Publications by authors named "P Fromont"

Diagnosis of autoimmune neutropenia (AIN) in infants is important, because it allows the exclusion of more severe forms of neutropenia that have an increased risk for leukemia. AIN is characterized by chronic neutropenia, which spontaneously resolves within several months to a few years, and mild infections. Diagnosis is confirmed by the presence of antibodies directed against neutrophil antigens.

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Autoimmune neutropenias (AIN) are classically divided into primary AIN and secondary AIN. The latter are associated with autoimmune disorders, hematologic malignancies, primary immune deficiencies, drug exposure or infections. In this review we will focus on the major aetiologies of AIN, their differential diagnosis, the various methods in biological diagnosis, and the treatment.

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Background: Granulocyte antibodies have been implicated in allo- and autoimmune neutropenia and in transfusion reactions.

Study Design And Methods: Fifty-one sera from suspected alloimmune neutropenia or transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI) and 40 sera from suspected autoimmune neutropenia were tested for granulocyte antibodies using LABScreen MULTI (One Lambda, Inc.), compared with classical tests (flow cytometry [FC] and granulocyte agglutination [GAT] followed by monoclonal antibody-specific immobilization of granulocyte antigens [MAIGA]).

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TRALI is considered a serious hazard among immune complications of blood transfusion and its occurrence is admitted to be globally underestimated. Each type of blood product is likely to cause TRALI. We report here on two consecutive observations of TRALI caused by red blood cell concentrates, in which anti-HLA class I and class II antibodies resulting from post-gravitational allo-immunization were evidenced in donors.

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We determined the frequency of post-transfusion alloimmunisation against platelet and granulocyte antigens in 51 Tunisian polytransfused patients with haematological diseases. Serum samples were analysed by a standard and an antiglobulin-augmented lymphocytotoxicity technique, a granulocyte agglutination test, a granulocyte immunofluorescence test, a platelet immunofluorescence test and the monoclonal antibody-specific immobilisation of platelet antigens assay. No granulocyte-specific antibodies were detected.

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