M

M. Bagot

Inserm

Publishes on Cutaneous lymphoproliferative disorders research, Lymphoma Diagnosis and Treatment, Autoimmune Bullous Skin Diseases. 53 papers and 648 citations.

53Publications
648Total Citations

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Transformation of mycosis fungoides: clinicopathological and prognostic features of 45 cases. French Study Group of Cutaneious Lymphomas.
Cited by 267

The course of mycosis fungoides (MF) is indolent except when transformation to a large T-cell lymphoma occurs. The diagnosis of transformed MF (T-MF) relies on the presence of more than 25% of large cells on biopsy of an MF lesion. We analyzed 45 patients with T-MF recorded by the French Study Group on Cutaneous Lymphomas to better determine clinicopathological features of MF transformation and to analyze their impact on prognosis. Median time from diagnosis of MF to transformation was 6.5 years. Extracutaneous progression was present in 20 patients. Mean survival from transformation to death was 22 months. In univariate analysis, only an extracutaneous progression was associated with a worse prognosis (5-year actuarial survival: 7.8% versus 32%). Neither sex, age, clinical and skin disease stage at transformation, transformation speed, nor percentage of large cells or CD30 expression (14 of 45) had a prognostic value. When performing multivariate analysis, age (at least 60 years), and extracutaneous spreading were found to be associated with a poor prognosis. There was no difference between survival curves of patients with T-MF and with pleomorphic large T-cell CD30- lymphomas. The main diagnostic pitfall was "histiocytic-rich" MF, requiring CD68 staining for the diagnosis of T-MF. Out of 45 patients, 6 presented an histologic transformation before clinical progression, suggesting that an early histopathological diagnosis may be performed by histological follow-up. The prognostic value of such early histopathological diagnosis must be confirmed by prospective studies.

Statistical Evaluation of Diagnostic and Prognostic Features of CD30+ Cutaneous Lymphoproliferative Disorders
B. Vergier, M. Beylot‐Barry, Karen Pulford et al.|The American Journal of Surgical Pathology|1998
Cited by 105

Several clinical and histopathologic features of 65 CD30+ cutaneous lymphoproliferations were evaluated for their diagnostic value between CD30+ primary versus secondary cutaneous lymphomas and for their prognostic significance. Primary cutaneous disease, spontaneous regression, and absence of extracutaneous spreading (but not age < or =60 years) were associated with a better prognosis. Epithelial membrane antigen, BNH9, CD15 or CBF.78 antigen were expressed in all types of cutaneous lymphoproliferations. However, epithelial membrane antigen immunoreactivity was more frequently expressed in CD30+ secondary cutaneous large-cell lymphoma. Among CD30+ primary cutaneous large-cell lymphoma, CD15 expression was only seen in localized skin lesions. P53 expression was not associated with spontaneous regression, extracutaneous spreading, or survival. Nested reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction allowed the detection of NPM-ALK transcripts in 10 of 26 CD30+ primary and in 3 of 11 secondary cutaneous large-cell lymphomas. The ALK protein was detected in only 1 of 50 primary and in 4 of 15 secondary cutaneous CD30+ lymphoproliferations. In CD30+ primary cutaneous lymphoproliferation, NPM-ALK transcripts might be expressed by very rare normal or tumoral cells that are undetectable by immunohistochemistry. However, the expression of either NPM-ALK transcripts or ALK-protein was not correlated with prognosis or age in CD30+ cutaneous lymphoproliferations.

Lack of evidence of HTLV-I/II infection in T CD8 malignant or reactive lymphoproliferative disorders in France: a serological and/or molecular study of 169 cases.
Cited by 33

Human T lymphotropic virus type II (HTLV-II), originally isolated in 1982 from a patient with a "T hairy cell leukemia", has not yet been proven to be the causative agent of any specific hematological disease. In order to screen for such an event, and because HTLV-II has a preferential tropism for OKT8 (CD8) T cells (both in vivo and in vitro), we searched for the presence of HTLV-II in lymphoproliferative diseases (LP) of CD8+ T cells. We report a serological and/or molecular study of 169 patients with a T CD8 LP, including 76 patients with malignant or reactive T CD8 LP (34 lymphomas, 27 large granular leukemias, three prolymphocytic leukemias, one hairy cell leukemia, 11 reactive T CD8 LP) and 93 HIV-1+ patients with a T CD8 peripheral lymphocytosis ( > 1500/mm3) from a prospective HIV cohort involving 1264 individuals. In the first series, the 40 sera available were all HTLV-I/II negative, except a 67-year-old French Guyanan man, with a cutaneous large T CD8 cell lymphoma, HTLV-I+. Furthermore, the molecular analysis of the 69 available DNA samples by PCR failed to detect any proviral HTLV-I/II sequences, except for the HTLV-I+ patient. The serological study of the 93 HIV-1+ individuals with CD8 lymphocytosis, showed that three patients were HTLV-I+, but none was HTLV-II+. Thus, in contrast to HTLV-I, whose etiological role in adult T cell leukemia is now well established, there is neither epidemiological nor molecular evidence that prototypic HTLV-II may be etiologically associated specifically with any of the CD8+ T cell LP investigated in this report.

Distinctive clinicopathologic features associated with regressive primary CD30 positive cutaneous lymphomas: analysis of 6 cases
Michèle Bernier, M. Bagot, Murielle Broyer et al.|Journal of Cutaneous Pathology|1997
Cited by 31

A distinct group of cutaneous lymphomas has been described on the basis of CD30 antigen expression by at least 75% of the tumoral cells. When confined to the skin, these CD30 positive cutaneous lymphomas seem to be associated with a better prognosis than CD30 negative counterparts and spontaneous regression may even occur. We observed a spontaneously regressive evolution in 6 out of 9 CD30 positive primary cutaneous large cell-lymphomas diagnosed during a 5-year period. Clinicopathological data of regressive cases were analysed. The mean age of patients was 56.5 years. They were 3 males and 3 females. Skin lesions were solitary nodule or plaque measuring from 1.5 cm to 11 cm in diameter. Histologically, the lesions were classified as pleomorphic, medium and large cell (5 cases) or large cell anaplastic lymphoma (1 case) according to the updated Kiel classification. Delay for spontaneous regression varied from 1 to 6 months. Three of the 6 patients had cutaneous relapses, followed by a spontaneous regression. All patients remained disease-free with an overall median follow-up of 30 months. Histologically, some distinctive signs such as epidermal pseudo-epitheliomatous hyperplasia, epidermotropism, edema, dermal vascular hyperplasia, seemed to be more frequently associated with spontaneously regressive evolution.