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  1. Article: Combination of the fetal urinary metabolome and peptidome for the prediction of postnatal renal outcome in fetuses with PUV

    Buffin-Meyer, Bénédicte / Benjamin Breuil / Françoise Muller / Jean-Loup Bascands / Joost P. Schanstra / Julie Klein / Marion Groussolles / Ourdia Bouali / Panagiotis Moulos / Stéphane Decramer

    Journal of proteomics. 2018 July 30, v. 184

    2018  

    Abstract: Most of biomarker panels, extracted from single omics traits, still need improvement since they display a gray zone where prediction is uncertain. Here we verified whether a combination of omics traits, fetal urinary metabolites and peptides analyzed in ... ...

    Abstract Most of biomarker panels, extracted from single omics traits, still need improvement since they display a gray zone where prediction is uncertain. Here we verified whether a combination of omics traits, fetal urinary metabolites and peptides analyzed in the same sample, improved prediction of postnatal renal function in fetuses with posterior urethral valves (PUV) compared to individual omics traits.Using CE-MS, we explored the urinary metabolome of 13 PUV fetuses with end stage renal disease (ESRD) and 12 PUV fetuses without postnatal ESRD at 2 years postnatally. This allowed the selection of 24 differentially abundant metabolite features which were modelled into predictive classifiers, alone or in combination with 12 peptides previously identified as predictive of ESRD. Validation in 35 new fetuses showed that the combination of peptides and metabolites significantly outperformed the 24 metabolite features with increased AUC (0.987 vs 0.905), net reclassification improvement (36%) and better sensitivity accuracy (86% vs 60%). In addition, the two trait combination tended to improve, but without reaching statistical significance, the already high performances of the 12 peptide biomarkers (AUC 0.967, accuracy 80%).In conclusion, this study demonstrates the potential of cumulating different omics traits in biomarker research where single omics traits fall short.Although increasingly proposed in disease-diagnosis and -prognosis because of their improved efficacy over single markers, panels of body fluid biomarkers based on single omics analysis still fail to display perfect accuracy, probably due to biological variability.Here, we hypothesized that combination of different omics traits allowed to better capture this biological variability. As proof of concept, we studied the added value of fetal urine metabolites and peptides using CE-MS, starting from the same urine sample, to predict postnatal renal outcome in fetuses with posterior urethral valves. We observed that the prognostic power of combined metabolite and peptide markers was clearly higher than that of metabolites alone and slightly, but non-significantly, improved compared to the peptides alone. To our knowledge, this report is the first to demonstrate that combining multiomics traits extracted from (fetal) urine samples displays clear promise for kidney disease stratification.
    Keywords biomarkers ; body fluids ; capillary electrophoresis ; disease diagnosis ; fetus ; kidney diseases ; mass spectrometry ; metabolites ; metabolome ; peptides ; prediction ; renal function ; taxonomic revisions ; urine
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2018-0730
    Size p. 1-9.
    Publishing place Elsevier B.V.
    Document type Article
    ZDB-ID 2400835-7
    ISSN 1876-7737 ; 1874-3919
    ISSN (online) 1876-7737
    ISSN 1874-3919
    DOI 10.1016/j.jprot.2018.06.012
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  2. Article ; Online: Human Cytomegalovirus Infection Changes the Pattern of Surface Markers of Small Extracellular Vesicles Isolated From First Trimester Placental Long-Term Histocultures

    Mathilde Bergamelli / Hélène Martin / Mélinda Bénard / Jérôme Ausseil / Jean-Michel Mansuy / Ilse Hurbain / Maïlys Mouysset / Marion Groussolles / Géraldine Cartron / Yann Tanguy le Gac / Nathalie Moinard / Elsa Suberbielle / Jacques Izopet / Charlotte Tscherning / Graça Raposo / Daniel Gonzalez-Dunia / Gisela D’Angelo / Cécile E. Malnou

    Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology, Vol

    2021  Volume 9

    Abstract: Extracellular vesicles (EVs) have increasingly been recognized as key players in a wide variety of physiological and pathological contexts, including during pregnancy. Notably, EVs appear both as possible biomarkers and as mediators involved in the ... ...

