Publications by authors named "Helene Greigert"

Apart from life-threatening and/or functional emergencies, treatment of vascular lesions in giant cell arteritis (GCA) is medical. Revascularization may be considered if the lesion remains symptomatic or progressive despite optimal medical treatment, provided that there is no disease-related inflammation, and always managed by a team of trained experts. The main risk associated with aortic involvement (aortitis) is the development of an aneurysm, most often in the thoracic aorta, after several years of progression.

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Article Synopsis
  • PET/CT is a diagnostic imaging tool gaining traction for identifying large-vessel vasculitis, particularly giant cell arteritis (GCA).
  • It effectively highlights inflammation in large arteries like the aorta, demonstrating its frequent involvement and the risk of serious complications like aneurysms.
  • Despite its benefits, challenges and uncertainties remain regarding the overall effectiveness of PET/CT in diagnosing and monitoring GCA, which this review aims to address.
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  • Polymyalgia rheumatica (PMR) and giant cell arteritis (GCA) often overlap, but PMR lacks the vascular inflammation present in GCA, suggesting different underlying mechanisms.
  • *In a study involving 45 isolated PMR patients and 29 PMR/GCA overlap patients, various serum biomarkers related to inflammation and vascular function were measured to differentiate between the two conditions before starting treatment.
  • *Results indicated that certain biomarker ratios, specifically CXCL9/IL-6 and MMP-3/sCD141, were more effective at diagnosing GCA in patients with isolated PMR, demonstrating the potential to guide further examination for those at risk.*
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Objectives: To evaluate the ability of FDG PET/CT, at diagnosis of giant cell arteritis (GCA) and during follow-up, to predict occurrence of relapse in large-vessel GCA (LV-GCA).

Methods: We conducted a retrospective study using the French Study Group for Large-Vessel Vasculitis (GEFA) network. Data from patients with LV-GCA diagnosed by PET/CT and who had PET/CT in the following year were collected.

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Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT) is a rare inherited disease due to heterozygous loss-of-function mutations on the BMP9/10 pathway ( or mainly). HHT endothelial cells are prone to lose their quiescence, leading to progressive appearance of numerous telangiectases on skin and mucosa (complicated by epistaxis and anemia), and to larger arteriovenous malformations in lungs, liver and brain. HHT is also associated with T lymphocyte abnormalities, which are currently poorly understood.

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Article Synopsis
  • The text serves as a correction to a previously published article identified by the DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0234165.
  • The correction addresses specific errors or inaccuracies in the original publication.
  • Such amendments aim to ensure the integrity and accuracy of the research findings presented in the article.
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Vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) have been shown to play a role in the pathogenesis of giant cell arteritis (GCA) through their capacity to produce chemokines recruiting T cells and monocytes in the arterial wall and their ability to migrate and proliferate in the neointima where they acquire a myofibroblast (MF) phenotype, leading to vascular stenosis. This study aimed to investigate if MFs could also impact T-cell polarization. Confocal microscopy was used to analyze fresh fragments of temporal artery biopsies (TABs).

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Warm autoimmune hemolytic anemia (wAIHA) is a rare acquired autoimmune disease mediated by antibodies targeting red blood cells. The involvement of CD4 T-helper cells has been scarcely explored, with most findings extrapolated from animal models. Here, we performed quantification of both effector T lymphocytes (Teff) and regulatory T cells (Treg), associated with functional and transcriptomic analyses of Treg in human wAIHA.

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Background: Venous thromboembolism is a major complication of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). We hypothesized that a weight-adjusted intermediate dose of anticoagulation may decrease the risk of venous thromboembolism COVID-19 patients.

Methods: In this multicenter, randomised, open-label, phase 4, superiority trial with blinded adjudication of outcomes, we randomly assigned adult patients hospitalised in 20 French centers and presenting with acute respiratory SARS-CoV-2.

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Diagnosis of neuro-histiocytosis is challenging and relies on clinical presentation, imaging, and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analysis to exclude differential diagnoses. Brain biopsy remains the gold standard for accurate diagnosis, but it is rarely performed because of the risk of the procedure and the low rentability in neurodegenerative presentation. Therefore, there is an unmet need to identify a specific biomarker for diagnosing neurohistiocytosis in adults.

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TREATMENT OF GIANT CELL ARTERITIS. The treatment of giant cell arteritis (GCA) is based on glucocorticoids. This treatment significantly reduces the risk of ischemic complications, especially those of a visual nature, rapidly relieves the symptoms of the disease, and eliminates the inflammatory syndrome.

