15 research outputs found

    New Perspectives on Primary Prophylaxis of Invasive Fungal Infection in Children Undergoing Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation: A 10-Year Retrospective Cohort Study

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    Background: Allogenic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (a-HCT) remains a therapeutic treatment for many pediatric hematological diseases. The occurrence of invasive fungal infections (IFIs) is a complication for which ECIL-8 recommends primary antifungal prophylaxis. In this study, we evaluated the impact of our local strategy of not systematically administering primary antifungal prophylaxis in children undergoing a-HCT on the occurrence and mortality of IFIs. Methods: We performed a retrospective monocentric study from 2010 to 2020. We retained all proven and probable IFIs diagnosed during the first year post a-HCT. Results: 308 patients were included. Eighteen patients developed twenty IFIs (thirteen proven, seven probable) (6.5%) among which aspergillosis (n = 10, 50%) and candidosis (n = 7, 35%) were the most frequently diagnosed infections. Only 2% of children died because of an IFI, which represents 14% of all deaths. Multivariate analysis found that age > 10 years (OR: 0.29), the use of a therapeutic antiviral treatment (OR: 2.71) and a low neutrophil count reconstitution (OR: 0.93) were significantly associated with the risk of IFI occurrence. There was also a trend of malignant underlying disease and status ≄ CR2 but it was not retained in multivariate analysis. Conclusions: IFI occurrence was not higher in our cohort than what is reported in the literature with the use of systematic antifungal prophylaxis, with a good survival rate nonetheless. Thus, a prophylaxis could be considered for children with a high risk of IFI such as those aged over 10 years

    Geoepidemiology and Immunologic Features of Autoinflammatory Diseases: a Comprehensive Review

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    International audienceThe knowledge on systemic autoinflammatory disorders (SAID) is expanding rapidly and new signalling pathways are being decrypted. The concept of autoinflammation has been proposed since 1999, to define a group of diseases with abnormal innate immunity activation. Since then, more than 30 monogenic SAID have been described. In this review, we first describe inflammasomopathies and SAID related to the interleukin-1 pathway. Recent insights into the pathogenesis of familial Mediterranean fever and the function of Pyrin are detailed. In addition, complex or polygenic SAID, such as Still’s disease or PFAPA syndrome, are also discussed. Then, major players driving autoinflammation, such as type-1 interferonopathies (including the recently described haploinsuffiency in A20 and otulipenia), TNF-associated periodic syndromes, defects in ubiquitination, and SAID with overlapping features of autoimmunity or immunodeficiency. Discoveries of the pathogenic role of mosaicism, intronic defects coupled to the likelihood to identify digenic or polygenic diseases are providing new challenges for physicians and geneticists. This comprehensive review depicts the various SAID, presenting them according to their predominant pathophysiological mechanism, with a particular emphasis on recent findings. Epidemiologic data are also presented. Finally, we propose a practical diagnostic approach to the most common monogenic SAID, based on the most characteristic clinical presentation of these disorders

    Combinatorial Expression of NK Cell Receptors Governs Cell Subset Reactivity and Effector Functions but Not Tumor Specificity

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    Abstract NK cell receptors allow NK cells to recognize targets such as tumor cells. Many of them are expressed on a subset of NK cells, independently of each other, which creates a vast diversity of receptor combinations. Whether these combinations influence NK cell antitumor responses is not well understood. We addressed this question in the C57BL/6 mouse model and analyzed the individual effector response of 444 mouse NK cell subsets, defined by combinations of 12 receptors, against tumor cell lines originating from different tissues and mouse strains. We found a wide range of reactivity among NK subsets, but the same hierarchy of responses was observed for the different tumor types, showing that the repertoire of NK cell receptors does not encode for different tumor specificities but for different intrinsic reactivities. The coexpression of CD27, NKG2A, and DNAM-1 identified subsets with relative cytotoxic specialization, whereas reciprocally, CD11b and KLRG1 defined the best IFN-Îł producers. The expression of educating receptors Ly49C, Ly49I, and NKG2A was also strongly correlated with IFN-Îł production, but this effect was suppressed by unengaged receptors Ly49A, Ly49F, and Ly49G2. Finally, IL-15 coordinated NK cell effector functions, but education and unbound inhibitory receptors retained some influence on their response. Collectively, these data refine our understanding of the mechanisms governing NK cell reactivity, which could help design new NK cell therapy protocols

    Alarming Upward Trend in Multidrug-Resistant Bacteria in a Large Cohort of Immunocompromised Children: A Four-Year Comparative Study

