Publications by authors named "A Allegraud"

The reliability of the assay of endogenous erythroid colony (EEC) formation in serum-free, cytokine-free collagen-based media was investigated in a multicentric study including 140 patients with polyglobuly (80 polycythemia vera (PV), 54 secondary erythrocytosis (SE), six idiopathic erythrocytosis (IE)) and 10 healthy donors. In each center, EEC assays were performed in parallel with progenitor cells from bone marrow (BM) and peripheral blood (PB); two commercialized media and 'low' and 'high' cell plating densities were tested. Negativity of EEC assays was considered certain only when sufficient BFU-E growth was obtained in control cultures with cytokines.

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Introduction: The assay of endogenous erythroid colony formation (EEC), a characteristic of polycythemia vera and essential thrombocythemia, is not standardized. In this multicentric study, we tested four semisolid, serum-free, cytokine-free media based on either methylcellulose (M1, M2) or collagen (C1, C2) commercialized for the EEC assay.

Materials And Methods: Bone marrow mononuclear cells (BMMC) from 73 individuals (62 patients with either polycythemia vera (26), essential thrombocythemia (19), secondary polyglobuly (17) or chronic myeloid leukemia (2) and 11 healthy donors) were grown in parallel in the four media without, or with 0.

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Colony counting remains an important source of variation in colony-forming unit-granulocyte-macrophage (CFU-GM) assays performed in methylcellulose or agar. We studied the reliability of colony scoring of CFU-GM assays carried out with collagen, a matrix that allows gel collection on glass slides and in situ cellular morphology. Fourteen slides were exchanged among laboratories, and two rounds of colony (CFU-GM and burst-forming units-erythrocyte [BFU-E]) counting were performed by 11 (first counting), then 8 (second counting) different laboratories, the majority of which had no previous experience of collagen gel cultures and reading.

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We have assessed the effect of platelet-activating factor (PAF), a biologically active phospholipid present in the human marrow, on the growth of human marrow and blood CD34+ progenitors. While the metabolization rate of PAF by CD34+ cells is low (weak acetylhydrolase and acylation processes) it is readily catabolized by the acetylhydrolase activity present in the growth medium (10% fetal calf serum + 10% 5637-conditioned medium). Treatment of marrow CD34+ cells with the non-metabolizable PAF agonist C-PAF (1 nM to 100 nM) immediately before semi-solid culture significantly (P < 0.

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Aplastic anemia is a rare complication of thymoma and is properly documented in only few cases. Here, we report the case of a previously healthy, 65-year-old patient who was found simultaneously to have a spindle-cell thymoma and severe hypoplastic anemia with a mild infiltration of the bone marrow by CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes, CD16+ natural killer cells, and a decrease in blood CD4/CD8 ratio. Cultures of marrow erythroid progenitors demonstrated serum inhibitor.

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