Institution
French Institute of Health and Medical Research
Government•Paris, France•
About: French Institute of Health and Medical Research is a government organization based out in Paris, France. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Receptor. The organization has 109367 authors who have published 174236 publications receiving 8365503 citations.
Topics: Population, Receptor, Gene, Immune system, Antigen
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: A multinational case-control study conducted in Europe between 1997 and 2001 evaluated the risk of medications to induce SCAR, finding that many cases were still related to a few "old" drugs with a known high risk, and risk was restricted to the first few weeks of drug intake.
843 citations
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TL;DR: In vitro culture of bone marrow cells in the presence of IL-10 induces the differentiation of a distinct subset of dendritic cells with a specific expression of CD45RB, identifying a natural DC subset that induces the differentiate of Tr1 cells in vitro and in vivo.
842 citations
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TL;DR: This work proposes nonparametric inverse probability of censoring weighting estimators of the AUC corresponding to these two definitions of the specificity, and studies their asymptotic properties.
Abstract: The area under the time-dependent ROC curve (AUC) may be used to quantify the ability of a marker to predict the onset of a clinical outcome in the future. For survival analysis with competing risks, two alternative definitions of the specificity may be proposed depending of the way to deal with subjects who undergo the competing events. In this work, we propose nonparametric inverse probability of censoring weighting estimators of the AUC corresponding to these two definitions, and we study their asymptotic properties. We derive confidence intervals and test statistics for the equality of the AUCs obtained with two markers measured on the same subjects. A simulation study is performed to investigate the finite sample behaviour of the test and the confidence intervals. The method is applied to the French cohort PAQUID to compare the abilities of two psychometric tests to predict dementia onset in the elderly accounting for death without dementia competing risk. The 'timeROC' R package is provided to make the methodology easily usable.
842 citations
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TL;DR: Bacteria use monomeric adhesins/invasins or highly sophisticated macromolecular machines to establish a complex host/pathogen molecular crosstalk that leads to subversion of cellular functions and establishment of disease.
840 citations
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TL;DR: Tau accumulation, probably the best histopathological correlate of the clinical symptoms, takes three aspects: in the cell body of the neuron as neurofibrillary tangle, in the dendrites as neuropil threads, and in the axons forming the senile plaque neuritic corona.
Abstract: The lesions of Alzheimer disease include accumulation of proteins, losses of neurons and synapses, and alterations related to reactive processes. Extracellular Aβ accumulation occurs in the parenchyma as diffuse, focal or stellate deposits. It may involve the vessel walls of arteries, veins and capillaries. The cases in which the capillary vessel walls are affected have a higher probability of having one or two apoe 4 alleles. Parenchymal as well as vascular Aβ deposition follows a stepwise progression. Tau accumulation, probably the best histopathological correlate of the clinical symptoms, takes three aspects: in the cell body of the neuron as neurofibrillary tangle, in the dendrites as neuropil threads, and in the axons forming the senile plaque neuritic corona. The progression of tau pathology is stepwise and stereotyped from the entorhinal cortex, through the hippocampus, to the isocortex. The neuronal loss is heterogeneous and area-specific. Its mechanism is still discussed. The timing of the synaptic loss, probably linked to Aβ peptide itself, maybe as oligomers, is also controversial. Various clinico-pathological types of Alzheimer disease have been described, according to the type of the lesions (plaque only and tangle predominant), the type of onset (focal onset), the cause (genetic or sporadic) and the associated lesions (Lewy bodies, vascular lesions, hippocampal sclerosis, TDP-43 inclusions and argyrophilic grain disease).
839 citations
Authors
Showing all 109539 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Guido Kroemer | 236 | 1404 | 246571 |
Pierre Chambon | 211 | 884 | 161565 |
Peer Bork | 206 | 697 | 245427 |
Ronald M. Evans | 199 | 708 | 166722 |
Raymond J. Dolan | 196 | 919 | 138540 |
Matthew Meyerson | 194 | 553 | 243726 |
Charles A. Dinarello | 190 | 1058 | 139668 |
Julie E. Buring | 186 | 950 | 132967 |
Tadamitsu Kishimoto | 181 | 1067 | 130860 |
Didier Raoult | 173 | 3267 | 153016 |
Giuseppe Remuzzi | 172 | 1226 | 160440 |
Zena Werb | 168 | 473 | 122629 |
Nahum Sonenberg | 167 | 647 | 104053 |
Philippe Froguel | 166 | 820 | 118816 |
Gordon J. Freeman | 164 | 579 | 105193 |