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Dive into the research topics where Christian Sainte-Rose is active.

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Featured researches published by Christian Sainte-Rose.


Pediatric Neurosurgery | 2000

Long-Term Follow-Up Data from the Shunt Design Trial

John R. W. Kestle; James M. Drake; Ruth Milner; Christian Sainte-Rose; G. Cinalli; Frederick A. Boop; Joseph H. Piatt; Stephen J. Haines; Steven J. Schiff; D. Douglas Cochrane; Paul Steinbok; N. MacNeil

Background: A previously reported multicenter randomized trial assessed whether 2 new shunt valve designs would reduce shunt failure rates compared to differential pressure valves. The study did not show a significant difference in the time to first shunt failure. Patients entered the trial between October 1, 1993, and October 31, 1995. The primary results were based on the patients’ status as of October 31, 1996 (a minimum follow-up of 1 year). This report describes the late complications based on the patients’ most recent follow-up. Methods: Three hundred and forty-four hydrocephalic children at 12 North American and European centers were randomized to 1 of 3 valves: a standard differential pressure valve; a Delta valve (PS Medical-Medtronic) or a Sigma valve (NMT Cordis). Patients were followed until their first shunt failure. Shunt failure was defined as shunt surgery for obstruction, overdrainage, loculation or infection. If the shunt did not fail, follow-up was continued until August 31, 1999. Results: One hundred and seventy-seven patients had shunt failure. Shunt obstruction occurred in 131, overdrainage in 13, loculated ventricles in 2 and infection in 29. The overall shunt survival was 62% at 1 year, 52% at 2 years, 46% at 3 years, 41% at 4 years. The survival curves for the 3 valves were similar to those from the original trial and did not show a survival advantage for any particular valve. Conclusions: Prolonged follow-up to date does not alter the primary conclusions of the trial: there does not appear to be one valve that is clearly the best for the initial treatment of pediatric hydrocephalus.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1999

Long-term intellectual outcome in children with posterior fossa tumors according to radiation doses and volumes

Jacques Grill; Virginie Kieffer Renaux; Christine Bulteau; Delphine Viguier; Christine Levy-Piebois; Christian Sainte-Rose; Georges Dellatolas; Marie-Anne Raquin; Isabelle Jambaqué; Chantal Kalifa

PURPOSE To analyze the relationship between craniospinal irradiation (CSI) and intellectual outcome in children with posterior fossa (PF) tumors. METHODS AND MATERIALS A neuropsychological evaluation was performed retrospectively in 31 children, aged 5-15 years, who had received radiotherapy for PF tumors, and who had been off therapy for at least 1 year. Factors evaluated for impact on intellectual outcome were: socioeconomic status, disease presentation, histology, complications, chemotherapy, age at radiotherapy, interval between radiotherapy and testing, and radiation doses and volumes. Patients were divided into 3 subgroups according to the CSI doses (0 Gy [i.e., PF irradiation only], 25 Gy, and 35 Gy), with 11, 11, and 9 patients, respectively. RESULTS Long-term cognitive impairment occurred in most of the patients, even after PF irradiation only. Moreover, there was a significant correlation between the full-scale IQ score (FSIQ) and the CSI dose, with mean FSIQ scores at 84.5 (SD = 14.0), 76.9 (SD = 16.6), and 63.7 (SD = 15.4) for 0 Gy, 25 Gy, and 35 Gy of CS1, respectively. A marked drop in verbal comprehension scores was noted in children who had received the higher dose. CONCLUSION This preliminary study further supports the rationale for de-escalation of CSI doses and volumes in standard-risk PF tumors.


Childs Nervous System | 1997

Congenital lumbosacral lipomas

Alain Pierre-Kahn; Michel Zerah; Dominique Renier; Giuseppe Cinalli; Christian Sainte-Rose; Arielle Lellouch-Tubiana; Francis Brunelle; Martine Le Merrer; Y. Giudicelli; Jacques Pichon; Bernard Kleinknecht; Francois Nataf