    Abstract Extracellular vesicles (EVs) have increasingly been recognized as key players in a wide variety of physiological and pathological contexts, including during pregnancy. Notably, EVs appear both as possible biomarkers and as mediators involved in the communication of the placenta with the maternal and fetal sides. A better understanding of the physiological and pathological roles of EVs strongly depends on the development of adequate and reliable study models, specifically at the beginning of pregnancy where many adverse pregnancy outcomes have their origin. In this study, we describe the isolation of small EVs from a histoculture model of first trimester placental explants in normal conditions as well as upon infection by human cytomegalovirus. Using bead-based multiplex cytometry and electron microscopy combined with biochemical approaches, we characterized these small EVs and defined their associated markers and ultrastructure. We observed that infection led to changes in the expression level of several surface markers, without affecting the secretion and integrity of small EVs. Our findings lay the foundation for studying the functional role of EVs during early pregnancy, along with the identification of new predictive biomarkers for the severity and outcome of this congenital infection, which are still sorely lacking.
    Keywords early placenta ; extracellular vesicles ; congenital infection ; human cytomegalovirus ; placental histoculture ; Biology (General) ; QH301-705.5
    Subject code 570
    Language English
    Publishing date 2021-09-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  3. Article ; Online: Women and health professionals’ perspectives on a conditional cash transfer programme to improve pregnancy follow-up

    Celine Chauleur / Jacob Hannigsberg / Philippe Merviel / Marc Bardou / Franck Perrotin / Thomas Schmitz / Olivier Picone / Jeanne Sibiude / Karine Chemin / Dominique Dallay / Frédéric Coatleven / Loïc Sentilhes / Céline Brochot / Astrid Eckman-Lacroix / Elise Thellier / Frédérique Falchier / Philippe Deruelle / Muriel Doret / Xavier Carcopino-Tusoli /
    Nicolas Meunier-Beillard / Hervé Fernandez / Vincent Villefranque / Caroline Diguisto / Damien Subtil / Clémence Houssin / Philippe Gillard / Laurent Mandelbrot / Aurelie Godard-Marceau / Nathalie Lesavre / Claude Virtos / Elodie Debras / Aude Bourtembourg / Claire Toubin / Danièle Addes / Véronique Uguen / Cleo Tourbot / Caroline Lelievre / Christophe Tremouilhac / Anne-Hélène Saliou / Aurelie Derrieu / Stephanie Auget / Anne Legourrierec / Anne Leroux / Julie Fort-Jacquier / Marion Serclerat / Nathalie Laurenceau / Audrey Renouleau / Eliane Catteau / Julie Blanc / Candice Ronin / Laurence Piechon / Séverine Puppo / Fanny Greco / Sandrine Pettazzoni / Muriel Athlani / Amina Desvignes / Annie Petiteau / Amina El Yaakoubi / Valérie Bechadergue / Valérie Vaugirard / Marie-Emmanuelle Neveu / Caroline Geyl / Marie-Victoire Senat / Claire Colmant / Marie Houllier / Myriam Virlouet / Marion Mir / Yasmina Bejaoui / Hélène Le Cornu / Lauriane Nikel / Elodie Gustave / Amandine Stadler / Ahmad Mehdi / Tiphaine Barjat / Suzanne Lima / Thomas Corsini / Anne Genod / Charlotte Vermesch / Cécile Fanget / Marianne Perrot / Manuela Munoz / Sylvie Pitaval / Fanny Magand / Françoise Baldi / Stephanie Bret / Anne-Lise Verdier / Christelle Denis / Carine Arlicot / Jérôme Potin / Stéphanie Chretien / Julie Paternotte / Nathalie Trignol / Élisabeth Blin / Camille Mathieu / Anne Dubreuil / Anne Viallon Pelletier / Catherine Guerin / Chloé Arthuis / Christophe Vayssieres / Olivier Parant / Marion Groussolles / Maria Denis / M Mathieu Morin / Marie-Thérèse Bavoux / Juliette Pelloux / Anne-Claire Jambon / Madeleine Santraine / Veronique Lebuffe / Pascale Broux / Thierry Dzukou / Magloire Gnansounou / Didier Hubert / Claire Djazet / Ludivine Destoop / Marine Derue / Pierrick Theret / Dominique Delzenne / Stéphanie Daussin / Alice Fraissinet / Mélanie Vannerum / Cyril Faraguet / Laurence Landais / Mariana Radu / Anne Rouget / Sena Al Sudani / Bernard Guillon / Estelle Wucher / Véronique Selva / Sandrine Reviron / Francis Schwetterlé / Cécile Chassande / Véronique Grandin / Eliane Krtoliza / Patrick Becher / Marie Sarrau / Claire Lecoq / Elsa Lutringer / Denis Roux / Noémie Berge / Clémentine Barbier / Anne Heron / Audrey Farina-Bracquart / Marie-Paule Curtet / Evelyne Lefebure / Marie-Hélène Le Douarin / Hassan Al Rayes / Émilie Magne / Nathalie Destampes / Émilie Ricard / Pascale Ghezzi / Catherine Guillen / Fanny Alazard / Marie-Thé Campanaro / Florence Mojard / Magalie David-Reynard / Patricia Fuma / Remy De Montgolfier / Capucine Neel / Guillaume Legendre / Isabelle Andre / Sylvie Nordstrom / Brigitte Guionnet / Catherine Crenn Hebert / Chloé Dussaux / Karine Achaintre / Anne Wagner / Martine Werveake / Eloïse De Gouville / George Theresin / Marie Pierre Couetoux / Lydia Caillaud / Marie-Pierre Fernandez / Sabrina Bottet / M Alain Almodovar / Elisa Etienne / Véronique Guiteras / Angélique Torres / N. Roche / Myriam Nassef / Christine Abel-Faure / Marie Louvet / Carole Ettori / Guillaume Ducarme / Valérie Bonnenfant-Mezeray / Laurence Szezot-Renaudeau / Marie-Pierre Berte / Elodie Netier-Herault / Stéphanie Manson-Gallone / Franck Mauviel / Nathalie Agostini / Marine Mazeaud / Jean-Claude Dausset / Isabelle De Murcia / Emilie Alliot / Anne-Marie Bes / Magali Biferi Magali / Hélène Heckenroth / Sophie Morange / Gersende Chiuot / Audrey Gnisci / Annie Allegre / Laetitia Lecq / Eva Balenbois / Claire Tourette / Aude Figarella / Dio Andriamanjay / Pauline Vignoles / Catherine Cazelles / Véronique Lejeune Saada / Benafsheh Kashani / Isabelle Chevalier / Muriel Terrieres / Audrey Cointement / Valérie Benhaïm / Najat Lindoune / Anne-Sophie Maisonneuve / M Frédéric Daubercy / Guilia Mencattini / Vanessa Combaud / Isabelle Moya / Xavier-Côme Donato / Raoul Desbriere / Marie Lafon / Véronique Baudet

