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Featured researches published by Christophe Cassinotto.


Journal of Hepatology | 2014

Non-invasive assessment of liver fibrosis with impulse elastography: Comparison of Supersonic Shear Imaging with ARFI and FibroScan®

Christophe Cassinotto; Bruno Lapuyade; Amaury Mouries; Jean-Baptiste Hiriart; Julien Vergniol; Delphine Gaye; Claire Castain; Brigitte Le Bail; Faiza Chermak; Juliette Foucher; François Laurent; Michel Montaudon; Victor de Ledinghen

BACKGROUND & AIMS Non-invasive assessment of liver fibrosis by elastography is a rapidly developing field with frequent technological innovations. The aim of this study was to assess the diagnostic performances of Supersonic Shear Imaging (SSI) for the diagnosis of liver fibrosis in chronic liver disease. METHODS A total of 349 consecutive patients with chronic liver diseases who underwent liver biopsy from November 2011 to October 2013 were prospectively enrolled. For each patient, liver stiffness was assessed by SSI, ARFI, FibroScan® (M probe for patients with BMI <30 kg/m(2), and XL probe for patients with BMI ⩾30 kg/m(2)), performed within two weeks of liver biopsy. Areas under the receiver operating curves (AUROCs) were performed and compared for each degree of liver fibrosis. RESULTS SSI, FibroScan®, and ARFI correlated significantly with histological fibrosis score (r=0.79, p<0.00001; r=0.70, p<0.00001; r=0.64, p<0.00001, respectively). AUROCs of SSI, FibroScan®, and ARFI were 0.89, 0.86, and 0.84 for the diagnosis of mild fibrosis; 0.88, 0.84, and 0.81 for the diagnosis of significant fibrosis; 0.93, 0.87, and 0.89, for the diagnosis of severe fibrosis; 0.93, 0.90, and 0.90 for the diagnosis of cirrhosis, respectively. SSI had a higher accuracy than FibroScan® for the diagnosis of severe fibrosis (⩾F3) (p=0.0016), and a higher accuracy than ARFI for the diagnosis of significant fibrosis (⩾F2) (p=0.0003). No significant difference was observed for the diagnosis of mild fibrosis and cirrhosis. CONCLUSIONS SSI is an efficient method for the assessment of liver fibrosis in chronic liver diseases, comparing favourably to FibroScan® and ARFI.


Journal of Hepatology | 2014

Controlled attenuation parameter (CAP) for the diagnosis of steatosis: A prospective study of 5323 examinations

Victor de Ledinghen; Julien Vergniol; Maylis Capdepont; Faiza Chermak; Jean-Baptiste Hiriart; Christophe Cassinotto; Wassil Merrouche; Juliette Foucher; Le Bail Brigitte

BACKGROUND & AIMS Controlled attenuation parameter (CAP) evaluated with transient elastography (FibroScan®) is a recent method for non-invasive assessment of steatosis. Its usefulness in clinical practice is unknown. We prospectively investigated the determinants of CAP failure and the relationships between CAP and clinical or biological parameters in a large cohort of consecutive patients. METHODS All CAP examinations performed in adult patients with suspected chronic liver disease were included. CAP failure was defined as zero valid shot. The following factors were analyzed for their influence on CAP value and the relationships between CAP and clinico-biological parameters: age, gender, body mass index, waist circumference, hypertension, diabetes, metabolic syndrome, alcohol use, liver stiffness measurement, indication, and different biological parameters. RESULTS CAP failure occurred in 7.7% of 5323 examinations. By multivariate analysis, factors independently associated with CAP measurement failure were female gender, BMI, and metabolic syndrome. By multivariate analysis, factors significantly associated with elevated CAP were BMI [25-30]kg/m(2), BMI >30kg/m(2), metabolic syndrome, alcohol >14 drink/week and liver stiffness >6kPa. CAP increased with the number of parameters of metabolic syndrome, BMI, waist circumference, the presence of diabetes or hypertension, and the cause of the disease. In the 440 patients with liver biopsy, for the diagnosis of steatosis >10%, steatosis >33%, and steatosis >66%, AUROCs of CAP were 0.79 (95% CI 0.74-0.84, p<0.001), 0.84 (95% CI 0.80-0.88, p<0.001), 0.84 (95% CI 0.80-0.88, p<0.001), respectively. CONCLUSIONS CAP provides an immediate assessment of steatosis simultaneously with liver stiffness measurement. The strong association of CAP with the metabolic syndrome and alcohol use could be of interest for the follow-up of NAFLD or alcoholic patients.


