Anne was trained as a statistician and epidemiologist: MS (ENSAI, French National School of Statistics and Information Analysis), MPH and PhD (Paris Sud University, Le Kremlin-Bicêtre Medical School). After undergraduate training at Institut Gustave Roussy (Villejuif) and postdoctoral training at the US National Institute of Cancer (National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD), she joined a research unit in pharmacoepidemiology at Inserm (French National Institute for Health and Medical Research) in October 2007 and got tenured as a full-time researcher in October 2009. The research unit is now entitled "Biostatistics, Biomathematics, Pharmacoepidemiology and Infectious Diseases" (UMR1181) and is located at Institut Pasteur, Paris, and University of Versailles-Saint Quentin, Montigny-le-Bretonneux.
After focusing on methodological developments for time-to-event analysis and exposure measurement error in the field of cancer prevention and nutritional epidemiology, Anne's research interests now extend to modelling drug exposure and its impact over time, in terms of hazard function and attributable risk, with a view to improving quantification of the role of antibiotics in resistance acquisition.