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Dive into the research topics where Caroline Salon is active.

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Featured researches published by Caroline Salon.


PLOS ONE | 2011

MicroRNA and Target Protein Patterns Reveal Physiopathological Features of Glioma Subtypes

Elodie Lages; Audrey Guttin; Michèle El Atifi; Claire Ramus; Hélène Ipas; Isabelle Dupré; Delphine Rolland; Caroline Salon; Catherine Godfraind; Florence deFraipont; Mehdi Dhobb; Laurent Pelletier; Didier Wion; François Berger; Jean-Paul Issartel

Gliomas such as oligodendrogliomas (ODG) and glioblastomas (GBM) are brain tumours with different clinical outcomes. Histology-based classification of these tumour types is often difficult. Therefore the first aim of this study was to gain microRNA data that can be used as reliable signatures of oligodendrogliomas and glioblastomas. We investigated the levels of 282 microRNAs using membrane-array hybridisation and real-time PCR in ODG, GBM and control brain tissues. In comparison to these control tissues, 26 deregulated microRNAs were identified in tumours and the tissue levels of seven microRNAs (miR-21, miR-128, miR-132, miR-134, miR-155, miR-210 and miR-409-5p) appropriately discriminated oligodendrogliomas from glioblastomas. Genomic, epigenomic and host gene expression studies were conducted to investigate the mechanisms involved in these deregulations. Another aim of this study was to better understand glioma physiopathology looking for targets of deregulated microRNAs. We discovered that some targets of these microRNAs such as STAT3, PTBP1 or SIRT1 are differentially expressed in gliomas consistent with deregulation of microRNA expression. Moreover, MDH1, the target of several deregulated microRNAs, is repressed in glioblastomas, making an intramitochondrial-NAD reduction mediated by the mitochondrial aspartate-malate shuttle unlikely. Understanding the connections between microRNAs and bioenergetic pathways in gliomas may lead to identification of novel therapeutic targets.


NeuroImage | 2010

Impaired fMRI Activation in Patients with Primary Brain Tumors

Zhen Jiang; A. Krainik; Olivier David; Caroline Salon; Irène Troprès; Dominique Hoffmann; Nicolas Pannetier; Emmanuel L. Barbier; Eduardo Ramos Bombìn; Jan Warnking; C Pasteris; Stefan Chabardes; François Berger; Sylvie Grand; Christoph Segebarth; Jean-François Le Bas

To characterize peritumoral BOLD contrast disorders, 25 patients referred for resection of primary frontal or parietal neoplasms (low-grade glioma (LGG) (n=8); high-grade glioma (HGG) (n=7); meningioma (n=10)) without macroscopic tumoral infiltration of the primary sensorimotor cortex (SM1) were examined preoperatively using BOLD fMRI during simple motor tasks. Overall cerebral BOLD signal was estimated using vasoreactivity to carbogen inhalation. Using bolus of gadolinium, cerebral blood flow (CBF), cerebral blood volume (CBV), and mean transit time (MTT) were estimated. In a 1cm(3) region-of-interest centered on maximal T-value in SM1 contralateral to movements, interhemispheric asymmetry was evaluated using interhemispheric ratios for BOLD and perfusion parameters. During motor tasks contralateral to the tumor, ipsitumoral sensorimotor activations were decreased in HGG and meningiomas, correlated to the distance between the tumor and SM1. Whereas CBV was decreased in ipsitumoral SM1 for HGG, it remained normal in meningiomas. Changes in basal perfusion could not explain motor activation impairment in SM1. Decreased interhemispheric ratio of the BOLD response to carbogen was the best predictor to model the asymmetry of motor activation (R=0.51). Moreover, 94.9+/-4.9% of all motor activations overlapped significant BOLD response to carbogen inhalation.


Pediatric Neurology | 2009

Primary Intracranial Extra-Axial and Supratentorial Atypical Rhabdoid Tumor

Fabrice Bing; Frédérique Nugues; Sylvie Grand; P Bessou; Caroline Salon

An atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumor of the central nervous system is an aggressive infantile embryonal neoplasm, usually presenting as an infratentorial and intraparenchymatous lesion. We report on magnetic resonance imaging findings of a 22-month-old boy with a biopsy-proven primary rhabdoid tumor, presenting as a single intracranial supratentorial extra-axial mass. Based on the patients age and imaging features (perfusion, diffusion magnetic resonance imaging, and magnetic resonance spectroscopy), a diagnosis of atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumor was more accurate than diagnoses of meningioma and primitive neuroectodermal tumor. Although this entity is relatively rare, it should be considered in the differential diagnosis of dural-based, space-occupying central nervous system lesions.


