1,024 results on '"Epelboin A"'
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2. Arboviruses and pregnancy: are the threats visible or hidden?
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Hcini, Najeh, Lambert, Véronique, Picone, Olivier, Carod, Jean-Francois, Carles, Gabriel, Pomar, Léo, Epelboin, Loïc, and Nacher, Mathieu
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- 2024
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3. Retrospective Study of Infections with Corynebacterium diphtheriae Species Complex, French Guiana, 2016-2021
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Gaillet, Melanie, Hennart, Melanie, Rose, Vincent Sainte, Badell, Edgar, Michaud, Celine, Blaizot, Romain, Demar, Magalie, Carvalho, Luisiane, Carod, Jean Francois, Andrieu, Audrey, Djossou, Felix, Toubiana, Julie, Epelboin, Loic, and Brisse, Sylvain
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Statistics ,Identification and classification ,Genetic aspects ,Risk factors ,Causes of ,Actinomycetales infections -- Risk factors -- Causes of -- Statistics ,Gram-positive bacteria -- Identification and classification -- Genetic aspects - Abstract
Corynebacterium diphtheriae species complex (CdSC; also called cornyebacteria of the diphtheriae species complex) include Corynebacterium diphtheriae and C. ulcerans, 2 potentially toxigenic and highly pathogenic species for humans (1). Human [...]
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- 2024
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4. The epidemiologic transition in French Guiana: Secular trends and setbacks, and comparisons with continental France and south American countries
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Nacher, Mathieu, Basurko, Celia, Douine, Maylis, Lambert, Yann, Hcini, Najeh, Elenga, Narcisse, Le Turnier, Paul, Epelboin, Loic, Djossou, Felix, Couppie, Pierre, de Toffol, Bertrand, Drak Alsibai, Kinan, Sabbah, Nadia, and Adenis, Antoine
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- 2023
5. Initial HIV-1 viral load in French Guiana: Factors associated with viral load set point differences
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Lucarelli, Aude, Rabier, Sébastien, Vergeade, Fanja, Guedj, Myriam El, Vaz, Tania, Cisse, Hawa, Epelboin, Loïc, Abboud, Philippe, Turnier, Paul Le, Djossou, Félix, Michaud, Céline, Delin, Claudia, Divino, Flavia, Verin, Karine, Bienvenu, Ketty, Adenis, Antoine, and Nacher, Mathieu
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- 2024
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6. Kinetics of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) activity during Plasmodium vivax infection: implications for early radical malaria treatment
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Laureen Dahuron, Juste Goungounga, Moustapha Drame, Maylis Douine, Mathieu Nacher, Théo Blaise, Emilie Mosnier, Lise Musset, Marie Fouillet, Félix Djossou, and Loïc Epelboin
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Plasmodium vivax ,G6PD/Glucose-6-phosphase dehydrogenase ,Malaria ,Primaquine ,French Guiana ,Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Background Plasmodium vivax relapses due to dormant liver hypnozoites can be prevented with primaquine. However, the dose must be adjusted in individuals with glucose-6-phosphate-dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency. In French Guiana, assessment of G6PD activity is typically delayed until day (D)14 to avoid the risk if misclassification. This study assessed the kinetics of G6PD activity throughout P. vivax infection to inform the timing of treatment. Methods For this retrospective monocentric study, data on G6PD activity between D1 and D28 after treatment initiation with chloroquine or artemisinin-based combination therapy were collected for patients followed at Cayenne Hospital, French Guiana, between January 2018 and December 2020. Patients were divided into three groups based on the number of available G6PD activity assessments: (i) at least two measurements during the P. vivax malaria infection; (ii) two measurements: one during the current infection and one previously; (iii) only one measurement during the malaria infection. Results In total, 210 patients were included (80, 20 and 110 in groups 1, 2 and 3, respectively). Data from group 1 showed that G6PD activity remained stable in each patient over time (D1, D3, D7, D14, D21, D28). None of the patients with normal G6PD activity during the initial phase (D1–D3) of the malaria episode (n = 44) was categorized as G6PD-deficient at D14. Patients with G6PD activity
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- 2024
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7. Ecological and evolutionary perspectives advance understanding of mycobacterial diseases
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Chevillon, Christine, de Thoisy, Benoît, Rakestraw, Alex W, Fast, Kayla M, Pechal, Jennifer L, Picq, Sophie, Epelboin, Loïc, Le Turnier, Paul, Dogbe, Magdalene, Jordan, Heather R, Sandel, Michael W, Benbow, Mark Eric, and Guégan, Jean-François
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- 2024
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8. The role of health mediation in investigation of Hantavirus cases among informal settlements inhabitants of Cayenne area, French Guiana, 2022–2023
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Margot Oberlis, Marion Guyot, Paul Le Turnier, Luisiane Carvalho, Tiphanie Succo, Dominique Rousset, Benoit De Thoisy, Mélanie Gaillet, Anne Lavergne, Stéphanie Vandentorren, and Loïc Epelboin
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investigation ,Hantavirus ,health mediation ,socially vulnerable people ,informal settlement ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
ContextIn 2022, four severe cases of Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS) were reported in patients from informal settlements around Cayenne, the main city in French Guiana. Regional Health Agency (RHA) was commissioned by the French Public Health Agency to estimate the seroprevalence of Hantavirus infections in the neighborhoods of confirmed cases of HPS. RHA then commissioned the French Red Cross (FRC) mobile public health team, providing support in environmental health issues to the population living in informal settlements by health mediators, to facilitate the investigation. The objective of this study was to describe the health mediators' activities set up to improve the efficiency of the investigation.MethodsThe health mediators' team was specifically trained by virologist and infectiologist specialized in HPS. They helped the investigating team and health workers at various steps of the investigation. These interventions are then described in the results section.ResultsThe investigation took place between Nov. 2022 and March 2023 in three neighborhoods. During the pre-investigation activities, the mediators raised awareness about HPS of 343 people, among whom 319 (93%) planned to participate in the investigation. Altogether, 274 people finally participated in the investigation, including, i.e., 30.8% of the estimated population living in the three concerned settlements. The global proportion of patients with positive IgG anti-Hantavirus was 5.1%. The health mediators team supported the following steps: preliminary meetings and training modules, identification of resource persons, field visits and awareness and information campaigns (pre-investigation); on field data collection in informal settlements (per-investigation) and communication of individual results, public feedback meeting (post-investigation).Discussion/ConclusionThe involvement of mediators was probably a factor in the success of the public health response to socially vulnerable people living in the investigated neighborhoods. The preliminary prevention activities helped to raise awareness of the health risk and to enroll participants. Health mediation and outreach activities seem relevant tools of epidemiological field investigations in diseases affecting inhabitants of informal settlements.
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- 2024
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9. Infections in Kidney Transplant Recipients: Perspectives in French Caribbean
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Laurène Tardieu, Gary Doppelt, Muriel Nicolas, Violaine Emal, Pascal Blanchet, Samuel Markowicz, Valérie Galantine, Pierre-Marie Roger, Joëlle Claudéon, and Loïc Epelboin
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transplant infectious diseases ,kidney transplantation ,nocardiosis ,phaeohyphomycosis ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Few studies have focused on the infectious complications in kidney transplant recipients in tropical regions, particularly in the Caribbean. The primary objective of this study was to determine the incidence of bacterial, fungal, and parasitic infections in kidney transplant recipients in the French Caribbean and French Guiana. We included all patients who received a kidney transplant at the University Hospital of Guadeloupe between January 2014 and October 2016, with post-transplant follow-up in the French Caribbean. A total of 91 patients were included, of whom 57 developed an infectious event during follow-up. When infections were documented (94/111), bacterial infections were the most frequent (79/94), followed by fungal (11/94) and parasitic infections (4/94). Four cases of nocardiosis were identified (4/79). Phaeohyphomycosis was the most common fungal infection (7/11). In a multivariate analysis, the female gender and diabetes mellitus at the time of transplant were significantly associated with a higher risk of infection. This study is the first to describe the epidemiology of infections in kidney transplant recipients in the Caribbean and to analyze the potential risk factors. We reported a similar profile of bacterial infections to that which were observed in the European and American studies. However, we found a higher incidence of tropical infections, such as nocardiosis and phaeohyphomycosis, which highlights the need for heightened awareness among healthcare teams to ensure earlier and more appropriate treatment. Further studies focusing on these rare tropical infections are necessary to better understand their risk factors
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- 2024
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10. Mosquito Feeding Habits in Coastal French Guiana: Mammals in the Crosshairs?
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Amandine Guidez, Sourakhata Tirera, Stanislas Talaga, Guillaume Lacour, Romuald Carinci, Edith Darcissac, Damien Donato, Pascal Gaborit, Emmanuelle Clervil, Yanouk Epelboin, Benoit de Thoisy, Isabelle Dusfour, Jean-Bernard Duchemin, and Anne Lavergne
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mosquito feeding habits ,blood-fed females ,host associations ,French Guiana ,Science - Abstract
Pathogens transmitted by mosquitoes (Diptera, Culicidae) in sylvatic or urban cycles involve wild or domestic animals and humans, driven by various mosquito species with distinct host preferences. Understanding mosquito–host associations is crucial for ecological insights and pathogen surveillance. In this study, we analyzed mosquito blood meals from coastal French Guiana by amplifying and sequencing host DNA from blood-fed females. Using the 12S ribosomal RNA gene and Sanger sequencing, we identified blood meals from 26 mosquito species across six genera, with 59% belonging to the Culex genus. Nanopore sequencing of selected samples showed 12 mosquito species with one to three mixed blood-meal sources. Mammals were the primary hosts (88%), followed by birds (7%), squamates (3%), and amphibians (2%), indicating a strong preference for mammalian hosts. A total of 46 vertebrate host species were identified, demonstrating high host diversity. This research provides insights into mosquito host usage and highlights the complexities of monitoring arboviruses of public health concern.
