Claude Chastang
French Institute of Health and Medical Research
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Featured researches published by Claude Chastang.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2002
Alain Depierre; Bernard Milleron; Denis Moro-Sibilot; Sylvie Chevret; Elisabeth Quoix; Bernard Lebeau; Denis Braun; Jean-Luc Breton; Etienne Lemarié; Sylvie Gouva; Nadine Paillot; Jeanne-Marie Bréchot; Henri Janicot; François-Xavier Lebas; Philippe Terrioux; Jean Clavier; Pascal Foucher; Michel Monchâtre; Daniel Coëtmeur; Marie-Claude Level; Pascal Leclerc; François Blanchon; Jean-Michel Rodier; Luc Thiberville; Anne Villeneuve; Virginie Westeel; Claude Chastang
PURPOSE To evaluate whether preoperative chemotherapy (PCT) could improve survival in resectable stage I (except T1N0), II, and IIIA non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). PATIENTS AND METHODS A randomized trial compared PCT to primary surgery (PRS). PCT consisted of two cycles of mitomycin (6 mg/m(2), day 1), ifosfamide (1.5 g/m(2), days 1 to 3) and cisplatin (30 mg/m(2), days 1 to 3), and two additional postoperative cycles for responding patients. In both arms, patients with pT3 or pN2 disease received thoracic radiotherapy. RESULTS Three hundred fifty-five eligible patients were randomized. Overall response to PCT was 64%. There were two preoperative toxic deaths. Postoperative mortality was 6.7% in the PCT arm and 4.5% in the PRS arm (P =.38). Median survival was 37 months (95% confidence interval [CI], 26.7 to 48.3) for PCT and 26.0 months (95% CI, 19.8 to 33.6) for PRS (P =.15). Survival differences between both arms increased from 3.8% (95% CI, 1.3% to 25.1%) at 1 year to 8.6% (95% CI, 2.64% to 24.4%) at 4 years. A quantitative interaction between N status and treatment was observed, with benefit confined to N0 to N1 disease (relative risk [RR], 0.68; 95% CI, 0.49 to 0.96; P =.027). After a nonsignificant excess of deaths during treatment, the effect of PCT was significantly favorable on survival (RR, 0.74; 95% CI, 0.56 to 0.99; P =.044). Disease-free survival time was significantly longer in the PCT arm (P =.033). CONCLUSION Although impressive differences in median, 3-year, and 4-year survival were observed, they were not statistically significant, except for stage I and II disease.
The Lancet | 1998
Jean Jacques Grob; Brigitte Dreno; Pauline de la Salmoniere; Michèle Delaunay; Didier Cupissol; Bernard Guillot; Pierre Souteyrand; Bruno Sassolas; Jean-Pierre Cesarini; Sylvie Lionnet; C. Lok; Claude Chastang; Jean Jacques Bonerandi
Summary Background Owing to the limited efficacy of therapy on melanoma at the stage of distant metastases, a well-tolerated adjuvant therapy is needed for patients with high-risk primary melanoma. Our hypothesis was that an adjuvant treatment with low doses of interferon a could be effective in patients with localised melanoma. Methods After resection of a primary cutaneous melanoma thicker than 1·5 mm, patients without clinically detectable node metastases were randomly assigned to receive either 3X106 IU interferon α-2a, three-times weekly for 18 months, or no treatment. The primary endpoint was the relapse-free interval. Findings 499 patients were enrolled, of whom 489 were eligible. When used as part of a sequential procedure, interferon α-2a was of significant benefit for relapse-free interval (p=0·038). A long-term analysis, after a median follow-up of 5 years, showed a significant extension of relapse-free interval (p=0·035) and a clear trend towards an increase in overall survival (p=0·059) in interferon α-2a-treated patients compared with controls. There were 100 relapses and 59 deaths among the 244 interferon α-2a-treated patients compared with 119 relapses and 76 deaths among the 245 controls. The estimated 3-year-relapse rates were 32% in the interferon α-2a group and 44% in controls; the 3-year death rates were 15% and 21%, respectively. Only 10% of patients experienced WHO grade 3 or 4 adverse events. Treatment was compatible with normal daily life. Interpretation Adjuvant therapy of high-risk melanoma with low doses of interferon α-2a for 18 months is safe and is beneficial when started before clinically detectable node metastases develop.