Abstract Congenital lumbosacral lipomas can be responsible for progressive defects. The general feeling is that tethering of roots, filum, or cord probably explains this evolution, and that untethering of these structures could prevent late deterioration. Like the vast majority of neurosurgeons, we too have routinely and systematically operated on lumbosacral lipomas, even in the absence of neurological deficits. This policy stemmed from our belief that spontaneous neurological deterioration was frequent, recovery from preoperative deficits rare, and surgery both efficient and benign in nature. After 22 years of experience, we felt that it was necessary to review our series of 291 lipomas (38 lipomas of the filum and 253 of the conus) operated on from 1972 to 1994. To reassess the value of pro-phylactic surgery, we attempted an accurate evaluation of (1) the risk of pathology, (2) the risks involved in surgery, (3) the postoperative outcome with respect to preoperative deficits, and (4) the postoperative outcome in asymptomatic patients at 1 year and at maximum follow-up. Special attention was paid to 93 patients whose postoperative follow-up was more than 5 years (average 8.7, median 8, range 5–23 years). Of these 93 patients, 39 were asymptomatic preoperatively (7 with lipoma of the filum and 32 with lipoma of the conus). Lipomas of the filum and of the conus are entirely different lesions and were studied separately. In 6 cases prenatal diagnosis had been possible. The mean age at surgery was 6.4 years. Low back skin stigmata were present in 89.4% of cases. Preoperative neurological deficits existed in 57% of the patients and were congenital in 22%. Clinical signs and symptoms recorded were pain in 13.3% of the patients and/or neurological deficits affecting sphincter (52%), motor (27.6%) and sensory (22.4%) functions. Deficits were progressive in 22.4% of cases, slowly progressive in 58.8% of these and rapidly progressive in the remaining 41.2%. In 36 patients (13.2%) the lipomas were seen to grow either subcutaneously or intraspinally. Among these patients, 21 were infants, 2 were obese adolescents, and 10 were pregnant women. The metabolism of the fat within the lipomas was studied in 11 patients and found to be similar to that at other sites. Lipomas were associated with various other malformations, either intra- or extraspinal. These associated anomalies were rare in the case of lipomatous filum (5.2%) but frequent with lipomas of the conus, except for intracranial malformations (3.6%). Therapeutic objectives were spinal cord untethering and decompression, sparing of functional neural tissue and prevention of retethering. Procedures used to achieve these goals were subtotal removal of the lipoma, intraoperative monitoring, duroplasty, and sometimes closure of the placode. Histologically, lipomas consisted of normal mature fat. However, 77% of them also included a wide variety of other tissues, originating from ectoderm, mesoderm, or entoderm. This indicates that lipomas are either simple or complex teratomas. The results of the study are as follows. (1) Surgery was easy and safe when performed for treatment of lipomas of the filum (no complications), but difficult and hazardous in the case of lipomas of the conus (20% local, 3.9% neurological complications). (2) All types of deficit could be improved by surgery, which was beneficial in all cases of lipoma of the filum and 50% of cases of lipoma of the conus. (3) In asymptomatic patients long-term surgical results depended on the anatomical type of the lipoma. They were excellent in lipomas of the filum. In lipomas of the conus they were good in the short term but eroded with time. At more than 5 years of follow-up only 53.1% of the patients were still free of symptoms. (4) Reoperations were performed in 16 patients (5.5%), 5 (31.2%) of whom improved postoperatively, while in 7 (43.7%) progression stopped, in 3 (18.7%) deterioration continued and in 1 (6.2%) the condition was worse after surgery. (5) The natural history of the malformation, that is to say the risk of spontaneous aggravation, has only been evaluated in hospital in-patients, so that the true level of risk remains unknown. This means we cannot interpret the actuarial curve following surgery for asymptomatic lipoma of the conus. In conclusion, there are two different types of lipoma: lipoma of the filum, for which surgery is harmless and beneficial in both the short and the long term, and lipoma of the conus, for which surgery involves considerable risks and is of questionable benefit in the long term. This raises the question as to whether prophylactic surgery is indicated for patients with asymptomatic lipomas of the conus, and whether the outcome is any better than it would be if the lipoma were left to take its natural course. The lack of basic information remains a stumbling block to management of these patients. Until this is remedied, we are unable to recommend prophylactic surgery in patients with asymptomatic lipomas of the conus.


Lancet Oncology | 2005

Treatment of medulloblastoma with postoperative chemotherapy alone: an SFOP prospective trial in young children.

