Publications by authors named "Jacqueline Chevrant-Breton"

Background: Thalidomide use in cutaneous sarcoidosis is based on data from small case series or case reports. The objective of this study was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of thalidomide in severe cutaneous sarcoidosis.

Methods: This study consisted of a randomized, double-bind, parallel, placebo-controlled, investigator-masked, multicenter trial lasting 3 months and an open-label study from month 3 to month 6.

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Objective: To identify the prognostic factors of overall survival in a series of patients with paraneoplastic pemphigus (PNP).

Design: Multicenter retrospective cohort study.

Setting: Twenty-seven dermatology departments in France.

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Objective: To study the relation between blood concentration of hydroxychloroquine and the clinical efficacy of hydroxychloroquine sulfate in a series of patients with cutaneous lupus erythematosus (CLE).

Design: Prospective multicenter study. A staff dermatologist blinded to blood hydroxychloroquine concentrations performed a standardized review of medical records and assessment of hydroxychloroquine efficacy in the following 3 categories: complete remission, partial remission (clearing of >50% of skin lesions), or treatment failure.

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So far, no common environmental and/or phenotypic factor has been associated with melanoma and renal cell carcinoma (RCC). The known risk factors for melanoma include sun exposure, pigmentation and nevus phenotypes; risk factors associated with RCC include smoking, obesity and hypertension. A recent study of coexisting melanoma and RCC in the same patients supports a genetic predisposition underlying the association between these two cancers.

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Superpotent topical corticosteroids (CS) have been demonstrated to improve bullous pemphigoid (BP) patients' survival. We assessed whether a mild regimen using lower doses of topical CS and a shorter duration could improve the outcome of BP patients even more. Three-hundred and twelve BP patients were included in a multicenter randomized controlled trial and stratified depending on the extent of BP as moderate (n=134) or extensive (n=178).

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Mutations in two genes encoding cell cycle regulatory proteins have been shown to cause familial cutaneous malignant melanoma (CMM). About 20% of melanoma-prone families bear a point mutation in the CDKN2A locus at 9p21, which encodes two unrelated proteins, p16(INK4a) and p14(ARF). Rare mutations in CDK4 have also been linked to the disease.

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Pyoderma gangrenosum (PG) is a neutrophilic skin disease commonly treated with immunosuppressants. High-dose intravenous immunoglobulins are used to treat a range of inflammatory diseases, but we found only five reports of the use of high-dose intravenous immunoglobulins in the treatment of PG. We report on two patients with PG for whom immunosuppressants could not be prescribed and who were treated with high-dose intravenous immunoglobulins.

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Background: Primary cutaneous cribriform carcinoma (PCCC) is a rare apocrine tumour occurring in middle-aged people. This neoplasm is often located on the limbs. The histopathological diagnosis is difficult, mainly because this tumour is exceptional.

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Multicentric reticulohistiocytosis (RHM) is a rare non Langherhans cell histiocytosis with skin and joint involvment. Nearly all organs can be involved. Association with cancer occurs in about 25% of cases.

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Among hereditary inflammatory disorders, Muckle-Wells syndrome, chronic infantile neurological cutaneous and articular syndrome (CINCA), and familial cold urticaria have recently been shown to be caused by dominantly inherited mutations in the CIAS1 gene. Reports suggest that these 3 diseases result from distinct missense mutations, with very few overlapping symptoms. We describe a French family presenting an intrafamilial overlapping clinical phenotype of CINCA and Muckle-Wells syndrome, caused by a mutation in CIAS1 gene.

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Neurofibromatosis 1 (NF1) is a genetically transmitted disease occurring approximately once in 3000 live births and resulting from mutations of the NF1 gene that encodes a protein named neurofibromin, a negative regulator of the ras-dependent pathway. An excess of neoplasia especially tumours of neuroectodermal origin is classically observed. The occurrence of malignant melanoma in patients with NF1 has already been described in scattered clinical reports but little is known as to the characteristics of melanoma arising in NF1 patients.

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Patients' autologous macrophages (AM) were used as antigen-presenting cells (APC) in a vaccination protocol against malignant melanoma. AM were administered by various routes, including intralymphatic, since these cells did not express CCR7, a molecule required for APC migration to lymph nodes. Seven HLA-A2 patients with metastatic melanoma-two classified as M1 and five as M3-were included in the study.

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Primary melanoma (MM) could be a good model to test an intuitive concept: a cancer that is growing fast in its early phase is likely to have a high aggressiveness. Since MMs are visible tumors, many patients can provide information to indirectly assess the kinetics of their lesion. A prospective study was designed to assess if the kinetics of the visible growth of a primary MM, as described by the patient, could be a noninvasive prognostic marker.

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