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Featured researches published by D. Pasquier.


Frontiers in Oncology | 2016

Comparison of Automated Atlas-Based Segmentation Software for Postoperative Prostate Cancer Radiotherapy

G. Delpon; Alexandre Escande; Timothée Ruef; Julien Darréon; Jimmy Fontaine; C. Noblet; S. Supiot; T. Lacornerie; D. Pasquier

Automated atlas-based segmentation (ABS) algorithms present the potential to reduce the variability in volume delineation. Several vendors offer software that are mainly used for cranial, head and neck, and prostate cases. The present study will compare the contours produced by a radiation oncologist to the contours computed by different automated ABS algorithms for prostate bed cases, including femoral heads, bladder, and rectum. Contour comparison was evaluated by different metrics such as volume ratio, Dice coefficient, and Hausdorff distance. Results depended on the volume of interest showed some discrepancies between the different software. Automatic contours could be a good starting point for the delineation of organs since efficient editing tools are provided by different vendors. It should become an important help in the next few years for organ at risk delineation.


Annals of Oncology | 2017

Prediction of local and metastatic recurrence in solitary fibrous tumor: construction of a risk calculator in a multicenter cohort from the French Sarcoma Group (FSG) database

S. Salas; N. Resseguier; J. Blay; A. Le Cesne; A. Italiano; C. Chevreau; P. Rosset; N. Isambert; Patrick Soulié; Didier Cupissol; Corinne Delcambre; J. Bay; Pascale Dubray-Longeras; Marco Krengli; B. De Bari; S. Villa; Johannes H.A.M. Kaanders; S. Torrente; D. Pasquier; Juliette Thariat; L. Myroslav; C.V. Sole; H.F. Dincbas; J.Y. Habboush; Thomas Zilli; T. Dragan; R.K. Khan; G. Ugurluer; T. Cena; Florence Duffaud

Background Solitary fibrous tumors (SFT) are rare unusual ubiquitous soft tissue tumors that are presumed to be of fibroblastic differentiation. At present, the challenge is to establish accurate prognostic factors. Patients and methods A total of 214 consecutive patients with SFT diagnosed in 24 participating cancer centers were entered into the European database (www.conticabase.org) to perform univariate and multivariate analysis for overall survival (OS), local recurrence incidence (LRI) and metastatic recurrence incidence (MRI) by taking competing risks into account. A prognostic model was constructed for LRI and MRI. Internal and external validations of the prognostic models were carried out. An individual risk calculator was carried out to quantify the risk of both local and metastatic recurrence. Results We restricted our analysis to 162 patients with local disease. Twenty patients (12.3%) were deceased at the time of analysis and the median OS was not reached. The LRI rates at 10 and 20 years were 19.2% and 38.6%, respectively. The MRI rates at 10 and 20 years were 31.4% and 49.8%, respectively. Multivariate analysis retained age and mitotic count tended to significance for predicting OS. The factors influencing LRI were viscera localization, radiotherapy and age. Mitotic count, tumor localization other than limb and age had independent values for MRI. Three prognostic groups for OS were defined based on the number of unfavorable prognostic factors and calculations were carried out to predict the risk of local and metastatic recurrence for individual patients. Conclusion LRI and MRI rates increased between 10 and 20 years so relapses were delayed, suggesting that long-term monitoring is useful. This study also shows that different prognostic SFT sub-groups could benefit from different therapeutic strategies and that use of a survival calculator could become standard practice in SFTs to individualize treatment based on the clinical situation.


Cancer Radiotherapie | 2018

Dose constraints for moderate hypofractionated radiotherapy for prostate cancer: The French genito-urinary group (GETUG) recommendations

J. Langrand-Escure; C. Llagostera; G. Créhange; G. Delaroche; C. Lafond; C. Bonin; F. Bideault; P. Sargos; S. Belhomme; D. Pasquier; I. Latorzeff; S. Supiot; Christophe Hennequin

Considering recent phase III trials results, moderate hypofractionated radiotherapy can be considered as a standard treatment for low and intermediate risk prostate cancer management. This assessment call for a framework allowing homogeneous and reproducible practices in the different centers using this radiotherapy schedule. The French Genito-Urinary Group (GETUG) provides here recommendations for daily practice of moderate hypofractionated radiotherapy for prostate cancer, with indications, dose, fractionation, pre-treatment planning, volume of interest delineation (target volume and organs at risk) and margins, dose constraints and radiotherapy techniques.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Harmonization of the Volume of Interest Delineation among All Eleven Radiotherapy Centers in the North of France.