Jacques Grill; Christian Sainte-Rose; Anne Jouvet; Jean-Claude Gentet; Odile Lejars; Didier Frappaz; François Doz; Xavier Rialland; Fabienne Pichon; Anne-Isabelle Bertozzi; Pascal Chastagner; Dominique Couanet; Jean-Louis Habrand; Marie-Anne Raquin; Marie-Cécile Le Deley; Chantal Kalifa

BACKGROUND Morbidity and mortality are high in young children with medulloblastoma who receive craniospinal radiotherapy. We aimed to assess whether adjuvant treatment with protracted chemotherapy alone could replace radiotherapy. METHODS We enrolled 79 children aged younger than 5 years who had had surgical resection of medulloblastoma onto a multicentre trial. Patients were treated with combination chemotherapy, which did not include methotrexate, for more than 16 months irrespective of the extent of disease. Early postoperative imaging defined three groups: R0M0 (no residual disease, no metastasis), R1M0 (radiological residual disease alone), and RXM+ (presence of metastases). Patients who did not relapse did not receive radiotherapy. Patients who relapsed or had disease progression received salvage treatment, which consisted of high-dose chemotherapy and stem-cell transplantation followed by local or craniospinal radiotherapy. For children classified as R0M0, the primary endpoint was 5-year overall survival and the secondary endpoint was 5-year progression-free survival. For children classified as R1M0 or RXM+, the primary endpoint was best radiological response and the secondary endpoints were 5-year overall survival and 5-year progression-free survival. Analyses were done by intention to treat. FINDINGS Two of 15 patients classified as RXM+ and four of 17 patients classified as R1M0 had a complete radiological response. 5-year progression-free survival was 29% (95% CI 18-44) in the R0M0 group, 6% (1-27) in the R1M0 group, and 13% (4-38) in the RXM+ group. 5-year overall survival was 73% (59-84) in the R0M0 group, 41% (22-64) in the R1M0 group, and 13% (4-38) in the RXM+ group. In the R0M0 group, 5-year progression-free survival was 41% (26-58) for the 34 patients who underwent gross total resection compared with 0% for the 13 patients who had subtotal resection (relative risk 2.7 [1.3-5.6], p=0.0065). INTERPRETATION Conventional chemotherapy alone can be used to cure children with non-metastatic medulloblastoma who have gross total resection confirmed by early radiological assessment, but is not sufficient for treatment of those with metastatic or incompletely resected medulloblastoma. Salvage treatment followed by posterior-fossa radiotherapy can effectively treat local relapses or progression.


Annals of Neurology | 1999

Radiation-induced cerebral vasculopathy in children with neurofibromatosis and optic pathway glioma.

Jacques Grill; Dominique Couanet; C. Cappelli; Jean-Louis Habrand; D. Rodriguez; Christian Sainte-Rose; Chantal Kalifa

Occlusive vasculopathy is a potential complication of radiotherapy in children with optic pathway glioma. With a median follow‐up of 7 years, 13 of 69 children in this study developed clinical and radiological signs of occlusive vasculopathy after radiotherapy within a median interval of 36 months. The major risk factor was neurofibromatosis type 1. Radiotherapy should no longer be the first treatment in these settings. When radiotherapy is unavoidable, regular screening for cerebral vasculopathy is mandatory, as preventive treatment is available. Ann Neurol 1999;45:393–396


Neurosurgery | 1998

The role of endoscopic third ventriculostomy in the management of shunt malfunction.

Giuseppe Cinalli; Cristian Salazar; Conor Mallucci; José Zanoni Yada; Michel Zerah; Christian Sainte-Rose

OBJECTIVE To evaluate the effectiveness of third ventriculostomy as an alternative to shunt revision in the management of shunt malfunction and infection in obstructive hydrocephalus. METHODS All of the clinical notes of 30 patients treated with third ventriculostomy for malfunctioning or infected shunts between January 1, 1974, and December 31, 1996, were retrospectively reviewed. Third ventriculostomy was performed under fluoroscopic control in the first seven patients and endoscopically in the remainder. A successful outcome was achieved if further shunt revision surgery was avoided. The median follow-up duration was 8.7 years RESULTS Twenty-three patients (76.7%) experienced successful outcomes, resulting in shunt independence. Of the seven failures, three were technical failures at the time of surgery and the remaining four were manifest within a median of 10 days, resulting in shunt revision. There have been no delayed failures. CONCLUSION Third ventriculostomy is a valuable alternative to shunt revision in patients affected by obstructive hydrocephalus presenting with shunt malfunction or infection. It should be considered in all suitable cases as the first-line treatment for obstructive hydrocephalus of all causes. Because all failures were manifest within a short time, it is likely that these successes will be durable.