Radiology | 2013

Liver Fibrosis: Noninvasive Assessment with Acoustic Radiation Force Impulse Elastography—Comparison with FibroScan M and XL Probes and FibroTest in Patients with Chronic Liver Disease

Christophe Cassinotto; Bruno Lapuyade; Ania Aït-Ali; Julien Vergniol; Delphine Gaye; Juliette Foucher; Claire Bailacq-Auder; Faiza Chermak; Brigitte Le Bail; Victor de Ledinghen

PURPOSE To compare the diagnostic performance of acoustic radiation force impulse (ARFI) elastography with that of FibroScan M and XL probes and FibroTest in the staging of fibrosis in patients with chronic liver disease. MATERIALS AND METHODS This study received ethics approval, and all participants provided written informed consent. A total of 321 consecutive patients with chronic liver disease who underwent liver biopsy were prospectively enrolled from April 2010 to May 2012. Liver disease was caused by viral hepatitis (n = 136), alcoholic or nonalcoholic steatohepatitis disorders (n = 113), or some other disease (n = 72). In each patient, liver stiffness was evaluated with ARFI elastography, M and XL probes, and FibroTest within 1 month before liver biopsy. Histologic staging of liver fibrosis served as the reference standard. RESULTS Liver stiffness measurement failure rates were 11.2% with the M probe (36 of 321 patients), 2.3% with the XL probe (six of 260 patients), and 0% with ARFI elastography (0 of 321 patients). Unreliable results with ARFI elastography were more frequent in obese patients (those with a body mass index of 30 kg/m(2) or more) (42 of 86 patients [48.8%] vs 34 of 235 patients [14.5%], P < .0001). No significant difference was found between ARFI elastography and the M probe in the diagnosis of cirrhosis (area under under the receiver operating characteristic curve [Az], 0.88 vs 0.91; P = .12) or severe fibrosis (Az, 0.85 vs 0.89; P = .15); however, the M probe demonstrated better results in the diagnosis of moderate fibrosis (Az, 0.81 vs 0.88; P = .008). No significant difference was found between ARFI elastography and the XL probe in the diagnosis of moderate fibrosis, severe fibrosis, or cirrhosis. The diagnostic performance of ARFI elastography improved when it was applied in nonobese patients (Az of ARFI for cirrhosis and severe fibrosis = 0.92 and 0.91, respectively, in nonobese patients [P = .0002] and 0.63 and 0.63, respectively, in obese patients [P < .0001]). CONCLUSION ARFI elastography is reliable in the assessment of liver fibrosis in patients with chronic liver disease, especially nonobese patients.


European Journal of Radiology | 2013

An evaluation of the accuracy of CT when determining resectability of pancreatic head adenocarcinoma after neoadjuvant treatment

Christophe Cassinotto; Juliette Cortade; Geneviève Belleannée; Bruno Lapuyade; Eric Terrebonne; V. Vendrely; Christophe Laurent; Antonio Sa-Cunha

BACKGROUND To evaluate the accuracy of MDCT for determination of resectability R0 after neoadjuvant therapy in patients with pancreatic head adenocarcinoma locally advanced. METHODS From January 2005 to December 2010, 80 patients with pancreatic head adenocarcinoma underwent multidetector CT before surgery. Of these, 38 patients received neoadjuvant therapy because tumor was considered locally advanced on baseline CT scan. We retrospectively correlated imaging interpretations with operative and histological data and compared results in patients without (control group) or with (neoadjuvant group) preoperative treatment. RESULTS 41/42 patients in control group and 31/38 patients in neoadjuvant group finally had curative resection. While resection R0 is similar in both groups (83% and 81%), CT accuracy in determining resectability R0 was significantly decreased in neoadjuvant group (58% versus 83%; p=0.039). CT scan specificity was significantly lower after neoadjuvant therapy (52% versus 88% in control group) due to an overestimation of vascular invasion: 12/31 patients with complete resection in neoadjuvant group were evaluated at high risk of incomplete resection on CT scan. Tumor size tends to be underestimated in control group (-2mm) and overestimated in neoadjuvant group (+10mm). T-staging accuracy was decreased in neoadjuvant group (39% versus 78% in control group; p=0.002). CONCLUSION Neoadjuvant therapy significantly decreases the accuracy of CT scan in determining operability, T-staging, and resectability R0 of pancreatic head carcinoma. Overestimation of tumor size and vascular invasion significantly reduces CT scan specificity after preoperative treatment.