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- 2024
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11. Immunomodulators for immunocompromised patients hospitalized for COVID-19: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials
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Hermine, Olivier, Mariette, Xavier, Ravaud, Philippe, Bureau, Serge, Dougados, Maxime, Resche-Rigon, Matthieu, Tharaux, Pierre-Louis, Tibi, Annick, Azoulay, Elie, Cadranel, Jacques, Emmerich, Joseph, Fartoukh, Muriel, Guidet, Bertrand, Humbert, Marc, Lacombe, Karine, Mahevas, Matthieu, Pene, Frédéric, Porcher, Raphaël, Pourchet-Martinez, Valerie, Schlemmer, Frédéric, Yazdanpanah, Yazdan, Baron, Gabriel, Perrodeau, Elodie, Vanhoye, Damien, Kedzia, Cécile, Demerville, Lauren, Gysembergh-Houal, Anne, Bourgoin, Alexandre, Raked, Nabil, Mameri, Lakhdar, Montlahuc, Claire, Biard, Lucie, Alary, St.phanie, Hamiria, Samir, Bariz, Thinhinane, Semri, Hala, Hai, Dhiaa Meriem, Benafla, Moustafa, Belloul, Mohamed, Vauboin, Pernelle, Flamand, Saskia, Pacheco, Claire, Walter-Petrich, Anouk, Stan, Emilia, Benarab, Souad, Nyanou, Corine, Charreteur, Robin, Dupre, Céline, Cardet, Kévin, Lehmann, Blandine, Baghli, Kamyl, Madelaine, Claire, D'Ortenzio, Eric, Puéchal, Oriane, Semaille, Caroline, Savale, Laurent, Harrois, Anatole, Figueiredo, Samy, Duranteau, Jacques, Anguel, Nadia, Pavot, Arthur, Monnet, Xavier, Richard, Christian, Teboul, Jean-Louis, Durand, Philippe, Tissieres, Pierre, Jevnikar, Mitja, Montani, David, Pavy, Stephan, Nocturne, Gaétane, Bitoun, Samuel, Noel, Nicolas, Lambotte, Olivier, Escaut, Lelia, Jauréguiberry, Stephane, Baudry, Elodie, Verny, Christiane, Lefevre, Edouard, Zaidan, Mohamad, Molinari, Domitille, Leprun, Gaël, Fourreau, Alain, Cylly, Laurent, Grimaldi, Lamiae, Virlouvet, Myriam, Meftali, Ramdane, Fabre, Soléne, Licois, Marion, Mamoune, Asmaa, Boudali, Yacine, Le Tiec, Clotilde, Verstuyft, Céline, Roques, Anne-Marie, Georgin-Lavialle, Sophie, Senet, Patricia, Pialoux, Gilles, Soria, Angele, Parrot, Antoine, François, Helene, Rozensztajn, Nathalie, Blin, Emmanuelle, Choinier, Pascaline, Camuset, Juliette, Rech, Jean-Simon, Canellas, Antony, Rolland-Debord, Camille, Lemarié, Nadege, Belaube, Nicolas, Nadal, Marine, Siguier, Martin, Petit-Hoang, Camille, Chas, Julie, Drouet, Elodie, Lemoine, Matthieu, Phibel, Audrey, Aunay, Lucie, Bertrand, Eliane, Ravato, Sylviane, Vayssettes, Marie, Adda, Anne, Wilpotte, Celine, Thibaut, Pélagie, Fillon, Julie, Debrix, Isabelle, Fellahi, Soraya, Bastard, Jean-Philippe, Lefévre, Guillaume, Gottenberg, Jacques-Eric, Hansmann, Yves, Blanc, Frédéric, Ohlmann-Caillard, Sophie, Castelain, Vincent, Chatelus, Emmanuel, Chatron, Eva, Collange, Olivier, Danion, François, De Blay, Frédéric, Diemunsch, Pierre, Diemunsch, Sophie, Felten, Renaud, Goichot, Bernard, Greigert, Valentin, Guffroy, Aurelien, Heger, Bob, Kaeuffer, Charlotte, Kassegne, Loic, Korganow, Anne Sophie, Le Borgne, Pierrick, Lefebvre, Nicolas, Mertes, Paul-Michel, Noll, Eric, Oberlin, Mathieu, Poindron, Vincent, Pottecher, Julien, Ruch, Yvon, Weill, François, Meyer, Nicolas, Andres, Emmanuel, Demonsant, Eric, Tayebi, Hakim, Nisand, Gabriel, Brin, Stéphane, Sublon, Cédric, Becker, Guillaume, Hutt, Anne, Martin, Tristan, Bayer, Sophie, Metzger, Catherine, Mekinian, Arsene, Abisror, Noémie, Adedjouma, Amir, Bollens, Diane, Bonneton, Marion, Bourcicaux, Nathalie, Bourrier, Anne, Thibault Chiarabiani, Maria Chauchard, Chopin, Doroth.e, Cohen, Jonathan, Devred, Ines, Donadille, Bruno, Fain, Olivier, Hariri, Geoffrey, Jachiet, Vincent, Ingliz, Patrick, Garnier, Marc, Gatfosse, Marc, Ghrenassia, Etienne, Gobert, Delphine, Krause le Garrec, Jessica, Landman, Cecilia, Lavillegrand, Jean Remy, Lefebvre, Benedicte, Mahevas, Thibault, Mazerand, Sandie, Meynard, Jean Luc, Morgand, Marjolaine, Ouaz.ne, Zineb, Pacanowski, Jerome, Riviere, S.bastien, Seksik, Philippe, Sokol, Harry, Soliman, Heithem, Valin, Nadia, Urbina, Thomas, McAvoy, Chloé, Miranda, Maria Pereira, Aratus, Gladys, Berard, Laurence, Simon, Tabassome, Nguyen, Anne Daguenel, Girault, Elise, Mayala-Kanda, Cl.mentine, Antignac, Marie, Leplay, Céline, Arlet, Jean-Benoit, Diehl, Jean-Luc, Bellenfant, Florence, Blanchard, Anne, Buffet, Alexandre, Cholley, Bernard, Fayol, Antoine, Flamarion, Edouard, Godier, Anne, Gorget, Thomas, Hamada, Sophie-Rym, Hauw-Berlemont, Caroline, Hulot, Jean-Sébastien, Lebeaux, David, Livrozet, Marine, Michon, Adrien, Neuschwander, Arthur, Pennet, Marie-Aude, Planquette, Benjamin, Ranque, Brigitte, Sanchez, Olivier, Volle, Geoffroy, Briois, Sandrine, Cornic, Mathias, Elisee, Virginie, Denis, Jesuthasan, Djadi-Prat, Juliette, Jouany, Pauline, Junquera, Ramon, Henriques, Mickael, Kebir, Amina, Lehir, Isabelle, Meunier, Jeanne, Patin, Florence, Paquet, Val.rie, Tréhan, Anne, Vigna, Véronique, Sabatier, Brigitte, Bergerot, Damien, Jouve, Charléne, Knosp, Camille, Lenoir, Olivia, Mahtal, Nassim, Resmini, Léa, Lescure, Xavier, Ghosn, Jade, Bachelard, Antoine, Rachline, Anne, Isernia, Valentina, Bao-chau, Phung, Vallois, Dorothée, Sautereau, Aurelie, Neukrich, Catherine, Dossier, Antoine, Borie, Raphaël, Crestani, Bruno, Ducrocq, Gregory, Steg, Philippe Gabriel, Dieude, Philippe, Papo, Thomas, Marcault, Estelle, Chaudhry, Marhaba, Da Silveira, Charléne, Metois, Annabelle, Mahenni, Ismahan, Meziani, Meriam, Nilusmas, Cyndie, Le Gac, Sylvie, Ndiaye, Awa, Louni, Fran.oise, Chansombat, Malikhone, Julia, Zelie, Chalal, Solaya, Chalal, Lynda, Kramer, Laura, Le Grand, Jeniffer, Ouifiya, Kafif, Piquard, Valentine, Tubiana, Sarah, Nguyen, Yann, Honsel, Vasco, Weiss, Emmanuel, Codorniu, Anais, Zarrouk, Virginie, de Lastours, Victoire, Uzzan, Matthieu, Gamany, Naura, Claveirole, Agathe, Navid, Alexandre, Fouque, Tiffanie, Cohen, Yonathan, Lupo, Maya, Gilles, Constance, Rahli, Roza, Louis, Zeina, Boutboul, David, Galicier, Lionel, Amara, Yaël, Archer, Gabrielle, Benattia, Amira, Bergeron, Anne, Bondeelle, Louise, de Castro, Nathalie, Clément, Melissa, Darmon, Michaël, Denis, Blandine, Dupin, Clairelyne, Feredj, Elsa, Feyeux, Delphine, Joseph, Adrien, Lenglin, Etienne, Le Guen, Pierre, Liégeon, Geoffroy, Lorillon, Gwenaël, Mabrouki, Asma, Mariotte, Eric, Martin de Frémont, Grégoire, Mirouse, Adrien, Molina, Jean-Michel, Peffault de Latour, Régis, Oksenhendler, Eric, Saussereau, Julien, Tazi, Abdellatif, Tudesq, Jean-Jacques, Zafrani, Lara, Brindele, Isabelle, Bugnet, Emmanuelle, Lebras, Karine Celli, Chabert, Julien, Djaghout, Lamia, Fauvaux, Catherine, Jegu, Anne Lise, Kozakiewicz, Ewa, Meunier, Martine, Tremorin, Marie-Thérèse, Davoine, Claire, Madelaine, Isabelle, Caillat-Zucman, Sophie, Delaugerre, Constance, Morin, Florence, Sène, Damien, Burlacu, Ruxandra, Chousterman, Benjamin, Mégarbanne, Bruno, Richette, Pascal, Riveline, Jean-Pierre, Frazier, Aline, Vicaut, Eric, Berton, Laure, Hadjam, Tassadit, Vazquez-Ibarra, Miguel Alejandro, Jourdaine, Clément, Tran, Olivia, Jouis, Véronique, Jacob, Aude, Smati, Julie, Renaud, Stéphane, Pernin, Claire, Suarez, Lydia, Semerano, Luca, Abad, Sébastien, nainous, Ruben B., Bonnet, Nicolas, Comparon, Celine, Cohen, Yves, Cordel, Hugues, Dhote, Robin, Dournon, Nathalie, Duchemann, Boris, Ebstein, Nathan, Gille, Thomas, Giroux-Leprieur, Benedicte, Goupil de Bouille, Jeanne, Nunes, Hilario, Oziel, Johanna, Roulot, Dominique, Sese, Lucile, ClaireTantet, Uzunhan, Yurdagul, Bloch-Queyrat, Coralie, Levy, Vincent, Messani, Fadhila, Rahaoui, Mohammed, Petit, Myléne, Brahmi, Sabrina, Rathoin, Vanessa, Rigal, Marthe, Costedoat-Chalumeau, Nathalie, Luong, Liem Binh, Hamou, Zakaria Ait, Benghanem, Sarah, Blanche, Philippe, Carlier, Nicolas, Chaigne, Benjamin, Gauzit, Remy, Joumaa, Hassan, Jozwiak, Mathieu, Lachétre, Marie, Lafoeste, Hélène, Launay, Odie, Legendre, Paul, Marey, Jonathan, Morbieu, Caroline, Palmieri, Lola-Jade, Szwebel, Tali-Anne, Abdoul, Hendy, Bruneau, Alexandra, Beclin-Clabaux, Audrey, Larrieu, Charly, Montanari, Pierre, Dufour, Eric, Clarke, Ada, Le Bourlout, Catherine, Marin, Nathalie, Menage, Nathalie, Saleh-Mghir, Samira, Cisse, Mamadou Salif, Cheref, Kahina, Guerin, Corinne, Zerbit, Jérémie, Michel, Marc, Gallien, Sébastien, Crickx, Etienne, Le Vavasseur, Benjamin, Kempf, Emmanuelle, Jaffal, Karim, Vindrios, William, Oniszczuk, Julie, Guillaud, Constance, Lim, Pascal, Fois, Elena, Melica, Giovanna, Matignon, Marie, Jalabert, Maud, Lelièvre, Jean-Daniel, Schmitz, David, Bourhis, Marion, Belazouz, Sylia, Languille, Laetitia, Boucle, Caroline, Cita, Nelly, Didier, Agnés, Froura, Fahem, Ledudal, Katia, Sadaoui, Thiziri, Thiemele, Alaki, Le