;22) and t(19;21).
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ABSTRACT: Association of a t(9;22)(q34;q11), BCR/ABL-positive, with a dic(19;21)(p13;p13) has been described in acute lymphoblastic leukemia in relapse, raising the question of whether this association is recurrent. Described here are two cases, one of myeloproliferative disease and one of acute lymphoblastic leukemia, both presenting a masked t(9;22) and t(19;21). Chromosomal rearrangements were ascertained by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) using locus-specific probes, multicolor FISH, and bacterial artificial chromosome array. These additional observations suggest a nonrandom association.Cancer Genetics and Cytogenetics 01/2008; 179(2):127-31. · 1.39 Impact Factor -
Article: 13q deletions in B-cell lymphoproliferative disorders: frequent association with translocation.
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ABSTRACT: The 13q14 deletion is the most frequent abnormality in chronic lymphocytic leukemias/small lymphocytic lymphomas, and this early rearrangement is observed from the start of the disease. The systematic use of a panel of interphase fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) may not reveal some probes (targeting chromosomes 11q, 13q, 17p, and chromosome 12) structural abnormalities. In this series, we analyzed metaphases by conventional cytogenetics, followed by interphase and metaphase fluorescence in situ hybridization. We were able to observe 17 cases of 13q translocations with deletions in eight of them. Three distinct regions were involved by translocations in association with or without deletions: a region centromeric to RB1 (13q11 approximately 13), a zone telomeric to D13D25 (13q21 approximately 31), and a 13q14 region deliniated by RB1 and D13S25. In this area, the deletion was variable: RB1 alone (one case), D13S319 approximately D13S25 (five cases), and from RB1 to D13S25 (two cases). The very high frequency of 13q14 loss suggests that these deletions are of pathogenetic importance, but, the importance of the translocations remains to be determined.Cancer Genetics and Cytogenetics 05/2007; 174(2):151-60. · 1.39 Impact Factor