Radiology | 2014

Locally Advanced Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma: Reassessment of Response with CT after Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy and Radiation Therapy

Christophe Cassinotto; Amaury Mouries; Jean-Pierre Lafourcade; Eric Terrebonne; Geneviève Belleannée; Jean-Frédéric Blanc; Bruno Lapuyade; V. Vendrely; Christophe Laurent; Laurence Chiche; Tristan Wagner; Antonio Sa-Cunha; Delphine Gaye; Hervé Trillaud; François Laurent; Michel Montaudon

PURPOSE To prospectively evaluate the utility of computed tomography (CT) for determination of tumor response and prediction of resectability after neoadjuvant combined chemotherapy and radiation therapy (CRT) in patients with nonmetastatic locally advanced pancreatic cancer. MATERIALS AND METHODS This study received institutional review board approval, and all participants provided written informed consent. Consecutive patients with cephalic locally advanced pancreatic cancer who underwent surgical exploration and/or resection following neoadjuvant CRT were prospectively enrolled from June 2009 to May 2013. Two radiologists independently analyzed the baseline and post-CRT CT scans for the size, attenuation, and circumferential vascular contacts of the tumor. Associations between the postoperative histologic grade of the tumor response (pTNM) and the clinical, biologic, and CT criteria were assessed by using Spearman correlation coefficients. CT criteria related to the presence of complete (ie, R0) resection were assessed by using logistic regression. RESULTS Forty-seven patients were included, 33 with an R0 resection and 14 with positive margins (ie, R1) or no resection. Variables demonstrating a significant correlation with the histologic tumor classification of tumor response were post-CRT carbohydrate antigen 19-9 level (r = 0.46), post-CRT largest tumor axis (r = 0.44), post-CRT sum of the largest and smallest tumor axes (r = 0.46), change in the largest axis (r = -0.31), change in the sum of the largest and smallest axes (r = -0.39), change in superior mesenteric vein (SMV) and/or portal vein (hereafter, SMV/portal vein) contact (r = -0.38), and post-CRT superior mesenteric artery contact (r = 0.34). Partial regression of tumor contact with the SMV/portal vein was associated in all cases with R0 resection (10 of 10 patients, positive predictive value = 100%), and partial regression of tumor contact with any peripancreatic vascular axis was associated with R0 resection in 91% of cases (20 of 22 patients, positive predictive value = 91%). Persistence of SMV/portal vein stenosis after CRT was not predictive of R1 resection. CONCLUSION Partial regression of tumor-vessel contact indicates suitability for surgical exploration, irrespective of the degree of decrease in tumor size or the degree of residual vascular involvement.


Digestive and Liver Disease | 2015

Liver and spleen elastography using supersonic shear imaging for the non-invasive diagnosis of cirrhosis severity and oesophageal varices

Christophe Cassinotto; Anne Charrie; Amaury Mouries; Bruno Lapuyade; Jean-Baptiste Hiriart; Julien Vergniol; Delphine Gaye; Arnaud Hocquelet; Maude Charbonnier; Juliette Foucher; François Laurent; Faiza Chermak; Michel Montaudon; Victor de Ledinghen