Febvre De Bailly, Delphine, Verlinde, Muriel Carvhalo, Mayaux, Julien, Cacoub, Patrice, Saadoun, David, Vautier, Mathieu, Bugaut, Héléne, Benveniste, Olivier, Allenbach, Yves, Leroux, Gaëlle, Rigolet, Aude, Guillaume-Jugnot, Perrine, Domont, Fanny, Desbois, Anne Claire, Comarmond, Chloé, Champtiaux, Nicolas, Toquet, Segolene, Ghembaza, Amine, Vieira, Matheus, Maalouf, Georgina, Boleto, Goncalo, Ferfar, Yasmina, Corvol, Jean-Christophe, Louapre, C.line, Sambin, Sara, Mariani, Louise-Laure, Karachi, Carine, Tubach, Florence, Estellat, Candice, Gimeno, Linda, Martin, Karine, Bah, Aicha, Keo, Vixra, Ouamri, Sabrine, Messaoudi, Yasmine, Yelles, Nessima, Faye, Pierre, Cavelot, Sebastien, Larcheveque, Cecile, Annonay, Laurence, Benhida, Jaouad, Zahrate-Ghoul, Aida, Hammal, Soumeya, Belilita, Ridha, Charbonnier, Fanny, Aguilar, Claire, Alby-Laurent, Fanny, Burger, Carole, Campos-Vega, Clara, Chavarot, Nathalie, Fournier, Benjamin, Rouzaud, Claire, Vimpére, Damien, Elie, Caroline, Bakouboula, Prissile, Choupeaux, Laure, Granville, Sophie, Issorat, Elodie, Broissand, Christine, Alyanakian, Marie-Alexandra, Geri, Guillaume, Derridj, Nawal, Sguiouar, Naima, Meddah, Hakim, Djadel, Mourad, Chambrin-Lauvray, Héléne, Duclos-vallée, Jean-Charles, Saliba, Faouzi, Sacleux, Sophie-Caroline, Kounis, Ilias, Tamazirt, Sonia, Rudant, Eric, Michot, Jean-Marie, Stoclin, Annabelle, Colomba, Emeline, Pommeret, Fanny, Willekens, Christophe, Da Silva, Rosa, Dejean, Valérie, Mekid, Yasmina, Ben-Mabrouk, Ines, Netzer, Florence, Pradon, Caroline, Drouard, Laurence, Camara-Clayette, Valérie, Morel, Alexandre, Garcia, Gilles, Mohebbi, Abolfazl, Berbour, Férial, Dehais, Mélanie, Pouliquen, Anne-Lise, Klasen, Alison, Soyez-Herkert, Loren, London, Jonathan, Keroumi, Younes, Guillot, Emmanuelle, Grailles, Guillaume, El amine, Younes, Defrancq, Fanny, Fodil, Hanane, Bouras, Chaouki, Dautel, Dominique, Gambier, Nicolas, Dieye, Thierno, Bienvenu, Boris, Lancon, Victor, Lecomte, Laurence, Beziriganyan, Kristina, Asselate, Belkacem, Allanic, Laure, Kiouris, Elena, Legros, Marie-Héléne, Lemagner, Christine, Martel, Pascal, Provitolo, Vincent, Ackermann, Félix, Le Marchand, Mathilde, Chan Hew Wai, Aurélie, Fremont, Dimitri, Coupez, Elisabeth, Adda, Mireille, Duée, Frédéric, Bernard, Lise, Gros, Antoine, Henry, Estelle, Courtin, Claire, Pattyn, Anne, Guinot, Pierre-Grégoire, Bardou, Marc, Maurer, Agnes, Jambon, Julie, Cransac, Amélie, Pernot, Corinne, Mourvillier, Bruno, Marquis, Eric, Benoit, Philippe, Roux, Damien, Gernez, Coralie, Yelnik, Cécile, Poissy, Julien, Nizard, Mandy, Denies, Fanette, Gros, Helene, Mourad, Jean-Jacques, Sacco, Emmanuelle, Renet, Sophie, Ader, F., Yazdanpanah, Y., Mentre, F., Peiffer-Smadja, N., Lescure, F.X., Poissy, J., Bouadma, L., Timsit, J.F., Lina, B., Morfin-Sherpa, F., Bouscambert, M., Gaymard, A., Peytavin, G., Abel, L., Guedj, J., Andrejak, C., Burdet, C., Laouenan, C., Belhadi, D., Dupont, A., Alfaiate, T., Basli, B., Chair, A., Laribi, S., Level, J., Schneider, M., Tellier, M.C., Dechanet, A., Costagliola, D., Terrier, B., Ohana, M., Couffin-Cadiergues, S., Esperou, H., Delmas, C., Saillard, J., Fougerou, C., Moinot, L., Wittkop, L., Cagnot, C., Le Mestre, S., Lebrasseur-Longuet, D., Petrov-Sanchez, V., Diallo, A., Mercier, N., Icard, V., Leveau, B., Tubiana, S., Hamze, B., Gelley, A., Noret, M., D’Ortenzio, E., Puechal, O., Semaille, C., Welte, T., Paiva, J.A., Halanova, M., Kieny, M.P., Balssa, E., Birkle, C., Gibowski, S., Landry, E., Le Goff, A., Moachon, L., Moins, C., Wadouachi, L., Paul, C., Levier, A., Bougon, D., Djossou, F., Epelboin, L., Dellamonica, J., Marquette, C.H., Robert, C., Gibot, S., Senneville, E., Jean-Michel, V., Zerbib, Y., Chirouze, C., Boyer, A., Cazanave, C., Gruson, D., Malvy, D., Andreu, P., Quenot, J.P., Terzi, N., Faure, K., Chabartier, C., Le Moing, V., Klouche, K., Ferry, T., F, Valour, Gaborit, B., Canet, E., Le Turnier, P., Boutoille, D., Bani-Sadr, F., Benezit, F., Revest, M., Cameli, C., Caro, A., Um Tegue, MJ Ngo, Le Tulzo, Y., Laviolle, B., Laine, F., Thiery, G., Meziani, F., Hansmann, Y., Oulehri, W., Tacquard, C., Vardon-Bounes, F., Riu-Poulenc, B., Murris-Espin, M., Bernard, L., Garot, D., Hinschberger, O., Martinot, M., Bruel, C., Pilmis, B., Bouchaud, O., Loubet, P., Roger, C., Monnet, X., Figueiredo, S., Godard, V., Mira, J.P., Lachatre, M., Kerneis, S., Aboab, J., Sayre, N., Crockett, F., Lebeaux, D., Buffet, A., Diehl, J.L., Fayol, A., Hulot, J.S., Livrozet, M., Dessap, A Mekontso, Ficko, C., Stefan, F., Le Pavec, J., Mayaux, J., Ait-Oufella, H., Molina, J.M., Pialoux, G., Fartoukh, M., Textoris, J., Brossard, M., Essat, A., Netzer, E., Riault, Y., Ghislain, M., Beniguel, L., Genin, M., Gouichiche, L., Betard, C., Belkhir, L., Altdorfer, A., Centro, V Fraipont, Braz, S., Ribeiro, JM Ferreira, Alburqueque, R Roncon, Berna, M., Alexandre, M., Lamprecht, B., Egle, A., Greil, R., Joannidis, M., Patterson, Thomas F., Ponce, Philip O., Taylor, Barbara S., Patterson, Jan E., Bowling, Jason E., Javeri, Heta, Kalil, Andre C., Larson, LuAnn, Hewlett, Angela, Mehta, Aneesh K., Rouphael, Nadine G., Saklawi, Youssef, Scanlon, Nicholas, Traenkner, Jessica J., Trible, Ronald P., Jr., Walter, Emmanuel B., Ivey, Noel, Holland, Thomas L., Ruiz-Palacios, Guillermo M., Ponce de León, Alfredo, Rajme, Sandra, Hsieh, Lanny, Amin, Alpesh N., Watanabe, Miki, Lee, Helen S., Kline, Susan, Billings, Joanne, Noren, Brooke, Kim, Hyun, Bold, Tyler D., Tapson, Victor, Grein, Jonathan, Sutterwala, Fayyaz, Iovine, Nicole, Beattie, Lars K., Wakeman, Rebecca Murray, Shaw, Matthew, Jain, Mamta K., Mocherla, Satish, Meisner, Jessica, Luque, Amneris, Sweeney, Daniel A., Benson, Constance A., Ali, Farhana, Atmar, Robert L., El Sahly, Hana M., Whitaker, Jennifer, Falsey, Ann R., Branche, Angela R., Rozario, Cheryl, Pineda, Justino Regalado, Martinez-Orozco, José Arturo, Lye, David Chien, Ong, Sean WX., Chia, Po Ying, Young, Barnaby E., Sandkovsky, Uriel, Berhe, Mezgebe, Haley, Clinton, Dishner, Emma, Cantos, Valeria D., Kelley, Colleen F., Rebolledo Esteinou, Paulina A., Kandiah, Sheetal, Doernberg, Sarah B., Crouch, Pierre-Cedric B., Jang, Hannah, Luetkemeyer, Anne F., Dwyer, Jay, Cohen, Stuart H., Thompson, George R., 3rd, Nguyen, Hien H., Finberg, Robert W., Wang, Jennifer P., Perez-Velazquez, Juan, Wessolossky, Mireya, Jackson, Patrick E.H., Bell, Taison D., West, Miranda J., Taiwo, Babafemi, Krueger, Karen, Perez, Johnny, Pearson, Triniece, Paules, Catharine I., Julian, Kathleen G., Ahmad, Danish, Hajduczok, Alexander G., Arguinchona, Henry, Arguinchona, Christa, Erdmann, Nathaniel, Goepfert, Paul, Ahuja, Neera, Frank, Maria G., Wyles, David, Young, Heather, Oh, Myoung-don, Park, Wan Beom, Kang, Chang Kyung, Marconi, Vincent, Moanna, Abeer, Cribbs, Sushma, Harrison, Telisha, Kim, Eu Suk, Jung, Jongtak, Song, Kyoung-Ho, Kim, Hong Bin, Tan, Seow Yen, Shafi, Humaira, Chien, Jaime, Fong, Raymond KC., Murray, Daniel D., Lundgren, Jens, Nielsen, Henrik, Jensen, Tomas, Zingman, Barry S., Grossberg, Robert, Riska, Paul F., Yang, Otto O., Ahn, Jenny, Arias, Rubi, Rapaka, Rekha R., Hauser, Naomi, Campbell, James D., Short, William R., Tebas, Pablo, Baron, Jillian T., McLellan, Susan L.F., Blanton, Lucas S., Seashore, Justin B., Creech, C. Buddy, Rice, Todd W., Walker, Shannon, Thomsen, Isaac P., Lopez de Castilla, Diego, Van Winkle, Jason W., Riedo, Francis X., Pada, Surinder Kaur, Wang, Alvin DY., Lin, Li, Harkins, Michelle, Mertz, Gregory, Sosa, Nestor, Ann Chai, Louis Yi, Tambyah, Paul Anantharajah, Tham, Sai Meng, Archuleta, Sophia, Yan, Gabriel, Lindholm, David A., Markelz, Ana Elizabeth, Mende, Katrin, Mularski, Richard, Hohmann, Elizabeth, Torres-Soto, Mariam, Jilg, Nikolaus, Maves, Ryan C., Utz, Gregory C., George, Sarah L., Hoft, Daniel F., Brien, James D., Paredes, Roger, Mateu, Lourdes, Loste, Cora, Kumar, Princy, Thornton, Sarah, Mohanraj, Sharmila, Hynes, Noreen A., Sauer, Lauren M., Colombo, Christopher J., Schofield, Christina, Colombo, Rhonda E., Chambers, Susan E., Novak, Richard M., Wendrow, Andrea, Gupta, Samir K., Lee, Tida, Lalani, Tahaniyat, Holodniy, Mark, Chary, Aarthi, Huprikar, Nikhil, Ganesan, Anuradha, Ohmagari, Norio, Mikami, Ayako, Price, D. Ashley, Duncan, Christopher J.A., Dierberg, Kerry, Neumann, Henry J., Taylor, Stephanie N., Lacour, Alisha, Masri, Najy, Swiatlo, Edwin, Widmer, Kyle, Neaton, James