Journal of Neuroradiology | 2011

Prognostic value of perfusion MR imaging in patients with oligodendroglioma: A survival study

Z. Jiang; J.F. Le Bas; Sylvie Grand; Caroline Salon; C Pasteris; D. Hoffmann; F. Bing; François Berger; S. Chabardes; C. Liu; A. Krainik

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to evaluate retrospectively whether cerebral blood volume measurement based on pretreatment perfusion MRI is a prognostic biomarker for survival in patients with oligodendroglioma or mixed oligoastrocytoma. PATIENTS AND METHODS Between 1998 and 2004, 54 patients (23 females and 31 males), aged 21-73 years, with oligodendroglioma (or mixed tumour) were examined prior to beginning treatment with dynamic susceptibility-weighted contrast (DSC) perfusion MRI during gadolinium first-pass. The relative cerebral blood volume (rCBV) was calculated by dividing the measurement within the tumour by the measurement of the normal-appearing contralateral region. Patients were classified in two groups, grade A and grade B, according to the Saint-Anne Hospital classification and followed-up clinically and by means of MRI until their death or for a minimum of 5 years. Patients were also classified in grade II and grade III-IV, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO) classification, and were analysed with the same methods. Age, sex, treatment, tumour grade, contrast agent uptake, and rCBV were tested using survival curves with Kaplan-Meiers method, and their differences were analysed using the log-rank test. RESULTS In this population, median survival was 3 years. A rCBV threshold value of 2.2 was validated as a prognostic factor, for survival in these patients with oligodendrogliomas. Age, sex, contrast uptake, and maximum rCBV were found to be prognostic factors in univariate analysis. Multivariate analysis revealed that tumour grade (grade A/grade B), rCBV, age, and sex were prognostic factors independent of the other factors. The tumour grade according to the WHO classification (II versus III-IV) was also detected as an independent prognostic factor. CONCLUSION Pretreatment rCBV measured by DSC perfusion MRI was found to be a prognostic factor for survival in patients with oligodendroglioma or mixed tumour, by using the Saint-Anne Hospital classification, which separate the IIB from the IIA.


Journal of Neuroscience Methods | 2014

Imaging and histological characterization of a human brain xenograft in pig: The first induced glioma model in a large animal

Laurent Selek; Eric Seigneuret; Guillaume Nugue; Didier Wion; Caroline Salon; Marie José Seurin; Claude Carozzo; Frédérique Ponce; Thierry Roger; François Berger

The prognosis of glioblastoma remains poor despite significant improvement in cytoreductive surgery, external irradiation and new approach of systemic treatment as antiangiogenic therapy. One of the issues is the low concentration in the infiltrated parenchyma of therapeutic agent administered intravenously mainly due to the blood-brain barrier. An intracerebral injection is advocated to overpass this barrier, this kind of administration need a low flow and continuous injection. The development of sophisticated implanted devices for convection-enhanced delivery is a mandatory step to have a controlled released of a therapeutic agent in glioblastoma treatment. Before testing such a device in a clinical trial a serious preclinical studies are required, in order to test it in realistic conditions we have develop the first induced high grade glioma model in a non-rodent animal: the pig. 21 pigs have been implanted in the parietal lobe with human glioblastoma cell lineage under a chemical immunosuppression by ciclosporine. A MRI follow up was then realized. 15 pigs have been implanted with U87MG, 14 have presented a macroscopic significant tumor, with radiological and anatomapathological characteristics of high grade glioma. 6 pigs were implanted with G6, stem-like cells tumors of glioblastoma, 1 pig develops a macroscopic tumor. This is the first reproducible glioma model in a large animal described, it open the way to preclinical studies to test implanted devices in anatomic realistic conditions, without the ethical issues of a primate use.