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DIAGNOSIS OF GIANT CELL ARTERITIS. The diagnosis of giant cell arteritis (GCA) must be made promptly in order to initiate appropriate treatment aimed at relieving symptoms and avoiding ischemic complications, particularly visual ones. The diagnosis of GCA is based on the occurrence, in a patient over 50, of clinical signs of GCA, primarily recent headaches, or polymyalgia rheumatica, as «evidence» of large-vessel vasculitis, which is provided by histological analysis of an arterial fragment, usually the temporal artery, or by imaging of the cephalic arteries, the aorta and/ or its main branches by Doppler US scan, angio-CT, 18fluorodeoxyglucose PET scan or more rarely by MRI angiography.

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EPIDEMIOLOGY AND PATHOPHYSIOLOGY OF GIANT CELL ARTERITIS. Giant cell arteritis (GCA) is a granulomatous vasculitis. It affects patients over 50 years of age, predominantly women.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study focuses on Giant Cell Arteritis (GCA), a condition characterized by vascular inflammation and remodeling, which are not effectively managed by current treatments.
  • Researchers investigated the impact of a new cell therapy called Human Monocyte-derived Suppressor Cells (HuMoSC) on tissue samples from GCA patients, measuring gene expression and protein levels after treatment.
  • Results show that HuMoSCs effectively reduce markers of inflammation and vascular remodeling, suggesting they could improve GCA therapy by targeting these key issues.
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Polymyalgia rheumatica (PMR) is an inflammatory rheumatism of the shoulder and pelvic girdles. In 16 to 21% of cases, PMR is associated with giant cell arteritis (GCA) that can lead to severe vascular complications. Ruling out GCA in patients with PMR is currently a critical challenge for clinicians.

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Objectives: To investigate the performance of cranial PET/CT for the diagnosis of GCA.

Methods: All patients with a suspected diagnosis of GCA were prospectively enrolled in this study and had a digital PET/CT with evaluation of cranial arteries if they had not started glucocorticoids >72 h previously. The diagnosis of GCA was retained after at least 6 months of follow-up if no other diagnosis was considered by the clinician and the patient went into remission after at least 6 consecutive months of treatment.

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Introduction: This study aimed to identify markers of disease worsening in patients hospitalized for SARS-Cov2 infection.

Patients And Methods: Patients hospitalized for severe recent-onset (<1 week) SARS-Cov2 infection were prospectively included. The percentage of T-cell subsets and plasma IL-6 at admission (before any steroid therapy) were compared between patients who progressed to a critical infection and those who did not.

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The giant cell arteritis (GCA) pathophysiology is complex and multifactorial, involving a predisposing genetic background, the role of immune aging and the activation of vascular dendritic cells by an unknown trigger. Once activated, dendritic cells recruit CD4 T cells and induce their activation, proliferation and polarization into Th1 and Th17, which produce interferon-gamma (IFN-γ) and interleukin-17 (IL-17), respectively. IFN-γ triggers the production of chemokines by vascular smooth muscle cells, which leads to the recruitment of additional CD4 and CD8 T cells and also monocytes that differentiate into macrophages.

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Article Synopsis
  • Recently developed human monocyte-derived suppressor cells (HuMoSC), specifically CD33+ subpopulation, show potential in reducing graft-versus-host disease (GvHD) severity in mice.
  • Researchers found that the supernatant from CD14+HuMoSC significantly inhibits T cell proliferation and cytotoxicity, effectively reducing GvHD in NSG mice.
  • The CD14+HuMoSC supernatant can be produced with good manufacturing practices and may serve as a complementary treatment alongside existing immunosuppressive drugs for GvHD prevention.
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Giant cell arteritis (GCA) is a large-vessel granulomatous vasculitis occurring in patients over 50-year-old. Diagnosis can be challenging because there is no specific biological test or other diagnoses to consider. Two main phenotypes of GCA are distinguished and can be associated.

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In the presence of temporal arteritis, clinicians often refer to the diagnosis of giant cell arteritis (GCA). However, differential diagnoses should also be evoked because other types of vascular diseases, vasculitis or not, may affect the temporal artery. Among vasculitis, Anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA)-associated vasculitis is probably the most common, and typically affects the peri-adventitial small vessel of the temporal artery and sometimes mimics giant cell arteritis, however, other symptoms are frequently associated and more specific of ANCA-associated vasculitis prompt a search for ANCA.

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