D., Bessesen, Mary, Stephens, David S., Burgess, Timothy H., Uyeki, Timothy M., Walker, Robert, Marks, G. Lynn, Osinusi, Anu, Cao, Huyen, Cardoso, Anabela, de Bono, Stephanie, Schlichting, Douglas E., Chung, Kevin K., Ferreira, Jennifer L., Green, Michelle, Makowski, Mat, Wierzbicki, Michael R., Conrad, Tom M., El-Khorazaty, Jill Ann, Hill, Heather, Bonnett, Tyler, Gettinger, Nikki, Engel, Theresa, Lewis, Teri, Wang, Jing, Beigel, John H., Tomashek, Kay M., Ghazaryan, Varduhi, Beresnev, Tatiana, Nayak, Seema, Dodd, Lori E., Dempsey, Walla, Nomicos, Effie, Lee, Marina, Pikaart-Tautges, Rhonda, Elsafy, Mohamed, Jurao, Robert, Koo, Hyung, Proschan, Michael, Yokum, Tammy, Arega, Janice, Florese, Ruth, Voell, Jocelyn D., Davey, Richard, Serrano, Ruth C., Wiley, Zanthia, Phadke, Varun K., Goepfert, Paul A., Gomez, Carlos A., Sofarelli, Theresa A., Certain, Laura, Imlay, Hannah N., Wolfe, Cameron R., Ko, Emily R., Engemann, John J., Felix, Nora Bautista, Wan, Claire R., Elmor, Sammy T., Bristow, Laurel R., Harkins, Michelle S., Iovine, Nicole M., Elie-Turenne, Marie-Carmelle, Tapson, Victor F., Choe, Pyoeng Gyun, Mularski, Richard A., Rhie, Kevin S., Hussein, Rezhan H., Ince, Dilek, Winokur, Patricia L., Takasaki, Jin, Saito, Sho, McConnell, Kimberly, Wyles, David L., Sarcone, Ellen, Grimes, Kevin A., Perez, Katherine, Janak, Charles, Whitaker, Jennifer A., Rebolledo, Paulina A., Gharbin, John, Lambert, Allison A., Zea, Diego F., Bainbridge, Emma, Hostler, David C., Hostler, Jordanna M., Shahan, Brian T., Ling, Evelyn, Go, Minjoung, Hubbard, Fleesie A., Chakrabarty, Melony, Laguio-Vila, Maryrose, Walsh, Edward E., Guirgis, Faheem, Marconi, Vincent C., Madar, Christian, Borgetti, Scott A., Levine, Corri, Nock, Joy, Candiotti, Keith, Rozman, Julia, Dangond, Fernando, Hyvert, Yann, Seitzinger, Andrea, Cross, Kaitlyn, Pettibone, Stephanie, Nayak, Seema U., Deye, Gregory A., Siempos, Ilias I., Belhadi, Drifa, Veiga, Viviane Cordeiro, Cavalcanti, Alexandre Biasi, Branch-Elliman, Westyn, Papoutsi, Eleni, Gkirgkiris, Konstantinos, Xixi, Nikoleta A., and Kotanidou, Anastasia
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- 2024
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12. Using capillary electrophoresis to identify Anopheline species in routine sampling sites
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Estelle Chabanol, Ottavia Romoli, Stanislas Talaga, Yanouk Epelboin, Katy Heu, Ghislaine Prévot, and Mathilde Gendrin
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Anopheles ,capillary electrophoresis ,French Guiana ,ITS2 ,length polymorphism ,mosquito ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Abstract In the Anopheles genus, various mosquito species are able to transmit the Plasmodium parasites responsible for malaria, while others are non‐vectors. In an effort to better understand the biology of Anopheles species and to quantify transmission risk in an area, the identification of mosquito species collected in the field is an essential but problematic task. Morphological identification requires expertise and cannot be checked after processing samples in a destructive treatment, while sequencing of numerous samples is costly. Here, we introduce a method of Species identification via Simple Observation Coupled with Capillary Electrophoresis Technology (SOCCET). This molecular technique of species identification is based on precise determination of ITS2 length combined with a simple visual observation, the colour of mosquito hindleg tip. DNA extracted from field‐collected Anopheles mosquitoes was amplified with universal Anopheles ITS2 primers and analysed with a capillary electrophoresis device, which precisely determines the size of the fragments. We defined windows of amplicon sizes combined with fifth hind tarsus colour, which allows discrimination of the major Anopheles species found in our collections. We validated our parameters via Sanger sequencing of ITS2 amplicons. Using the SOCCET method, we characterised the composition of Anopheles populations in five locations of French Guiana, where we detected a total of nine species. Anopheles braziliensis and Anopheles darlingi were detected in four locations each and represented 13 and 67% of our samples, respectively. The SOCCET method can be particularly useful when working with routine sampling sites with a moderate species diversity, that is, when the number of local species is too high to define species‐specific primers but low enough to avoid individual ITS2 sequencing. This tool will be of interest to evaluate local malaria transmission risk and this approach may be further implemented for other mosquito genera.
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- 2024
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13. Determination of different social groups’ level of knowledge about malaria in a multicultural Amazonian cross-border context
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Gaillet, Mélanie, Musset, Lise, Cropet, Claire, Djossou, Félix, Mallard, Adeline, Odonne, Guillaume, Davy, Damien, Douine, Maylis, Epelboin, Loic, Lazrek, Yassamine, Mathieu, Luana, Nacher, Mathieu, and Mosnier, Emilie
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- 2023
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14. Is there Lyme borreliosis in French Guiana? Descriptive study among patients referred for a suspected Lyme borreliosis in an Amazonian hospital between 2010 and 2022
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Cartau, Tom, Eldin, Carole, Le Turnier, Paul, Eskenazi, Anaïs, Walter, Gaëlle, Coignard, Catherine, Schrooten, Ward, Caumes, Eric, Djossou, Félix, and Epelboin, Loïc
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- 2024
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15. Chest CT findings in community-acquired pneumonia due to Coxiella burnetii (Q fever) compared to Streptococcus pneumoniae, a cross sectional study in French Guiana, 2013–2017
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de La Porte des Vaux, Clémentine, Sainte-Rose, Vincent, Le Turnier, Paul, Djossou, Félix, Nacher, Mathieu, Zappa, Magaly, and Epelboin, Loïc
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- 2024
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16. Migration in French Guiana: Implications in health and infectious diseases
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Nacher, Mathieu, Epelboin, Loïc, Bonifay, Timothée, Djossou, Félix, Blaizot, Romain, Couppié, Pierre, Adenis, Antoine, Lucarelli, Aude, Lambert, Yann, Schaub, Roxane, and Douine, Maylis
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- 2024
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17. Emerging infectious diseases and new pandemics: dancing with a ghost! Lessons in inter- and transdisciplinary research in French Guiana, South America
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Jean-François Guégan, Loïc Epelboin, Maylis Douine, Paul Le Turnier, Olivier Duron, Lise Musset, Christine Chevillon, Philippe Quénel, Mark Eric Benbow, and Benoît de Thoisy
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Biomedical research ,Public health ,Interdisciplinarity ,Transdisciplinarity ,One Health ,Infectious disease ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
In light of current international public health challenges, calls for inter- and transdisciplinary research are increasing, particularly in response to complex and intersecting issues. Although widely used under the One Health flag, it is still unclear how inter- and transdisciplinary science should be applied to infectious disease research, public health, and the different stakeholders. Here, we present and discuss our common scientific and biomedical experience in French Guiana, South America to conduct and enrich research in vector-borne and zoonotic infectious diseases, with the aim to translate findings to public health and political stakeholders. We highlight the successful progressive dissolution of disciplinary boundaries that go beyond One Health positive-driven assumptions and argue that specific local conditions, as well as strong support from research and medical institutions, have facilitated an emulsion toward inter- and transdisciplinary science. This argument is intended to improve responses to public health concerns in French Guiana and other countries and regions of the world.