Journal of Hepatology | 1999
Sylvie Chevret; Jean-Claude Trinchet; Didier Mathieu; Antoine Abou Rached; Michel Beaugrand; Claude Chastang
BACKGROUND/AIMS In patients with hepatocellular carcinoma, prediction of survival is difficult. The aim of this prospective study was to provide a simple classification for predicting survival of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma, based on a multivariable Cox model. METHODS Seven hundred and sixty-one patients who presented with hepatocellular carcinoma from 24 Western medical centers were enrolled over a 30-month period. Patients were randomly assigned to either a training sample (n=506, with 418 deaths) from which a classification system was established, or a test sample (n=255, with 200 deaths) for validating its prognostic significance. RESULTS Five prognostic factors were selected at the 0.0001 level: Karnofsky index <80% (relative risk of death=2.2, 95% confidence interval: 1.7-2.7), serum bilirubin >50 micromol/l (relative risk=2.1, 95% confidence interval: 1.7-2.6), serum alkaline phosphatase at least twice the upper limit of normal range (relative risk=1.6, 95% confidence interval: 1.3-2.0), serum alpha-fetoprotein >35 microg/l (relative risk=1.7, 95% confidence interval: 1.4-2.1), and ultrasonographic portal obstruction (relative risk=1.3, 95% confidence interval: 1.1-1.7). Three risk groups with different 1-year survival rates (72%, 34%, 7%) were derived, and independently validated in the test sample (79%, 31%, 4%). CONCLUSION This classification could be useful in the assessment of prognosis from homogeneous groups of patients with respect to their expected outcome.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1995
Hervé Dombret; Claude Chastang; Pierre Fenaux; Josy Reiffers; Dominique Bordessoule; Reda Bouabdallah; Franco Mandelli; Augustin Ferrant; Gilles Auzanneau; Hervé Tilly; Antoine Yver; Laurent Degos
BACKGROUND Intensive chemotherapy for acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) continues to yield low rates of complete remission and survival among patients over the age of 65 years. Infection-related mortality is particularly high among these patients during the period of neutropenia that follows chemotherapy. We determined the effect of lenograstim (glycosylated recombinant human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor) on mortality at eight weeks (the main end point) and the rate of complete remission among patients with AML who were 65 years old or older. METHODS After induction chemotherapy with daunorubicin (45 mg per square meter of body-surface area per day for 4 days) and cytarabine arabinoside (200 mg per square meter per day for 7 days), 173 patients with newly diagnosed AML were randomly assigned on day 8 to receive either lenograstim (5 micrograms per kilogram of body weight per day) or placebo, starting on day 9, until there was neutrophil recovery or a treatment failure, or for a maximum of 28 days. Salvage chemotherapy was also followed by lenograstim or placebo. Patients with a complete remission received two consolidation courses of chemotherapy without lenograstim or placebo. RESULTS The mortality rate at eight weeks was similar in the lenograstim and placebo groups (23 and 27 percent, respectively; P = 0.60), as was the incidence of severe infections. The median duration of neutropenia (absolute neutrophil count < or = 1000 per cubic millimeter) was shorter in the lenograstim group (21 days, as compared with 27 days in the placebo group; P < 0.001). Eight percent of the patients in both groups had regrowth of AML cells. The rate of complete remission was significantly higher in the lenograstim group (70 percent, as compared with 47 percent in the placebo group; P = 0.002). Overall survival, however, was similar in the two groups (P = 0.76). CONCLUSIONS The administration of lenograstim after chemotherapy for AML did not decrease the mortality rate at eight weeks among patients over the age of 65 years. The patients who received lenograstim had a significantly higher rate of complete remission than those who received placebo. Nevertheless, the overall survival in the two groups did not differ significantly.
Cancer | 1994
Bernard Lebeau; Claude Chastang; Jeanne-Marie Bréchot; Frédérique Capron; Berteand Dautzenberg; Corinne Delaisements; Michel Mornet; Janine Brun; Jean-Paul Hurdebourcq; Etienne Lemarie
Background. A positive influence of anticoagulant treatment in small cell lung cancer (SCLC) has been sug gested by experimental and clinical data.
Cancer | 1999
Bertrand Dautzenberg; Rodrigo Arriagada; Agnès Boyer Chammard; Alina Jarema; Maurizio Mezzetti; Karin Mattson; Jean L. Lagrange; Cécile Le Péchoux; Bernard Lebeau; Claude Chastang
Postoperative radiotherapy is commonly used to treat patients with completely resected nonsmall cell lung carcinoma, but its effect on overall survival has not been established.