Journal of Neurosurgery | 2007

Stereotactic biopsy of diffuse pontine lesions in children

Thomas Roujeau; Guilherme Machado; Matthew R. Garnett; Catherine Miquel; Stéphanie Puget; Birgit Geoerger; Jacques Grill; Nathalie Boddaert; Federico Di Rocco; Michel Zerah; Christian Sainte-Rose

OBJECT Empirical radiotherapy is the current treatment for children with diffuse pontine lesions that have imaging characteristics of an infiltrative malignant astrocytoma. The use of chemotherapeutic agents is, however, currently under investigation in the treatment of these tumors. To be included into a trial, patients need a definitive histological diagnosis. The authors present their prospective study of the stereotactic biopsy of these lesions during a 4-year period. METHODS A suboccipital, transcerebellar approach was used to obtain biopsy samples in 24 children. RESULTS Two patients suffered deficits. Both had a transient (< 2 months) new cranial nerve palsy; one of these patients also experienced an exacerbation of a preoperative hemiparesis. No patient died during the perioperative period. A histological diagnosis was made in all 24 patients as follows: 22 had a malignant infiltrative astrocytoma, one had a low-grade astrocytoma, and one had a pilocytic astrocytoma. The diagnosis of the latter two patients affected the initial treatment after the biopsy. CONCLUSIONS The findings of this study imply that stereotactic biopsy sampling of a diffuse pontine tumor is a safe procedure, is associated with minimal morbidity, and has a high diagnostic yield. A nonmalignant tumor was identified in two of the 24 patients in whom the imaging findings were characteristic of a malignant infiltrative astrocytoma. With the advent of new treatment protocols, stereotactic biopsy sampling, which would allow specific tumor characterization of diffuse pontine lesions, may become standard.


Childs Nervous System | 1995

Intellectual outcome in children with malignant tumors of the posterior fossa: influence of the field of irradiation and quality of surgery

Elizabeth Hoppe-Hirsch; L. Brunet; F. Laroussinie; Giuseppe Cinalli; Alain Pierre-Kahn; Dominique Renier; Christian Sainte-Rose; Jean-François Hirsch

The purpose of this study was to determine the respective parts played by cerebral hemisphere irradiation, posterior fossa irradiation, and surgery in the poor late functional results often observed in children treated for medulloblastoma. To do this we compared the intellectual outcome in a series of 59 children operated on for medulloblastoma, who had received whole-brain irradiation, to that observed in a series of 37 children operated on for ependymoma of the posterior fossa, who had received radiotherapy only on the posterior fossa. Only patients who had survived for more than 2 years without recurrence were included. At the assessment 1 year after treatment, intellectual outcome was somewhat better in the ependymoma group, but the difference was not statistically significant. At the long-term follow-ups at 5 and 10 years the results remained stable in the children treated for ependymoma, around 60% having an IQ above 90, whereas the intellectual level of the children treated for medulloblastoma was seen to have deteriorated progressively: 20% had an IQ above 90 5 years after treatment and only 10% at the 10-year followup. This progressive degradation is most likely due to the irradiation of the cerebral hemispheres, as this prophylactic irradiation constituted the only difference between the two groups. Moreover, irradiation to the posterior fossa did not seem to affect intellectual functions, since in the group of children with ependymomas the proportion of IQs above 90 was high and remained stable over the years. Surgery was certainly responsible for some poor results. The percentage of IQs above 90 observed 1–2 years after treatment was between 70 and 80 when no postoperative complications occurred, and only between 20–40% in the presence of postoperative complications. Postoperative aggravation was in most cases related to a brain-stem lesion. These results encourage the reduction, when possible, of irradiation to the cerebral hemispheres and underline the importance of the quality of surgery.