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- 2023
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18. Development of a case fatality prognostic score for HIV-associated histoplasmosis
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Ugo Françoise, Mathieu Nacher, Morgane Bourne-watrin, Loïc Epelboin, Camille Thorey, Magalie Demar, Jean-François Carod, Félix Djossou, Pierre Couppié, and Antoine Adenis
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Histoplasmosis ,Histoplasma capsulatum ,HIV ,Prognosis ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Objectives: The burden of histoplasmosis is as great as that of tuberculosis in Latin America and the attributable mortality is even higher. A better assessment of severity could help reduce mortality. Methods: From the French Guiana HIV-histoplasmosis database, we attempted to identify factors associated with 30-day death after antifungal drug initiation and constructed a prognostic score. We evaluated its discrimination performance using several resampling methods. Results: Of the 415 patients included, 56 (13.5%) died within 30 days of treatment. The fatality-associated factors were performance status ≥3, altered mental status, dyspnea, C-reactive protein ≥75 mg/l, hemoglobin
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- 2023
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19. Histoplasmosis in Non-HIV Infected Patients: Another Neglected Infection in French Guiana
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Houari Aissaoui, Morgane Bourne-Watrin, Benoit Lemarie, Genevieve Guillot, Alolia Aboikoni, Piseth Chhorn, Dana Gaudard, Ghazi Hadj-Amara, Ricardo Manasse, Mahamado Ouedraogo, Charles Salloum, Magalie Demar, Loïc Epelboin, Hatem Kallel, Antoine Adenis, Mathieu Nacher, Kinan Drak Alsibai, and Dominique Louvel
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histoplasmosis ,non-HIV ,neglected infectious disease ,French Guiana ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
(1) Background: Only a few studies on histoplasmosis in immunocompetent patients have been reported in French Guiana. Therefore, we conducted a detailed clinical description of hospitalized patients suffering with histoplasmosis among non-HIV patients. (2) Methods: This is a single-center, retrospective study conducted at Cayenne Hospital Center between 2008 and 2022. (3) Results: Our cohort was composed of 31 (91%) adults (>18 years of age) and 3 (9%) children, with a sex ratio, M:F, of 1:2. The median age was higher among the women than among the men (70 versus 54 years). The collection of respiratory samples constituted the majority of the performed examinations (38%). Fever (>37 °C) was found in 56% of patients. Surprisingly, the histoplasmosis was disseminated in 82% of patients with an overall case fatality rate of 14.7%. However, immunosuppressive conditions were found in 52% (16/31) of the adult patients, including lymphoid hemopathies, diabetes and immunosuppressive drugs. Conclusions: This disease, though rare and usually considered a mostly benign disease in non-HIV patients, presented a relatively high mortality rate in our cohort. Thus, histoplasmosis should be suspected, screened and investigated as a first line of defense in highly endemic areas, even in immunocompetent and non-HIV patients, especially those with fever or chronic respiratory symptoms.
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- 2024
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20. Contrasted life trajectories: reconstituting the main population exposomes in French Guiana
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Mathieu Nacher, Célia Basurko, Maylis Douine, Yann Lambert, Cyril Rousseau, Celine Michaud, Ronan Garlantezec, Antoine Adenis, Margarete M Gomes, Kinan Drak Alsibai, Nadia Sabbah, Véronique Lambert, Loïc Epelboin, Rakesh Gajadhar Sukul, Fredrik Terlutter, Caroline Janvier, and Najeh Hcini
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exposome ,nutritional deficiencies ,infectious diseases ,heavy metals ,French Guiana ,life statistics ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
In French Guiana, life expectancy is between 2 and 3 years below that of France, reflecting differences in mortality rates that are largely sensitive to primary healthcare and thus preventable. However, because poverty affects half of the population in French Guiana, global measurements of life expectancy presumably conflate at least two distinct situations: persons who have similar life expectancies as in mainland France and persons living in precariousness who have far greater mortality rates than their wealthier counterparts. We thus aimed to synthesize what is known about statistical regularities regarding exposures and sketch typical French Guiana exposomes in relation to health outcomes. We conducted a narrative review on common exposures in French Guiana and made comparisons between French Guiana and mainland France, between rich and poor in French Guiana, and between urban and rural areas within French Guiana. The most striking fact this panorama shows is that being a fetus or a young child in French Guiana is fraught with multiple threats. In French Guiana, poverty and poor pregnancy follow-up; renouncing healthcare; wide variety of infectious diseases; very high prevalence of food insecurity; psychosocial stress; micronutrient deficiencies; obesity and metabolic problems; and frequent exposure to lead and mercury in rural areas constitute a stunningly challenging exposome for a new human being to develop into. A substantial part of the population’s health is hence affected by poverty and its sources of nutrition.
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- 2024
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21. Understanding the impact of mobility on Plasmodium spp. carriage in an Amazon cross-border area with low transmission rate
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Hélène Tréhard, Lise Musset, Yassamine Lazrek, Felix Djossou, Loïc Epelboin, Emmanuel Roux, Jordi Landier, Jean Gaudart, and Emilie Mosnier
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Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Published
- 2024
22. Novel Species of Brucella Causing Human Brucellosis, French Guiana
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About, Fredegonde, Pastre, Theo, Boutrou, Mathilde, Martinez, Alex Yahiaoui, Melzani, Alessia, Peugny, Sandrine, Michaud, Celine, Zouaoui, Sami, Carage, Thierry, Rose, Vincent Sainte, Demar, Magalie, Lavigne, Jean-Philippe, Djossou, Felix, O'Callaghan, David, Epelboin, Loic, and Keriel, Anne
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Identification and classification ,Case studies ,Causes of ,Brucella -- Identification and classification -- Case studies ,Brucellosis -- Causes of -- Case studies ,Zoonoses -- Causes of -- Case studies - Abstract
Human brucellosis is a subacute or chronic debilitating disease with nonspecific clinical manifestations. Presenting classically as an influenza-like syndrome, this zoonosis remains endemic in most developing countries, mainly in areas [...]
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- 2023
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23. Adult T-cell leukemia and lymphoma in French Guiana: a retrospective analysis with real-life data from 2009 to 2019
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Abdelmoumen, Karim, Alsibai, Kinan Drak, Rabier, Sébastien, Nacher, Mathieu, Wankpo, N'detodji-Bill, Gessain, Antoine, Santa, Florin, Hermine, Olivier, Marçais, Ambroise, Couppié, Pierre, Droz, Jean-Pierre, and Epelboin, Loïc
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- 2023
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24. Air‐fluid level in the mediastinum
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Fremery, Alexis, Zappa, Magaly, Pujo, Jean, and Epelboin, Loïc
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- 2023
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25. Causes and consequences of fever in Amazonian pregnant women: A large retrospective study from French Guiana.
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Najeh Hcini, Véronique Lambert, Olivier Picone, Jean-Francois Carod, Mérédith Mathieu, Romane Cousin, Ferroudja Akli, Gabriel Carles, Célia Basurko, Léo Pomar, Loïc Epelboin, and Mathieu Nacher
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Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to describe different causes and consequences of fever during pregnancy in Western French Guiana and along the Maroni River.Study designA retrospective single-center study including all patients with a history of documented fever ≥ 38°C during pregnancy at the West French Guiana Hospital for 9 years. Postpartum fever and nosocomial infections were excluded. We focused on medical history and on clinical and biological findings. Causes were characterized as confirmed or uncertain and then classified as preventable or non-preventable.ResultsA total of 940 pregnant women who experienced at least one episode of fever were included and compared to 23,811 deliveries who occurred during the same period without documented fever. Among them, 43.7% (411/940) were in labor. About 3.7% (35/940) of febrile pregnant women had at least two episodes of fever, while 0.3% (3/940) had a coinfection at the time of diagnosis, resulting in a total of 978 febrile episodes. Among them, causes remained unknown or uncertain in 7.6% (75/978) and 0.9% (9/978) of cases, respectively. Among confirmed causes of fever throughout pregnancy (n = 483), the most common known cause was arbovirus infection (146/483, 30.2%), followed by urinary tract infection (134/483, 27.7%), chickenpox (27/483, 5.6%), and gastrointestinal (14/483, 2.9%) and pulmonary infections (10/483, 2%). Mothers with fever had a higher risk of cesarean section (19.8% vs 15.5%, aOR 1.3 [95% CI 1.14-1.6], stillbirth (5.5% versus 1.9%, aOR 2.7 [95% CI 2-3.7]), and preterm delivery < 34 weeks of gestation (7.2% vs 4.7%, aOR 1.5 [95% CI 1.2-2].ConclusionsIn the Amazon region, causes of fever are diverse and often associated with epidemic waves, notably arboviruses. This must be considered when exploring possible causes of fever during pregnancy in these localities, including fetal anomalies and/or fetal loss. Physicians should consider the epidemiological context and avoid generalizations. Given the impact of emergent agents such as arboviruses on pregnancy, particular attention must be paid to the epidemiological context. This study can also help clinicians when managing fever in pregnant travelers or in their partner after having visited exposed areas. In this context, fetal abnormalities and adverse obstetric outcomes should be explored accordingly.
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- 2023
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26. Forty Years of HIV Research in French Guiana: Comprehend to Combat
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Mathieu Nacher, Aude Lucarelli, Astrid Van-Melle, Célia Basurko, Sébastien Rabier, Malorie Chroum, Thiago Santana, Karine Verin, Ketty Bienvenu, Myriam El Guedj, Tania Vaz, Hawa Cisse, Loïc Epelboin, Paul Le Turnier, Philippe Abboud, Félix Djossou, Roger Pradinaud, Antoine Adenis, and Pierre Couppié
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HIV ,French Guiana ,AIDS ,epidemiology ,research ,public health ,Medicine - Abstract
The drivers of the HIV epidemic, the viruses, the opportunistic infections, the attitudes and the resources allocated to the fight against HIV/AIDS, vary substantially across countries. French Guiana, at the crossroads between Amazonian South America and the Caribbean, constitutes a singular context with poor populations and rich country health funding, which has allowed researchers to gather lots of information on the particulars of our epidemic. We aimed to focus on the little known story of forty years of HIV research in French Guiana and emphasize how local research intertwined with public health action has yielded continuous progress, despite the difficult social conditions of the affected population. We searched Web of Science and associated local experts who worked through much of the epidemic in selecting the most meaningful products of local research for clinical and public health outcomes in French Guiana. Research tools and facilities included, from 1991 onwards, the HIV hospital cohort and the HIV-histoplasmosis cohort. Ad hoc studies funded by the ANRS or the European Regional Development fund shed light on vulnerable groups. The cumulative impact of prospective routine collection and focused efforts has yielded a breadth of knowledge, allowing for informed decisions and the adaptation of prevention, testing and care in French Guiana. After this overview, we emphasize that the close integration of research and public health was crucial in adapting interventions to the singular context of French Guiana.
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- 2024
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27. Novel Chronic Anaplasmosis in Splenectomized Patient, Amazon Rainforest
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Duron, Olivier, Koual, Rachid, Musset, Lise, Buysse, Marie, Lambert, Yann, Jaulhac, Benoit, Blanchet, Denis, Alsibai, Kinan Drak, Lazrek, Yassamine, Epelboin, Loic, Deshuillers, Pierre, Michaud, Celine, and Douine, Maylis
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Diagnosis ,Risk factors ,Demographic aspects ,Patient outcomes ,Splenectomy -- Patient outcomes ,Anaplasmosis -- Diagnosis -- Risk factors -- Demographic aspects - Abstract
Anaplasmoses are emerging tickborne zoonoses caused by intracellular bacteria of the Anaplasma genus. In total, 8 Anaplasma species and several candidate species have been described, including at least 5 species [...]