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 1999
Patricia Ribaud; Claude Chastang; Jean-Paul Latgé; Laurence Baffroy-Lafitte; Nathalie Natquet; Agnès Devergie; Helene Esperou; Fadhéla Sélimi; Vanderson Rocha; Francis Derouin; Gérard Socié; Eliane Gluckman
To determine prognostic factors for survival in bone marrow transplant recipients with invasive aspergillosis (IA), we retrospectively reviewed 27 IA cases observed in our bone marrow transplantation unit between January 1994 and October 1994. On 30 September 1997, six patients were alive and disease-free. The median survival after IA diagnosis was 36 days. Of eight variables found to be related to survival according to the univariate analysis, graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) status at IA diagnosis (P = .0008) and the cumulative prednisolone dose taken during the week preceding IA diagnosis (CPDlw) (P < .0001) were selected by a backward stepwise Cox regression model. A three-stage classification was established: CPD1w of < or =7 mg/kg (3 of 8 patients died; 60-day survival rate, 88%), CPD1w of >7 mg/kg and no GVHD (9 of 10 patients died; 60-day survival rate, 20%), and CPD1w of >7 mg/kg and active acute grade 2 or more or extensive chronic GVHD (9 of 9 patients died; 30-day survival rate, 0) (P < .0001).
The Lancet | 1989
Jean-Claude Raphael; David Elkharrat; Marie-Claude Jars-Guincestre; Claude Chastang; Jean-Baptiste Vercken; Valérie Chasles; Philippe Gajdos
The value of hyperbaric oxygen in the treatment of acute carbon monoxide intoxication was assessed in 629 adults who had been poisoned at home in the 12 h before admission to hospital. In patients without initial impairment of consciousness (group A) the effect of 6 h of normobaric oxygen (NBO) (group A0, n = 170) was compared with that of 2 h of hyperbaric oxygen (HBO) at 2 atmospheres absolute (ATA) plus 4 h NBO (group A1, n = 173). At the 1 month follow-up 66% of A0 and 68% of A1 patients had recovered. In patients with initial impairment of consciousness the effect of one session of HBO (group B1, n = 145) was compared with that of two sessions (group B2, n = 141); all group B patients also received 4 h of NBO. At 1 month of follow-up 54% group B1 and 52% group B2 patients had recovered. The 7 patients left with neuropsychiatric sequelae (3 B1, 4 B2) and the 4 who died (2 B1, 2 B2) had all presented with coma. HBO was not useful in patients who did not lose consciousness during carbon monoxide intoxication, irrespective of their carboxyhaemoglobin level, nor were two sessions of HBO in patients who sustained only a brief loss of consciousness. The prognosis is poorest for those presenting with coma; the trial needs to be pursued in this group of patients until the power of the study is sufficient to demonstrate the value or otherwise of HBO.
The Lancet | 1994
Jean-Claude Raphael; Sylvie Chevret; Claude Chastang; Françoise Bouvet
Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is the most common muscular dystrophy in children. Paralysis of respiratory muscles causes a decrease in forced vital capacity (FVC) from age 12 years, and death occurs between 20 and 25 years old and is usually related to respiratory insufficiency. Uncontrolled studies suggest that early home use of nasal intermittent positive-pressure ventilation (NIPPV) in DMD patients free of respiratory failure could limit progression of the restrictive syndrome and therefore improve survival because efficacy of preventive NIPPV has not been demonstrated in a controlled trial, we undertook a randomised multicentre study in which 70 patients with DMD were included. Patients were free of daytime respiratory failure and FVC was between 20 and 50% of predicted values. At least 6 h of nocturnal NIPPV (n = 35) was compared with conventional treatment (n = 35). During a mean follow-up of 52 months, 10 patients died, 8 in the NIPPV group and 2 in the control group (p = 0.05, log-rank test). No differences were observed between the two groups for occurrence of hypercapnia, decrease of FVC below 20% of initial values, or use of necessary mechanical ventilation. Preventive NIPPV did not improve respiratory handicap and reduced survival of DMD patients. Use of NIPPV for preventive purposes should be avoided in patients with FVC between 20 and 50% of predicted values.
Cancer | 1996
Jeanne-Marie Bréchot; Sylvie Chevret; Marie-Christine Charpentier; Corinne Appere de Vecchi; Frédérique Capron; Jacques Prudent; Jacques Rochemaure; Claude Chastang
The objective of this prospective study was to assess in 96 patients with resected nonsmall cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) the prevalence of both blood and lymphatic vessel invasion (BVI and LVI) according to stage, as well as their prognostic value for disease free and overall survival.