D. Pasquier; Laurence Boutaud de la Combe-Chossiere; Damien Carlier; Franck Darloy; Anne Catherine Degrendel-Courtecuisse; Chantal Dufour; Mustapha Fares; Laurent Gilbeau; Xavier Liem; Philippe Martin; Pascal Meyer; Jean François Minne; Olimpia Olszyk; Hassan Rhliouch; Marc Tokarski; Chloé Viot; Bernard Castelain; E. Lartigau

Background Inter-observer delineation variation has been detailed for many years in almost every tumor location. Inadequate delineation can impair the chance of cure and/or increase toxicity. The aim of our original work was to prospectively improve the homogeneity of delineation among all of the senior radiation oncologists in the Nord-Pas de Calais region, irrespective of the conditions of practice. Methods All 11 centers were involved. The first studied cancer was prostate cancer. Three clinical cases were studied: a low-risk prostate cancer case (case 1), a high-risk prostate cancer case (pelvic nodes, case 2) and a case of post-operative biochemical elevated PSA (case 3). All of the involved physicians delineated characteristically the clinical target volume (CTV) and organs at risk. The volumes were compared using validated indexes: the volume ratio (VR), common and additional volumes (CV and AV), volume overlap (VO) and Dice similarity coefficient (DSC). A second delineation of the same three cases was performed after discussion of the slice results and the choice of shared guidelines to evaluate homogenization. A comparative analysis of the indexes before and after discussion was conducted using the Wilcoxon test for paired samples. A p-value less than 0.05 was considered to indicate statistical significance. Results The indexes were not improved in case 1, for which the inter-observer agreement was considered good after the first comparison (DSC = 0.83±0.06). In case 2, the second comparison showed homogenization of the CTV delineation with a significant improvement in CV (81.4±11.7 vs. 88.6±10.26, respectively, p = 0.048), VO (0.41±0.09 vs. 0.47±0.07, respectively; p = 0.009) and DSC (0.58±0.09 vs. 0.63±0.07, respectively; p = 0.0098). In case 3, VR and AV were significantly improved: VR: 1.71(±0.6) vs. 1.34(±0.46), respectively, p = 0.0034; AV: 46.58(±14.50) vs. 38.08(±15.10), respectively, p = 0.0024. DSC was not improved, but it was already superior to 0.6 in the first comparison. Conclusion Our prospective work showed that a collaborative discussion about clinical cases and the choice of shared guidelines within an established framework improved the homogeneity of CTV delineation among the senior radiation oncologists in our region.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2016

OLIGOPELVIS – GETUG P07, a multicentre phase II trial of combined salvage radiotherapy and hormone therapy in oligometastatic pelvic node relapses of prostate cancer: Preplanned analysis of acute toxicity.

S. Supiot; G. Créhange; Xavier Buthaud; D. Pasquier; Ali Hasbini; Guy de Laroche; Pascal Pommier; Geneviève Loos; V. Beckendorf; P. Sargos; Emmanuel Rio; Loic Campion

173 Background: We explored the role of salvage pelvic radiotherapy combined with LH-RH agonists in pelvic oligometastatic patients (pts) detected by 18F-choline positron-emission tomography (FCH-PET) imaging in biochemically relapsing prostate cancer patients following radical therapy. We report a preplanned analysis of acute toxicity and quality of life after the first 20 pts. Methods: Biochemically relapsing prostate cancer pts with 1-5 FCH-PET positive oligometastatic pelvic lymph nodes received high-dose image-guided intensity-modulated radiation therapy (RT: pelvic lymph nodes 54 Gy, 30 f; FCH-PET-positive lymph nodes 66 Gy, 30 f; prostate bed 66 Gy, 33 f; if FCH-PET-positive prostate bed relapse 72 Gy, 36 f) combined with 6 months LH-RH agonists. Primary objective was biochemical-clinical failure-free survival. After the first 20 pts, a preplanned analysis of toxicity at 1 months after RT completion was conducted. Stopping criteria were more than 10 or 2 pts experiencing grade 2 or 3 toxicity respe...


Radiation Oncology | 2016

Accelerated partial breast irradiation using robotic radiotherapy: a dosimetric comparison with tomotherapy and three-dimensional conformal radiotherapy.

Erwann Rault; T. Lacornerie; Hong-Phuong Dang; Frederik Crop; E. Lartigau; Nick Reynaert; D. Pasquier


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2004

MRI simulation for conformal radiation therapy of prostate cancer

D. Pasquier; G. Palos; Bernard Castelain; E. Lartigau; Jean Rousseau


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2016

Radiation Therapy for Extracranial Hemangiopericytoma/Solitary Fibrous Tumor: A Study From the Rare Cancer Network

Marco Krengli; B. De Bari; S. Villa; Johannes H.A.M. Kaanders; S. Torrente; D. Pasquier; J.O. Thariat; L. Myroslav; C.V. Sole; H.F. Dincbas; J.Y. Habboush; Thomas Zilli; T. Dragan; K. Khanfir; G. Ugurluer; T. Cena


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2015

Robotic SBRT for Locally Advanced Prostate Cancer Recurrence Following Radiation Therapy: Preliminary Results of a Single Institution

Thomas Leroy; T. Lacornerie; P. Nickers; E. Lartigau; D. Pasquier


Cancer Radiotherapie | 2016

Fiduciels intraprostatiques dans le cadre de la radiothérapie stéréotaxique du cancer de la prostate

A. Cordoba; D. Pasquier; P. Nickers; T. Lacornerie; E. Lartigau

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E. Lartigau

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Gilles Calais

François Rabelais University

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E. Lartigau

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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