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- 2022
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28. Genetic landscape of a large cohort of Primary Ovarian Insufficiency: New genes and pathways and implications for personalized medicine
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Heddar, Abdelkader, Ogur, Cagri, Da Costa, Sabrina, Braham, Inès, Billaud-Rist, Line, Findikli, Necati, Beneteau, Claire, Reynaud, Rachel, Mahmoud, Khaled, Legrand, Stéphanie, Marchand, Maud, Cedrin-Durnerin, Isabelle, Cantalloube, Adèle, Peigne, Maeliss, Bretault, Marion, Dagher-Hayeck, Benedicte, Perol, Sandrine, Droumaguet, Celine, Cavkaytar, Sabri, Nicolas-Bonne, Carole, Elloumi, Hanen, Khrouf, Mohamed, Rougier-LeMasle, Charlotte, Fradin, Melanie, Le Boette, Elsa, Luigi, Perrine, Guerrot, Anne-Marie, Ginglinger, Emmanuelle, Zampa, Amandine, Fauconnier, Anais, Auger, Nathalie, Paris, Françoise, Brischoux-Boucher, Elise, Cabrol, Christelle, Brun, Aurore, Guyon, Laura, Berard, Melanie, Riviere, Axelle, Gruchy, Nicolas, Odent, Sylvie, Gilbert-Dussardier, Brigitte, Isidor, Bertrand, Piard, Juliette, Lambert, Laetitia, Hamamah, Samir, Guedj, Anne Marie, Brac de la Perriere, Aude, Fernandez, Hervé, Raffin-Sanson, Marie-Laure, Polak, Michel, Letur, Hélène, Epelboin, Sylvie, Plu-Bureau, Genevieve, Wołczyński, Sławomir, Hieronimus, Sylvie, Aittomaki, Kristiina, Catteau-Jonard, Sophie, and Misrahi, Micheline
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- 2022
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29. Infections in Kidney Transplant Recipients: Perspectives in French Caribbean.
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Tardieu, Laurène, Doppelt, Gary, Nicolas, Muriel, Emal, Violaine, Blanchet, Pascal, Markowicz, Samuel, Galantine, Valérie, Roger, Pierre-Marie, Claudéon, Joëlle, and Epelboin, Loïc
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KIDNEY transplant complications ,PARASITIC diseases ,BACTERIAL diseases ,KIDNEY transplantation ,MYCOSES - Abstract
Few studies have focused on the infectious complications in kidney transplant recipients in tropical regions, particularly in the Caribbean. The primary objective of this study was to determine the incidence of bacterial, fungal, and parasitic infections in kidney transplant recipients in the French Caribbean and French Guiana. We included all patients who received a kidney transplant at the University Hospital of Guadeloupe between January 2014 and October 2016, with post-transplant follow-up in the French Caribbean. A total of 91 patients were included, of whom 57 developed an infectious event during follow-up. When infections were documented (94/111), bacterial infections were the most frequent (79/94), followed by fungal (11/94) and parasitic infections (4/94). Four cases of nocardiosis were identified (4/79). Phaeohyphomycosis was the most common fungal infection (7/11). In a multivariate analysis, the female gender and diabetes mellitus at the time of transplant were significantly associated with a higher risk of infection. This study is the first to describe the epidemiology of infections in kidney transplant recipients in the Caribbean and to analyze the potential risk factors. We reported a similar profile of bacterial infections to that which were observed in the European and American studies. However, we found a higher incidence of tropical infections, such as nocardiosis and phaeohyphomycosis, which highlights the need for heightened awareness among healthcare teams to ensure earlier and more appropriate treatment. Further studies focusing on these rare tropical infections are necessary to better understand their risk factors [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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30. Mayaro virus infection in French Guiana, a cross sectional study 2003–2019
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Mutricy, Rémi, Matheus, Séverine, Mosnier, Émilie, Martinez-Lorenzi, Enguerrane, De Laval, Franck, Nacher, Mathieu, Niemetzky, Florence, Naudion, Pauline, Djossou, Félix, Rousset, Dominique, and Epelboin, Loïc
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- 2022
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31. Higher risk of pre-eclampsia and other vascular disorders with artificial cycle for frozen-thawed embryo transfer compared to ovulatory cycle or to fresh embryo transfer following in vitro fertilization
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Sylvie Epelboin, Julie Labrosse, Jacques De Mouzon, Aviva Devaux, Marie-José Gervoise-Boyer, Laetitia Hesters, Philippe Jonveaux, Rachel Levy, Nathalie Sermondade, Patricia Fauque, and Fabienne Pessione
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pre-eclampsia ,artificial cycle ,ovulatory cycle ,frozen embryo transfer ,fresh embryo transfer ,endometrial preparation ,Diseases of the endocrine glands. Clinical endocrinology ,RC648-665 - Abstract
BackgroundRisks of maternal morbidity are known to be reduced in pregnancies resulting from frozen embryo transfer (FET) compared to fresh-embryo transfer (fresh-ET), except for the risk of pre-eclampsia, reported to be higher in FET pregnancies compared to fresh-ET or natural conception. Few studies have compared the risk of maternal vascular morbidities according to endometrial preparation for FET, either with ovulatory cycle (OC-FET) or artificial cycle (AC-FET). Furthermore, maternal pre-eclampsia could be associated with subsequent vascular disorders in the offspring.MethodsA 2013-2018 French nationwide cohort study comparing maternal vascular morbidities in 3 groups of single pregnancies was conducted: FET with either OC or AC preparation, and fresh-ET. Data were extracted from the French National Health System database. Results were adjusted for maternal characteristics and infertility (age, parity, smoking, obesity, history of diabetes or hypertension, endometriosis, polycystic ovary syndrome and premature ovarian insufficiency).ResultsA total of 68025 single deliveries were included: fresh-ET (n=48152), OC-FET (n=9500), AC-FET (n=10373). The risk of pre-eclampsia was higher in AC-FET compared to OC-FET and fresh-ET groups in univariate analysis (5.3% vs. 2.3% and 2.4%, respectively, P
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- 2023
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32. The burden of COVID-19 in French Guiana: Vaccine-averted deaths, hospitalizations and costs
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Mathieu Nacher, Nicolas Vignier, Cyril Rousseau, Antoine Adenis, Maylis Douine, Célia Basurko, Bertrand de Toffol, Narcisse Elenga, Hatem Kallel, Jean Pujot, Magaly Zappa, Magalie Demar, Félix Djossou, Pierre Couppié, and Loïc Epelboin
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COVID-19 ,Vaccination ,Vaccine reluctance ,Number needed to vaccinate ,Mortality ,Cost ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Objectives: French Guiana, the least-vaccinated French territory, also has the lowest COVID-19 vaccination coverage in Latin America. We aimed to estimate how many deaths, hospitalizations and costs the vaccines had and could have avoided. Methods: We calculated the Number Needed to Vaccinate to prevent one death per year, 1 standard hospitalization, 1 Intensive Care Unit admission given the mean incidence numbers of the past 6 months, and divided the number of persons vaccinated to estimate how many deaths and hospitalizations had been avoided in French Guiana at that time. Results: The crude number needed to vaccinate to prevent one death per year, the crude number needed to vaccinate to prevent one hospitalization per 6 months were computed Based on our observed incidence and ICU admission rate, the crude number needed to vaccinate to prevent one ICU admission per 6 months.After 6 months with an incidence exceeding 400 per million inhabitants, and 148 observed deaths, we estimate that vaccination avoided 46 deaths (IC95%=43.5–48.7). If the number of vaccinated persons had reached the same proportion as mainland France, 141 deaths per year could have been prevented (IC95%=131.9–147.6).With 2085 hospitalization and 370 ICU admissions during the same period, we estimate that the current albeit low vaccination rate avoided 300 hospital (IC95%=280–313) and 77 (IC95%=72–81) ICU admissions. With the same vaccination rates as mainland France, we estimate that 900 hospitalizations and 231 ICU admissions would have been avoided.Similarly, there would have been 139 ICU admission (instead of 370). Conclusions: In sparsely populated French Guiana these numbers are quite substantial and framing the vaccine benefits and wasted opportunities using such concrete numbers may help convincing undecided persons to get vaccinated.
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- 2023
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33. Primary or secondary prevention of HIV-associated histoplasmosis during the early antiretrovirals for all era.
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Mathieu Nacher, Paul Le Turnier, Philippe Abboud, Ugo Françoise, Aude Lucarelli, Magalie Demar, Félix Djossou, Loïc Epelboin, Pierre Couppié, and Antoine Adenis
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Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Published
- 2023
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34. Review on Main Arboviruses Circulating on French Guiana, An Ultra-Peripheric European Region in South America
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Timothee Bonifay, Paul Le Turnier, Yanouk Epelboin, Luisiane Carvalho, Benoit De Thoisy, Félix Djossou, Jean-Bernard Duchemin, Philippe Dussart, Antoine Enfissi, Anne Lavergne, Rémi Mutricy, Mathieu Nacher, Sébastien Rabier, Stanislas Talaga, Antoine Talarmin, Dominique Rousset, and Loïc Epelboin
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arbovirus ,French Guiana ,Dengue virus ,Chikungunya virus ,Zika virus ,Yellow fever virus ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
French Guiana (FG), a French overseas territory in South America, is susceptible to tropical diseases, including arboviruses. The tropical climate supports the proliferation and establishment of vectors, making it difficult to control transmission. In the last ten years, FG has experienced large outbreaks of imported arboviruses such as Chikungunya and Zika, as well as endemic arboviruses such as dengue, Yellow fever, and Oropouche virus. Epidemiological surveillance is challenging due to the differing distributions and behaviors of vectors. This article aims to summarize the current knowledge of these arboviruses in FG and discuss the challenges of arbovirus emergence and reemergence. Effective control measures are hampered by the nonspecific clinical presentation of these diseases, as well as the Aedes aegypti mosquito’s resistance to insecticides. Despite the high seroprevalence of certain viruses, the possibility of new epidemics cannot be ruled out. Therefore, active epidemiological surveillance is needed to identify potential outbreaks, and an adequate sentinel surveillance system and broad virological diagnostic panel are being developed in FG to improve disease management.
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- 2023
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35. Outbreak of Oropouche Virus in French Guiana
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Gaillet, Melanie, Pichard, Clara, Restrepo, Johana, Lavergne, Anne, Perez, Lucas, Enfissi, Antoine, Abboud, Philippe, Lambert, Yann, Ma, Laurence, Monot, Marc, Demar, Magalie, Djossou, Felix, Servas, Veronique, Nacher, Mathieu, Andrieu, Audrey, Prudhomme, Julie, Michaud, Celine, Rousseau, Cyril, Jeanne, Isabelle, Duchemin, Jean-Bernard, Epelboin, Loic, and Rousset, Dominique
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Diagnosis ,Distribution ,Care and treatment ,Health aspects ,Company distribution practices ,RNA virus infections -- Diagnosis -- Care and treatment -- Distribution ,Epidemics -- Distribution -- French Guiana ,Bunyaviruses -- Health aspects - Abstract
French Guiana is an overseas territory of France in northern South America; 95% of the country is covered by Amazon rainforest. The remote village of Saul, deep in the rainforest, [...]
