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Valérie Li Thiao Te

Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Amiens-Picardie

Publishes on Immunodeficiency and Autoimmune Disorders, Blood disorders and treatments, Blood groups and transfusion. 18 papers and 351 citations.

18Publications
351Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Practical approach for characterization of glucose 6‐phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency in countries with population ethnically heterogeneous: Description of seven new G6PD mutants
Kamran Moradkhani, C. Mekki, Michel Bahuau et al.|American Journal of Hematology|2011
Cited by 10Open Access

We present a rapid strategy based on Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism (RFLP) analysis to characterize the more frequent glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) variants observed in a population with high gene flow. During a study involving more than 600 patients, we observed mainly G6PD A(-) (c.202G>A, c.376A>G; p.Val68Met, p.Asn126Asp), G6PD Mediterranean (Med) (c.563C>T, p.Ser188Phe), and G6PD Betica (c.376A>G, 542A>T; p.126Asn>Asp, 181Asp>Val) with addition of a few rare ones. A number of 10 abnormalities amounted to 92% of all the molecular defects. In addition, seven new mutations were found: three presented with acute hemolytic anemia following oxidative stress [G6PD Nice (c.1380G>C, p.Glu460Asp), G6PD Roubaix (c.811G>C, p.Val271Leu), and G6PD Toledo (c.496C>T, p.Arg166Cys)], three with different degrees of chronic hemolytic anemia [G6PD Lille (c.821A>T, p.Glu274Val), G6PD Villeurbanne (c.1000_1002delACC, p.Thr334del), and G6PD Amiens (c.1367A>T, p.Asp456Val)] and one found fortuitously G6PD Montpellier (c.1132G>A, p.Gly378Ser).

Childhood Langerhans cell histiocytosis hematological involvement: severity associated with <i>BRAF</i> <i>V600E</i> loads
Cited by 9Open Access

ABSTRACT: Hematological involvement (HI) is one of the life-threatening risk organs (ROs) in Langerhans cell histiocytosis (LCH). Lahey criteria have defined HI since 1975 as hemoglobin <10 g/dL, platelets <100 × 109/L, leukopenia (white blood cell count <4 × 109/L), and/or neutrophils <1.5 × 109/L. Among the 2313 patients aged <18 years enrolled in the French National Histiocytosis Registry (1983-2023), 331 developed HI (median age at diagnosis, 1 year); median follow-up lasted 8.1 years. Bone marrow aspirate smears and biopsies may show reactive histiocytes, hemophagocytosis, or myelofibrosis but never confirm the diagnosis. Fifty-eight patients (17%) developed macrophage-activation syndrome, sometimes related to acute Epstein-Barr virus or cytomegalovirus infection, sometimes months before typical LCH manifestations appeared. Hemoglobin and platelet thresholds for initiating transfusion(s) appear to accurately distinguish 2 groups: mild HI (MHI; >7 g/dL and >20 × 109/L, respectively) and severe HI (SHI; ≤7 g/dL and/or ≤20 × 109/L). Each entity has different organ involvements, laboratory parameters, mutational status, blood BRAFV600E loads, drug sensitivities, and outcomes (MHI and SHI 10-year survival rates, 98% and 73%, respectively). Since 1998, mortality first declined with combination cladribine-cytarabine therapy and then with MAPK inhibitors since 2014. Forty-one patients (12%) developed neurodegenerative complications that have emerged as a risk for long-term survivors. These results suggest limiting the HI-RO definition to SHI, because it encompasses almost all medical complications of LCH. Future clinical trials might demonstrate that targeted therapy approaches would be better adapted for these patients, whereas MHI can be managed with classic therapies.

Analysis of infectious complications in paediatric autoimmune neutropenia: a French nationwide retrospective cohort study
Robin Dhersin, Estelle Trebucq, Marie Rimbert et al.|Archives of Disease in Childhood|2026
Cited by 2Open Access

BACKGROUND: Autoimmune neutropenia (AIN) is the main cause of chronic neutropenia in children, but its infectious consequences remain poorly studied. The primary objective of this study was to evaluate infectious events leading to emergency department or hospital admissions during the first 2 years following the diagnosis of AIN in children. METHODS: We performed a retrospective, multicentre analysis of medical records from 21 French university hospitals of patients aged under 18 years diagnosed with AIN with positive antineutrophils autoantibodies. We collected data on emergency room visits and hospitalisations in the 2 years following diagnosis, causes of these events, microbiology results, management and outcome. RESULTS: One hundred and sixty-eight patients were enrolled. Median age at diagnosis of AIN was 13 months. AIN was predominantly diagnosed during an infectious episode (n=120, 71%). In the 2 years of follow-up after diagnosis, 248 events of emergency room visits and/or hospitalisations were reported (0.77 per patient-year). The most frequent diagnoses were common childhood viral or bacterial infections. The incidence rate of severe infections was 0.003 per patient-year. Despite the predominance of viral infections, 177 episodes (71%) led to hospitalisation and 166 (68%) to the initiation of antibiotic therapy, for a median duration of 7 days (IQR 3-10). CONCLUSION: The risk of severe infections in children with AIN is low. During follow-up, we suggest being attentive to signs of severity during fever, particularly in children over 3 years of age and/or with other immunological comorbidities but not proposing systematic hospitalisation or additional antibiotic therapy.