    BMJ Open, Vol 13, Iss

    a qualitative analysis of the NAITRE randomised controlled study

    2023  Volume 3

    Abstract: Objectives Women of low socioeconomic status have been described as having suboptimal prenatal care, which in turn has been associated with poor pregnancy outcomes. Many types of conditional cash transfer (CCT) programmes have been developed, including ... ...

    Abstract Objectives Women of low socioeconomic status have been described as having suboptimal prenatal care, which in turn has been associated with poor pregnancy outcomes. Many types of conditional cash transfer (CCT) programmes have been developed, including programmes to improve prenatal care or smoking cessation during pregnancy, and their effects demonstrated. However, ethical critiques have included paternalism and lack of informed choice. Our objective was to determine if women and healthcare professionals (HPs) shared these concerns.Design Prospective qualitative research.Setting We included economically disadvantaged women, as defined by health insurance data, who participated in the French NAITRE randomised trial assessing a CCT programme during prenatal follow-up to improve pregnancy outcomes. The HP worked in some maternities participating in this trial.Participants 26 women, 14 who received CCT and 12 who did not, mostly unemployed (20/26), and - 7 HPs.Interventions We conducted a multicentre cross-sectional qualitative study among women and HPs who participated in the NAITRE Study to assess their views on CCT. The women were interviewed after childbirth.Results Women did not perceive CCT negatively. They did not mention feeling stigmatised. They described CCT as a significant source of aid for women with limited financial resources. HP described the CCT in less positive terms, for example, expressing concern about discussing cash transfer at their first medical consultation with women. Though they emphasised ethical concerns about the basis of the trial, they recognised the importance of evaluating CCT.Conclusions In France, a high-income country where prenatal follow-up is free, HPs were concerned that the CCT programme would change their relationship with patients and wondered if it was the best use of funding. However, women who received a cash incentive said they did not feel stigmatised and indicated that these payments helped them prepare for their baby’s birth.Trial registration number NCT02402855
    Keywords Medicine ; R
    Subject code 300
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-03-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher BMJ Publishing Group
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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