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- 2021
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36. Breakthrough Infections of SARS-CoV-2 Gamma Variant in Fully Vaccinated Gold Miners, French Guiana, 2021
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Vignier, Nicolas, Berot, Vincent, Bonnave, Nathalie, Peugny, Sandrine, Ballet, Mathilde, Jacoud, Estelle, Michaud, Celine, Gaillet, Melanie, Djossou, Felix, Blanchet, Denis, Lavergne, Anne, Demar, Magalie, Nacher, Mathieu, Rousset, Dominique, and Epelboin, Loic
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Diagnosis ,Genetic aspects ,Patient outcomes ,Health aspects ,COVID-19 vaccines -- Patient outcomes ,Gold miners -- Health aspects -- Genetic aspects ,Genetic variation -- Health aspects ,COVID-19 -- Genetic aspects -- Diagnosis - Abstract
On May 31, 2021, a gold miner tested positive for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) at the Cacao health center, French Guiana. He worked in a legal gold [...]
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- 2021
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37. Evaluation of a New Histoplasma spp. Quantitative RT-PCR Assay
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Woimant, Marine Gosset, blanchard, Geneviève, Silhadi, Souad, Vignier, Nicolas, Pitsch, Aurelia, Jidar, Kaoutar, Traversier, Nicolas, Poisson, Didier, Lecointre, Claire, Foulet, Françoise, Botterel, Françoise, Ammar, Nawel Ait, Amsellem, Gabriel, Frederic, Poirier, Philipe, Cornu, Marjorie, Loridant, Severine, Morio, Florent, Boutoille, David, Jeddi, Fakhri, Hasseine, Lilia, Ouissa, Rachida, Toubas, Dominique, Bailly, Eric, Désoubeaux, Guillaume, Ronez, Emily, Foulon, Guillaume, Lefrançois, Sebastien, Bonnal, Christine, Paugam, André, Dougados, Maxime, Desroches, Marine, Barazzutti, Hélène, Paleiron, Nicolas, rabodonirina, Meja, Catherinot, Emilie, Cardot-Martin, Emilie, Hiesse, Chrisian, Salvator, Hélène, Aguilar, Claire, Gigandon, Anne, de Montpreville, Thomas, Bougnoux, Marie-Elisabeth, Sitterlé, Emilie, Fekkar, Arnaud, Imbert, Sébastien, Bleibtreu, Alexandre, Senghor, Yaye, Denis, Blandine, Molina, Jean-Michel, Liegeon, Geoffroy, Munnier, Anne-Lise, Malphettes, Marion, Denis, Julie, Berlioz-Arthaud, Alain, Lange, Franciska, Chiaruzzi, Myriam, Epelboin, Loic, Alanio, Alexandre, Gits-Muselli, Maud, Lanternier, Fanny, Sturny-Leclère, Aude, Benazra, Marion, Hamane, Samia, Rodrigues, Anderson Messias, Garcia-Hermoso, Dea, Lortholary, Olivier, Dromer, Françoise, and Bretagne, Stéphane
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- 2021
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38. Establishing the proportion of severe/moderately severe vs mild cases of progressive disseminated histoplasmosis in patients with HIV.
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Mathieu Nacher, Antoine Adenis, Romain Blaizot, Philippe Abboud, Paul Le Turnier, Ugo Françoise, Aude Lucarelli, Magalie Demar, Félix Djossou, Loïc Epelboin, and Pierre Couppié
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Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
BackgroundProgressive disseminated histoplasmosis remains a major but neglected cause of death among patients with advanced HIV. Recently, aiming to reduce avoidable deaths, the Pan American Health Organization issued the first diagnosis and treatment guidelines for HIV-associated histoplasmosis. But what proportion of progressive disseminated histoplasmosis in HIV-infected patients is severe is currently not known. Because this proportion influences treatment needs, we aimed to estimate this in a cohort of 416 patients in French Guiana.MethodsWe used the definition in the recent PAHO/WHO guidelines for severity. We used regression modelling to predict the impact of CD4 count on the proportion of severe cases. In a territory where treatment cost is not a limiting factor and where histoplasmosis is well known, we assumed that clinicians' initial treatment reflected their perception about the severity of the case and therefore, the needs for different treatments.ResultsUsing these definitions, since the beginning, there were 274 (65.9%) severe/moderately severe cases and 142 (34.1%) mild cases. In practice 186 cases were treated with deoxycholate or liposomal amphotericin B (44.7%) and 230 (55.3%) cases treated with itraconazole as first line treatment. The Kappa concordance measure between the guideline definition and the actual treatment given was 0.22. There was a 9% risk difference for death within 30 days of antifungal treatment initiation between severe/moderately severe and mild cases. Over threequarters (77%) of early deaths were attributed to severe/moderately severe cases.ConclusionsThis is the only rigorous estimate of the proportion of severe/moderately severe cases of progressive disseminated histoplasmosis in symptomatic HIV patients on the largest published cohort. These numbers may help defend budget needs for rapid diagnostic tests and liposomal amphotericin B.
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- 2022
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39. Epidemiology of infection by pulmonary non-tuberculous mycobacteria in French Guiana 2008-2018.
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Milène Chaptal, Claire Andrejak, Timothée Bonifay, Emmanuel Beillard, Geneviève Guillot, Stéphanie Guyomard-Rabenirina, Magalie Demar, Sabine Trombert-Paolantoni, Veronique Jacomo, Emilie Mosnier, Nicolas Veziris, Felix Djossou, Loïc Epelboin, and French Guiana PNTM working group
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Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
IntroductionUnlike diseases caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis, M. leprae and M. ulcerans, the epidemiology of pulmonary non-tuberculous mycobacteria (PNTM) has not received due attention in French Guiana. The main objective of the current study was to define the incidence of these PNTM infections: NTM pulmonary diseases (NTM-PD) and casual PNTM isolation (responsible of latent infection or simple colonization). The secondary objectives were to determine species diversity and geographic distribution of these atypical mycobacteria.MethodsA retrospective observational study (2008-2018) of French Guiana patients with at least one PNTM positive respiratory sample in culture was conducted. Patients were then classified into two groups: casual PNTM isolation or pulmonary disease (NTM-PD), according to clinical, radiological and microbiological criteria defined by the American Thoracic Society / Infectious Disease Society of America (ATS / IDSA) in 2007.Results178 patients were included, out of which 147 had casual PNTM isolation and 31 had NTM-PD. Estimated annual incidence rate of respiratory isolates was 6.17 / 100,000 inhabitants per year while that of NTM-PD was 1.07 / 100,000 inhabitants per year. Among the 178 patients, M. avium complex (MAC) was the most frequently isolated pathogen (38%), followed by M. fortuitum then M. abscessus (19% and 6% of cases respectively), the latter two mycobacteria being mainly found in the coastal center region. Concerning NTM-PD, two species were mainly involved: MAC (81%) and M. abscessus (16%).Discussion/conclusionThis is the first study on the epidemiology of PNTM infections in French Guiana. PNTM's incidence looks similar to other contries and metropolitan France and NTM-PD is mostly due to MAC and M.abscessus. Although French Guiana is the French territory with the highest tuberculosis incidence, NTM should not be overlooked.
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- 2022
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40. Morphological and Molecular Characterizations of Cochliomyia hominivorax (Diptera: Calliphoridae) Larvae Responsible for Wound Myiasis in French Guiana
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Mohammad Akhoundi, Alexandre Mathieu, Wajih Hannachi, Jade Nasrallah, Guillaume Quezel, Romain Blaizot, Denis Blanchet, Habib Ben Romdhane, Loïc Epelboin, and Arezki Izri
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diptera flies ,Cochliomyia hominivorax ,larvae ,wound myiasis ,pre-urban areas ,immunocompetent patient ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Myiasis is an ectoparasitic infection caused by the larvae of true flies (Diptera). We came across a rather rare case of myiasis in an immunocompetent 34-year-old man from French Guiana with advanced wound myiasis masquerading as cavitary myiasis and a history of cholesteatoma surgery in the left ear. The Diptera larvae responsible for the disease were isolated and identified using morphological and molecular approaches as Cochliomyia hominivorax. We underline the importance of this parasitosis as the second case of myiasis caused by C. hominivorax and the first case of wound myiasis in this overseas department of France and its incidence in pre-urban areas of the capital, Cayenne, in South America.
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- 2023
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41. Mosquito Feeding Habits in Coastal French Guiana: Mammals in the Crosshairs?
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Guidez, Amandine, Tirera, Sourakhata, Talaga, Stanislas, Lacour, Guillaume, Carinci, Romuald, Darcissac, Edith, Donato, Damien, Gaborit, Pascal, Clervil, Emmanuelle, Epelboin, Yanouk, de Thoisy, Benoit, Dusfour, Isabelle, Duchemin, Jean-Bernard, and Lavergne, Anne
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DOMESTIC animals ,CULEX ,ANIMAL species ,RIBOSOMAL RNA ,PUBLIC health ,MOSQUITOES - Abstract
Simple Summary: Mosquitoes transmit pathogens through cycles involving animals and humans. Understanding which animals mosquitoes feed on helps us to monitor these diseases. In our study, we examined blood-fed female mosquitoes from various sites in French Guiana to determine their feeding preferences. We used DNA (genetic material) present in their blood meals to identify the animals they had fed on. We discovered that most mosquitoes we studied, especially those from the Culex group, prefer feeding on mammals like humans and other animals, followed by birds, amphibians, and reptiles. We identified 46 different animal species in the blood meals. Our findings provide important information on mosquito feeding habits and help improve the tracking of diseases spread by mosquitoes, which is crucial for public health. Pathogens transmitted by mosquitoes (Diptera, Culicidae) in sylvatic or urban cycles involve wild or domestic animals and humans, driven by various mosquito species with distinct host preferences. Understanding mosquito–host associations is crucial for ecological insights and pathogen surveillance. In this study, we analyzed mosquito blood meals from coastal French Guiana by amplifying and sequencing host DNA from blood-fed females. Using the 12S ribosomal RNA gene and Sanger sequencing, we identified blood meals from 26 mosquito species across six genera, with 59% belonging to the Culex genus. Nanopore sequencing of selected samples showed 12 mosquito species with one to three mixed blood-meal sources. Mammals were the primary hosts (88%), followed by birds (7%), squamates (3%), and amphibians (2%), indicating a strong preference for mammalian hosts. A total of 46 vertebrate host species were identified, demonstrating high host diversity. This research provides insights into mosquito host usage and highlights the complexities of monitoring arboviruses of public health concern. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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42. Zoonoses and gold mining: A cross-sectional study to assess yellow fever immunization, Q fever, leptospirosis and leishmaniasis among the population working on illegal mining camps in French Guiana.