BACKGROUND Elastography is a promising non-invasive approach for assessing liver fibrosis. We assessed diagnostic performances of liver and spleen stiffness using supersonic shear imaging for diagnosing cirrhosis severity and oesophageal varices. METHODS 401 consecutive cirrhotic patients were prospectively enrolled from November 2012 to March 2014. All patients underwent liver and spleen stiffness measurement with supersonic shear imaging and Fibroscan. RESULTS Failures of measurement were 6.2% and 29.2% for liver and spleen stiffness (supersonic shear imaging), and 18.4% for liver stiffness (Fibroscan). Liver and spleen stiffness were correlated with severity of cirrhosis, with values increasing according to Child-Pugh subclasses and presence of complications. With a negative predictive value ≥90%, liver stiffness cut-offs for high-risk oesophageal varices, history of ascites, Child-Pugh B/C, variceal bleeding and clinical decompensation were 12.8, 19, 21.4, 30.5, and 39.4 kPa, respectively. Areas under the curve of spleen and liver stiffness (supersonic shear imaging), and liver stiffness (Fibroscan) were 0.80, 0.77 and 0.73 respectively for detection of oesophageal varices. CONCLUSION Liver stiffness using supersonic shear imaging is a relevant diagnostic tool for assessing cirrhosis severity and its complications. Spleen stiffness shows promising results for the detection of oesophageal varices but is not yet sufficiently robust for clinical practice owing to high failure rates.


Hepatology | 2018

Assessment of biopsy-proven liver fibrosis by two-dimensional shear wave elastography: An individual patient data-based meta-analysis.

Eva Herrmann; Victor de Ledinghen; Christophe Cassinotto; Winnie C.W. Chu; Vivian Yee-fong Leung; Giovanna Ferraioli; Carlo Filice; Laurent Castera; Valérie Vilgrain; Maxime Ronot; Jérôme Dumortier; Aymeric Guibal; Stanislas Pol; Jonel Trebicka; Christian Jansen; Christian P. Strassburg; Rongqin Zheng; Jian Zheng; Sven Francque; Thomas Vanwolleghem; Luisa Vonghia; Emanuel K. Manesis; Pavlos Zoumpoulis; Ioan Sporea; Maja Thiele; Aleksander Krag; Claude Cohen-Bacrie; Aline Criton; Thomas Deffieux; Mireen Friedrich-Rust

Two‐dimensional shear wave elastography (2D‐SWE) has proven to be efficient for the evaluation of liver fibrosis in small to moderate‐sized clinical trials. We aimed at running a larger‐scale meta‐analysis of individual data. Centers which have worked with Aixplorer ultrasound equipment were contacted to share their data. Retrospective statistical analysis used direct and paired receiver operating characteristic and area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC) analyses, accounting for random effects. Data on both 2D‐SWE and liver biopsy were available for 1,134 patients from 13 sites, as well as on successful transient elastography in 665 patients. Most patients had chronic hepatitis C (n = 379), hepatitis B (n = 400), or nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (n = 156). AUROCs of 2D‐SWE in patients with hepatitis C, hepatitis B, and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease were 86.3%, 90.6%, and 85.5% for diagnosing significant fibrosis and 92.9%, 95.5%, and 91.7% for diagnosing cirrhosis, respectively. The AUROC of 2D‐SWE was 0.022‐0.084 (95% confidence interval) larger than the AUROC of transient elastography for diagnosing significant fibrosis (P = 0.001) and 0.003‐0.034 for diagnosing cirrhosis (P = 0.022) in all patients. This difference was strongest in hepatitis B patients. Conclusion: 2D‐SWE has good to excellent performance for the noninvasive staging of liver fibrosis in patients with hepatitis B; further prospective studies are needed for head‐to‐head comparison between 2D‐SWE and other imaging modalities to establish disease‐specific appropriate cutoff points for assessment of fibrosis stage. (Hepatology 2018;67:260‐272).