International Journal of Oncology | 2011

The heterogeneity of meningioma revealed by multiparameter analysis: infiltrative and non-infiltrative clinical phenotypes

Elodie Lages; Claire Ramus; Audrey Guttin; Michèle El Atifi; Isabelle Dupré; Ali Bouamrani; Caroline Salon; David Ratel; Didier Wion; François Berger; Jean-Paul Issartel

Tumor invasion or infiltration of adjacent tissues is the source of clinical challenges in diagnosis as well as prevention and treatment. Among brain tumors, infiltration of the adjacent tissues with diverse pleiotropic mechanisms is frequently encountered in benign meningiomas. We assessed whether a multiparametric analysis of meningiomas based on data from both clinical observations and molecular analyses could provide a consistent and accurate appraisal of invasive and infiltrative phenotypes and help determine the diagnosis of these tumors. Tissue analyses of 37 meningiomas combined enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and surface-enhanced laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight (SELDI-TOF) assays of two different protein biomarkers (thrombospondin 1 and a phosphorylated form of vimentin) as well as gene expression analyses with oligonucleotide micro-arrays. Up to four different clinical and molecular parameters were then examined for tumor classification. From this study, we were able to cluster 36 out of the 37 tumors into two different subsets corresponding to infiltrative/invasive and non-infiltrative tumors. In addition, meningiomas that invade brain and those that infiltrate the neighboring skull bone exhibited no distinguishable molecular features. Our multi-parameter analysis that combines clinical data, transcriptomic and molecular assays clearly reveals the heterogeneity of meningiomas and distinguishes the intrinsically infiltrative/invasive tumors from the non-infiltrative meningiomas.


Journal De Radiologie | 2009

Pathologie tumorale des meninges intracraniennes

F. Bing; Caroline Salon; P Bessou; A. Krainik; J.F. Le Bas; S. Grand

Objectifs Connaitre les aspects en imagerie des differentes lesions meningiomateuses. Connaitre l’apport des nouvelles sequences en IRM dans l’exploration d’une masse tumorale meningee. Connaitre les principaux diagnostics des lesions arachnoido-durales diffuses et arachnoido-piales. Messages a retenir Le meningiome presente divers sous-types anato-mopathologiques expliquant ses differences de comportement en IRM. Le meningiome peut etre agressif par son grade histologique et par sa capacite a envahir les tissus adjacents (structures vasculaires, extension foraminale...). La carcinomatose leptomeningee correspond a une dissemination arach-noido-piale des cellules tumorales. Elle est a distinguer des autres atteintes arachnoido-piales et des lesions diffuses arachnoido-durales, dominees par l’hypertension intracrânienne. Resume La pathologie tumorale meningee est largement dominee par le meningiome, dont le comportement en IRM est fonction du sous-type anatomopathologique. L’IRM a pour but de rechercher des signes d’agressivite ou un envahissement local. Les lesions pseudo-meningiomateuses sont rares, parfois non differenciables d’un meningiome. Les techniques de diffusion, perfusion et spectrometrie permettent de proposer des diagnostics differentiels. La carcinose leptomeningee peut etre primitive (melanose) ou secondaire. Les cellules tumorales peuvent egalement envahir les pachymeninges par une dissemination hematogene ou a partir d’une tumeur de la base du crâne qu’il faut rechercher. La localisation, le type de rehaussement et la semiologie IRM permettent de proposer des diagnostics differentiels.


Journal of Neuro-oncology | 2013

Hypoxia-induced expression of VE-cadherin and filamin B in glioma cell cultures and pseudopalisade structures

Marie-France Nissou; Michèle El Atifi; Audrey Guttin; Catherine Godfraind; Caroline Salon; Emmanuel Garcion; Boudewijn van der Sanden; Jean-Paul Issartel; François Berger; Didier Wion


Bulletin Du Cancer | 2010

10: Valeur pronostique de l’imagerie IRM de perfusion chez des patients porteurs d’oligodendrogliomes: étude de survie

Jiang Zhen; Jean-François Le Bas; Sylvie Grand; Caroline Salon; C Pasteris; François Berger; Stephan Chabardes; Chantal Rémy; Alexandre Krainik


/data/revues/02210363/v90i10/S0221036309749753/ | 2010

Lesions kystiques et lesions a composante kystique intracraniennes

F. Bing; Caroline Salon; P Bessou; S. Grand; J F Le Bas; A. Krainik

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C Pasteris

Joseph Fourier University

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F. Bing

Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Grenoble

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P Bessou

Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Grenoble

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Audrey Guttin

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

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Jean-Paul Issartel

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Michèle El Atifi

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

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S. Grand

Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Grenoble

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Catherine Godfraind

Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc

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Ali Bouamrani

Joseph Fourier University

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