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Maylis Douine, Timothée Bonifay, Yann Lambert, Louise Mutricy, Muriel Suzanne Galindo, Audrey Godin, Pascale Bourhy, Mathieu Picardeau, Mona Saout, Magalie Demar, Alice Sanna, Emilie Mosnier, Romain Blaizot, Pierre Couppié, Mathieu Nacher, Antoine Adenis, Martha Suarez-Mutis, Stephen Vreden, Loïc Epelboin, and Roxane Schaub
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Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
BackgroundMost emerging pathogens are zoonoses and have a wildlife origin. Anthropization and disruption of ecosystems favor the crossing of inter-species barriers. We hypothesize that the marginalized population of undocumented goldminers in the Amazon is at risk of acquiring zoonoses.MethodA multicentric cross-sectional study included consenting gold-mining adult workers in 2019. A clinical examination recorded dermatological signs of leishmaniosis and past history of yellow fever vaccination. Biological tests were performed for yellow fever, Q fever and leptospirosis serologies. Additional blood samples from a previous study in 2015 were also tested for leptospirosis.ResultsIn 2019, 380 individuals were included in the study, along with 407 samples from the 2015 biological collection. The seroprevalence of leptospirosis was 31.0% [95%CI = 26.4-35.5] in 2015 and 28.1% [23.5-32.7] in 2019. The seroprevalence of Q fever was 2.9% [1.2-4.6]. The majority of participants reported being vaccinated against yellow fever (93.6%) and 97.9% had seroneutralizing antibodies. The prevalence of suspected active mucocutaneous leishmaniasis was 2.4% [0.8-3.9].DiscussionThese unique data shed new light on the transmission cycles of zoonoses still poorly understood in the region. They support the existence of a wild cycle of leptospirosis but not of Q fever. Leishmaniasis prevalence was high because of life conditions and tree felling. High yellow fever vaccine coverage was reassuring in this endemic area. In the era of global health, special attention must be paid to these vulnerable populations in direct contact with the tropical ecosystem and away from the health care system.
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- 2022
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43. Forty Years of HIV Research in French Guiana: Comprehend to Combat
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Nacher, Mathieu, primary, Lucarelli, Aude, additional, Van-Melle, Astrid, additional, Basurko, Célia, additional, Rabier, Sébastien, additional, Chroum, Malorie, additional, Santana, Thiago, additional, Verin, Karine, additional, Bienvenu, Ketty, additional, El Guedj, Myriam, additional, Vaz, Tania, additional, Cisse, Hawa, additional, Epelboin, Loïc, additional, Le Turnier, Paul, additional, Abboud, Philippe, additional, Djossou, Félix, additional, Pradinaud, Roger, additional, Adenis, Antoine, additional, and Couppié, Pierre, additional
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- 2024
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44. Kinetics of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) activity during Plasmodium vivax infection: implications for early radical malaria treatment
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Dahuron, Laureen, primary, Goungounga, Juste, additional, Drame, Moustapha, additional, Douine, Maylis, additional, Nacher, Mathieu, additional, Blaise, Théo, additional, Mosnier, Emilie, additional, Musset, Lise, additional, Fouillet, Marie, additional, Djossou, Félix, additional, and Epelboin, Loïc, additional
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- 2024
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45. Using capillary electrophoresis to identify Anopheline species in routine sampling sites
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Chabanol, Estelle, primary, Romoli, Ottavia, additional, Talaga, Stanislas, additional, Epelboin, Yanouk, additional, Heu, Katy, additional, Prévot, Ghislaine, additional, and Gendrin, Mathilde, additional
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- 2024
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46. Resurgence risk for malaria, and the characterization of a recent outbreak in an Amazonian border area between French Guiana and Brazil
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Emilie Mosnier, Isabelle Dusfour, Guillaume Lacour, Raphael Saldanha, Amandine Guidez, Margarete S. Gomes, Alice Sanna, Yanouk Epelboin, Johana Restrepo, Damien Davy, Magalie Demar, Félix Djossou, Maylis Douine, Vanessa Ardillon, Mathieu Nacher, Lise Musset, and Emmanuel Roux
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Plasmodium vivax ,Anopheles darlingi ,French Guiana ,Brazil ,Transnational ,Outbreak investigation ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Background In 2017, inhabitants along the border between French Guiana and Brazil were affected by a malaria outbreak primarily due to Plasmodium vivax (Pv). While malaria cases have steadily declined between 2005 and 2016 in this Amazonian region, a resurgence was observed in 2017. Methods Two investigations were performed according to different spatial scales and information details: (1) a local study on the French Guiana border, which enabled a thorough investigation of malaria cases treated at a local village health center and the entomological circumstances in the most affected neighborhood, and (2) a regional and cross-border study, which enabled exploration of the regional spatiotemporal epidemic dynamic. Number and location of malaria cases were estimated using French and Brazilian surveillance systems. Results On the French Guianese side of the border in Saint-Georges de l’Oyapock, the attack rate was 5.5% (n = 4000), reaching 51.4% (n = 175) in one Indigenous neighborhood. Entomological findings suggest a peak of Anopheles darlingi density in August and September. Two female An. darlingi (n = 1104, 0.18%) were found to be Pv-positive during this peak. During the same period, aggregated data from passive surveillance conducted by Brazilian and French Guianese border health centers identified 1566 cases of Pv infection. Temporal distribution during the 2007–2018 period displayed seasonal patterns with a peak in November 2017. Four clusters were identified among epidemic profiles of cross-border area localities. All localities of the first two clusters were Brazilian. The localization of the first cluster suggests an onset of the outbreak in an Indigenous reservation, subsequently expanding to French Indigenous neighborhoods and non-Native communities. Conclusions The current findings demonstrate a potential increase in malaria cases in an area with otherwise declining numbers. This is a transborder region where human mobility and remote populations challenge malaria control programs. This investigation illustrates the importance of international border surveillance and collaboration for malaria control, particularly in Indigenous villages and mobile populations.
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- 2020
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47. Capybara and Brush Cutter Involvement in Q Fever Outbreak in Remote Area of Amazon Rain Forest, French Guiana, 2014
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Jacques-Robert Christen, Sophie Edouard, Thierry Lamour, Enguerrane Martinez, Claire Rousseau, Franck de Laval, François Catzeflis, Félix Djossou, Didier Raoult, Vincent Pommier de Santi, and Loïc Epelboin
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Q fever ,Hydrochoerus hydrochaeris ,capybara ,infectious aerosol ,brush cutter ,weed whacker ,Medicine ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
We investigated a Q fever outbreak that occurred in an isolated area of the Amazon Rain Forest in French Guiana in 2014. Capybara fecal samples were positive for Coxiella burnetii DNA. Being near brush cutters in use was associated with disease development. Capybaras are a putative reservoir for C. burnetii.
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- 2020
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48. HIV patients dying on anti-tuberculosis treatment: are undiagnosed infections still a problem in French Guiana?
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Mathieu Nacher, Antoine Adenis, Philippe Abboud, Felix Djossou, Magalie Demar, Loïc Epelboin, and Pierre Couppié
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AIDS ,Tuberculosis ,Histoplasmosis ,Death ,Diagnosis ,Latin America ,Medicine ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 - Abstract
Abstract Objective Despite scaling-up testing and antiretroviral treatment in Latin America, advanced HIV remains a significant public health problem. The objective of the present study was look for historical risk factors for death in French Guiana’s HIV cohort taking into account the immunological status, the main opportunistic infections, and their treatment. A retrospective cohort study was conducted on data collected between 1992 and 2008 to identify factors associated with death in a cohort 2323 patients. Results There were 370 deaths for a total 9608 patient-years. Being on tuberculosis treatment was associated with a greater hazard of death. The diagnosis of confirmed tuberculosis, of histoplasmosis, of toxoplasmosis, and pneumocystosis were independently associated with death. Interactions terms between cotrimoxazole treatment and pneumocystosis, or between confirmed tuberculosis and tuberculosis treatment showed a protective treatment-effect. All patients having received anti-tuberculosis treatment (n = 347) did not have a final diagnosis of tuberculosis (n = 93). For histoplasmosis, 199 patients received antifungal treatment while 141 were diagnosed as having histoplasmosis. The number of patients on anti-tuberculosis drugs was far greater that the number of patients with confirmed tuberculosis, and these patients on treatment without confirmed tuberculosis had a twofold greater risk of dying.
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- 2020
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49. High endemicity of Q fever in French Guiana: A cross sectional study (2007-2017).
- Author
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Pauline Thill, Carole Eldin, Laureen Dahuron, Alain Berlioz-Artaud, Magalie Demar, Mathieu Nacher, Emmanuel Beillard, Félix Djossou, and Loïc Epelboin
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Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Q fever (QF) is a zoonosis caused by Coxiella burnetii (Cb). French Guiana (FG) had a high incidence but no data have been published since 2006. The objective of this study was to update the incidence and epidemiological data on QF in FG. A retrospective study of all FG Q fever serodiagnosis between 2007 and 2017 was carried out. Among the 695 patients included, the M/F sex-ratio was 2.0 and the median age of 45.3 years (IQR 33.7-56.3). The annual QF incidence rate was 27.4 cases (95%CI: 7.1-47.7) per 100,000 inhabitants ranging from 5.2 in 2007 to 40.4 in 2010. Risk factors associated with Q fever compared to general population were male gender, being born in mainland France, an age between 30 to 59 years-old and a residence in Cayenne and surroundings. The incidence of QF in FG remains high and stable and the highest in the world.
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- 2022
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50. Case Report: Invasive Cryptococcosis in French Guiana: Immune and Genetic Investigation in Six Non-HIV Patients
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Jeanne Goupil de Bouillé, Loïc Epelboin, Fanny Henaff, Mélanie Migaud, Philippe Abboud, Denis Blanchet, Christine Aznar, Felix Djossou, Olivier Lortholary, Narcisse Elenga, Anne Puel, Fanny Lanternier, and Magalie Demar
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cryptococcosis ,immunocompetent ,STAT1 gene ,autoantibodies against GM-CSF ,antibodies against IFN-γ ,fungal infection ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
ObjectivesWe describe the clinical, mycological, immunological, and genetic characteristics of six HIV-negative patients presenting with invasive cryptococcosis.MethodsPatients with cryptococcosis without any of the classical risk factors, such as HIV infection, followed at Cayenne Hospital, were prospectively included. An immunologic and genetic assessment was performed.ResultsFive male patients and one female patient, 5 adults and one child, were investigated. All presented a neuromeningeal localization. Cryptococcus neoformans var. gattii and C. neoformans var. grubii were isolated in two and three patients, respectively, whereas one patient could not be investigated. Overall, we did not observe any global leukocyte defect. Two patients were found with high levels of circulating autoantibodies against Granulocyte macrophage-colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF), and none had detectable levels of autoantibodies against Interferon gamma (IFN-γ) Sequencing of STAT1 exons and flanking regions performed for four patients was wild type.ConclusionTo better understand cryptococcosis in patients with cryptococcosis but otherwise healthy, further explorations are needed with repeated immune checkups and strain virulence studies.
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- 2022
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