International Journal of Hyperthermia | 2015

Radiofrequency ablation versus surgical resection for hepatocellular carcinoma within the Milan criteria: A study of 281 Western patients

Arnaud Hocquelet; Pierre Balageas; Christophe Laurent; Jean-Frédéric Blanc; Nora Frulio; Cécile Salut; Christophe Cassinotto; Jean Saric; Laurent Possenti; Pierre-Henri Bernard; Michel Montaudon; Hervé Trillaud

Abstract Objectives: The aim of this study was to compare survival between radiofrequency ablation (RFA) and surgical resection (SR) in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) within Milan criteria. Methods: From January 2004 to December 2013 we consecutively and retrospectively included all patients with first occurrence of HCC within Milan criteria receiving SR or RFA as first-line treatment. The cumulative overall survival (OS) and disease-free survival (DFS) were compared after inverse probability weighting (including confounding factor). Results: A total of 281 patients (RFA 178, SR 103) were enrolled. In multivariate Cox regression RFA and SR were not independent predictors of survival or recurrence. The respective weighted 5 years OS and DFS for patients with propensity scores between 0.1–0.9 in the SR and RFA groups were 54–33% and 60–16.9%, P = 0.695 and P = 0.426, respectively. Local tumour progression rate did not differ according to treatment (P = 0.523). Major complication rate was higher in the SR group, P = 0.001. Hospitalisation duration was lower in the RFA group (mean 2.19 days, range 2–7) than in the SR group (mean 10.2 days, range 3–30), P < 0.001. Conclusion: This large Western study has shown that OS and DFS did not differ after RFA (using mainly multipolar devices) and SR, for HCC within the Milan criteria in a European population, with a shorter hospitalisation time and a lower complication rate for RFA.


European Journal of Radiology | 2015

MR relaxometry in chronic liver diseases: Comparison of T1 mapping, T2 mapping, and diffusion-weighted imaging for assessing cirrhosis diagnosis and severity

Christophe Cassinotto; Matthieu Feldis; Julien Vergniol; Amaury Mouries; Hubert Cochet; Bruno Lapuyade; Arnaud Hocquelet; Etienne Juanola; Juliette Foucher; François Laurent; Victor de Ledinghen

BACKGROUND MR relaxometry has been extensively studied in the field of cardiac diseases, but its contribution to liver imaging is unclear. We aimed to compare liver and spleen T1 mapping, T2 mapping, and diffusion-weighted MR imaging (DWI) for assessing the diagnosis and severity of cirrhosis. METHODS We prospectively included 129 patients with normal (n=40) and cirrhotic livers (n=89) from May to September 2014. Non-enhanced liver T1 mapping, splenic T2 mapping, and liver and splenic DWI were measured and compared for assessing cirrhosis severity using Child-Pugh score, MELD score, and presence or not of large esophageal varices (EVs) and liver stiffness measurements using Fibroscan(®) as reference. RESULTS Liver T1 mapping was the only variable demonstrating significant differences between normal patients (500±79ms), Child-Pugh A patients (574±84ms) and Child-Pugh B/C patients (690±147ms; all p-values <0.00001). Liver T1 mapping had a significant correlation with Child-Pugh score (Pearsons correlation coefficient of 0.46), MEDL score (0.30), and liver stiffness measurement (0.52). Areas under the receiver operating characteristic curves of liver T1 mapping for the diagnosis of cirrhosis (O.85; 95% confidence intervals (CI), 0.77-0.91), Child-Pugh B/C cirrhosis (0.87; 95%CI, 0.76-0.93), and large EVs (0.75; 95%CI, 0.63-0.83) were greater than that of spleen T2 mapping, liver and spleen DWI (all p-values<0.01). CONCLUSION Liver T1 mapping is a promising new diagnostic tool for assessing cirrhosis diagnosis and severity, showing higher diagnostic accuracy than liver and spleen DWI, while T2 mapping is not reliable.


Liver International | 2017

EASL and AASLD recommendations for the diagnosis of HCC to the test of daily practice

C. Aubé; Frédéric Oberti; Julie Lonjon; G.-P. Pageaux; Olivier Seror; G. Nkontchou; Agnès Rode; Sylvie Radenne; Christophe Cassinotto; Julien Vergniol; Ivan Bricault; Vincent Leroy; Maxime Ronot; Laurent Castera; S. Michalak; Maxime Esvan; Valérie Vilgrain

To evaluate the diagnostic performance of CT, MRI and CEUS alone and in combination, for the diagnosis of HCC between 10 and 30 mm, in a large population of cirrhotic patients.

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Boris Guiu

University of Burgundy

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