Childs Nervous System | 2005

Chiari malformation in craniosynostosis

Giuseppe Cinalli; Pietro Spennato; Christian Sainte-Rose; Eric Arnaud; Ferdinando Aliberti; Francis Brunelle; Emilio Cianciulli; Dominique Renier

IntroductionChiari malformation (CM) is a frequent finding in multisutural and syndromic craniosynostosis, occurring in 70% of patients with Crouzon’s syndrome, 75% with oxycephaly, 50% with Pfeiffer’s syndrome and 100% with the Kleeblattschädel deformity. The pathogenesis of this condition and rationale for treatment are still controversial.DiscussionSince its first description in 1972, several factors have been cited to play a role in inducing CM. In the light of recent publications, the roles of premature fusion of cranial vault and cranial base sutures, of congenital anomalies of the cerebellum and brain stem, of raised intracranial pressure, of venous hypertension and of hydrocephalus are reviewed. Evaluation and management of CM are also discussed.ConclusionChiari malformation appears to be an acquired and progressive condition that develops in the first months of life, because of a disproportion between hindbrain growth and an abnormally small posterior fossa, a consequence of the premature fusion of lambdoid and cranial base sutures. Venous hypertension caused by stenosis of the jugular foramen can also be present in these patients, resulting in intracranial hypertension and/or hydrocephalus. Careful MRI evaluation is recommended for the forms of craniosynostosis at a high risk of developing hindbrain herniation. The selection of posterior cranial vault expansion as the first surgical procedure is advocated. In selected cases, treatment of the posterior cranial deformity by occipital vault remodelling and treatment of the Chiari-like deformity by suboccipital decompression can be carried out using the same surgical procedure.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Mesenchymal Transition and PDGFRA Amplification/Mutation Are Key Distinct Oncogenic Events in Pediatric Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Gliomas

Stéphanie Puget; Cathy Philippe; Bastien Job; Pascale Varlet; Marie-Pierre Junier; Felipe Andreiuolo; Dina Carvalho; Ricardo Augusto de Melo Reis; Léa Guerrini-Rousseau; Thomas Roujeau; Philippe Dessen; Catherine Richon; Vladimir Lazar; Gwénaël Le Teuff; Christian Sainte-Rose; Birgit Geoerger; Gilles Vassal; Chris Jones; Jacques Grill

Diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) is one of the most frequent malignant pediatric brain tumor and its prognosis is universaly fatal. No significant improvement has been made in last thirty years over the standard treatment with radiotherapy. To address the paucity of understanding of DIPGs, we have carried out integrated molecular profiling of a large series of samples obtained with stereotactic biopsy at diagnosis. While chromosomal imbalances did not distinguish DIPG and supratentorial tumors on CGHarrays, gene expression profiling revealed clear differences between them, with brainstem gliomas resembling midline/thalamic tumours, indicating a closely-related origin. Two distinct subgroups of DIPG were identified. The first subgroup displayed mesenchymal and pro-angiogenic characteristics, with stem cell markers enrichment consistent with the possibility to grow tumor stem cells from these biopsies. The other subgroup displayed oligodendroglial features, and appeared largely driven by PDGFRA, in particular through amplification and/or novel missense mutations in the extracellular domain. Patients in this later group had a significantly worse outcome with an hazard ratio for early deaths, ie before 10 months, 8 fold greater that the ones in the other subgroup (p = 0.041, Cox regression model). The worse outcome of patients with the oligodendroglial type of tumors was confirmed on a series of 55 paraffin-embedded biopsy samples at diagnosis (median OS of 7.73 versus 12.37 months, p = 0.045, log-rank test). Two distinct transcriptional subclasses of DIPG with specific genomic alterations can be defined at diagnosis by oligodendroglial differentiation or mesenchymal transition, respectively. Classifying these tumors by signal transduction pathway activation and by mutation in pathway member genes may be particularily valuable for the development of targeted therapies.

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Dive into the Christian Sainte-Rose's collaboration.

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Michel Zerah

University of Paris-Sud

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Stéphanie Puget

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Dominique Renier

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Alain Pierre-Kahn

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Jacques Grill

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Nathalie Boddaert

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Thomas Roujeau

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Marie Bourgeois

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Giuseppe Cinalli

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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