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    Documenting bacteremia at the onset of fever in immunosuppressed children is challenging; therefore, it leads to the early administration of broad-spectrum antibiotics. We aimed to analyse the evolution of antibiotic resistance profiles of bacterial bloodstream infections (BSI) and gut colonisations in a large cohort of immunocompromised children carrying a central venous catheter, in comparison with a prior, similar study conducted in our centre from 2014 to 2017. A retrospective, observational cohort study was conducted from January 2018 to December 2021, in a tertiary centre for paediatric immuno-haematology and oncology. Empirical antibiotic therapy was adapted to the immunosuppression risk group and prior bacterial colonisation. There was a mean of 6.9 BSI/1000 patient bed days. Multidrug-resistant bacteria (MDRB) associated BSI accounted for 35/273 (12.8%). The incidence of MDRB gum/gut colonisation and MDRB associated BSI increased annually and correlated with the level of immunosuppression (p = 0.024). One third (34.7%) of the BSI episodes were not associated with neutropenia. As compared to the previous study, an alarming emergence of MDRB responsible for gut colonisations and BSI in immunosuppressed children was reported over the last four years. The degree of immunosuppression directly correlates with the risk of having an MDRB gut colonisation or MDRB BSI

    Alarming Upward Trend in Multidrug-Resistant Bacteria in a Large Cohort of Immunocompromised Children: A Four-Year Comparative Study

    No full text
    Documenting bacteremia at the onset of fever in immunosuppressed children is challenging; therefore, it leads to the early administration of broad-spectrum antibiotics. We aimed to analyse the evolution of antibiotic resistance profiles of bacterial bloodstream infections (BSI) and gut colonisations in a large cohort of immunocompromised children carrying a central venous catheter, in comparison with a prior, similar study conducted in our centre from 2014 to 2017. A retrospective, observational cohort study was conducted from January 2018 to December 2021, in a tertiary centre for paediatric immuno-haematology and oncology. Empirical antibiotic therapy was adapted to the immunosuppression risk group and prior bacterial colonisation. There was a mean of 6.9 BSI/1000 patient bed days. Multidrug-resistant bacteria (MDRB) associated BSI accounted for 35/273 (12.8%). The incidence of MDRB gum/gut colonisation and MDRB associated BSI increased annually and correlated with the level of immunosuppression (p = 0.024). One third (34.7%) of the BSI episodes were not associated with neutropenia. As compared to the previous study, an alarming emergence of MDRB responsible for gut colonisations and BSI in immunosuppressed children was reported over the last four years. The degree of immunosuppression directly correlates with the risk of having an MDRB gut colonisation or MDRB BSI

    Rescue of Pap-Mas in Systemic JIA Using Janus Kinase Inhibitors, Case Report and Systematic Review

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    Introduction: Biological disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (bDMARDs) targeting interleukin (IL)-6 and IL-1ÎČ represent a steroid-sparing first-line therapy used in systemic-onset juvenile idiopathic arthritis (sJIA). Recently, the occurrence of pulmonary alveolar proteinosis (PAP) in sJIA patients was reported with early-onset and exposure to bDMARDs as potential risk factors. We report on a new case with longitudinal immunomonitoring successfully treated by Janus Kinase inhibitors (JAKi) and review past clinical descriptions of this new entity. Methods: We report one case of pulmonary alveolar proteinosis and macrophage activation syndrome (PAP-MAS) with longitudinal immunomonitoring. We then conducted a review of the literature of seven publications reporting 107 cases of PAP-MAS sJIA, and included the main characteristics and evolution under treatment. Results: Of the seven articles analyzed, the incidence of PAP-MAS among sJIA patients varied from 1.28% to 12.9%. We report here a single case among a cohort of 537 sJIA patients followed in the pediatric department of the Hospices Civils de Lyon over the last 15 years. This child presented with all clinical and immunological characteristics of PAP-MAS. After several lines of treatment, he benefited from JAKi and improved with respect to both systemic symptoms and lung disease. In the literature, strategies with monoclonal antibodies targeting either INF-Îł or IL-1ÎČ/IL-18 have been tested with variable results. Orally taken JAKi presents the advantage of targeting multiple cytokines and avoiding parenteral injections of monoclonal antibodies that may contribute to the pathogenesis. Conclusions: JAKi represent a promising option in the treatment of lung disease associated with sJIA

    Aggressive large B‐cell lymphoma triggered by a parvovirus B19 infection in a previously healthy child

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    International audienceIn absence of red blood cells disease or immune defect, parvovirus B19 (PVB-19) is usually considered as a benign condition. Here, we report the case of a 10-year-old boy, previously healthy, presenting with a PVB-19 infection revealed by a bicytopenia and a voluminous axillary adenopathy. Pathophysiology examination showed reactional lymphoid population. Nine months later and in the absence of remission, a new biopsy of the same adenopathy revealed a Hodgkin lymphoma with area of T-cell rich aggressive large B-cell lymphoma. This case suggests PVB-19 as potential trigger of this malignant childhood hemopathy. Although no definitive conclusion can be drawn, our clinical case questions the role of PVB-19 in lymphomagenesis
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