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Featured researches published by Didier Frappaz.


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.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2001

Postoperative Chemotherapy Without Irradiation for Ependymoma in Children Under 5 Years of Age: A Multicenter Trial of the French Society of Pediatric Oncology

Jacques Grill; Marie-Cécile Le Deley; Danièle Gambarelli; Marie-Anne Raquin; Dominique Couanet; Alain Pierre-Kahn; Jean-Louis Habrand; François Doz; Didier Frappaz; Jean-Claude Gentet; Christine Edan; Pascal Chastagner; Chantal Kalifa

PURPOSE To evaluate a strategy that avoids radiotherapy in first-line treatment in children under 5 years of age with brain or posterior fossa ependymoma, by exclusively administering 16 months of adjuvant multiagent chemotherapy after surgery. PATIENTS AND METHODS Between June 1990 and October 1998, 73 children with ependymoma (82% with high-grade tumors) were enrolled onto this multicenter trial. Children received adjuvant conventional chemotherapy after surgery consisting of seven cycles of three courses alternating two drugs at each course (procarbazine and carboplatin, etoposide and cisplatin, vincristine and cyclophosphamide) over a year and a half. Systematic irradiation was not envisaged at the end of chemotherapy. In the event of relapse or progression, salvage treatment consisted of a second surgical procedure followed by local irradiation with or without second-line chemotherapy. RESULTS Conventional chemotherapy was well tolerated and could be administered in outpatient clinics. No radiologically documented response to chemotherapy more than 50% was observed. With a median follow-up of 4.7 years (range, 5 months to 8 years), the 4-year progression-free survival rate in this series was 22% (95% confidence interval [CI], 13% to 43%) and the overall survival rate was 59% (95% CI, 47% to 71%). Overall, 40% (95% CI, 29% to 51%) of the patients were alive having never received radiotherapy 2 years after the initiation of chemotherapy and 23% (95% CI, 14% to 35%) were still alive at 4 years without recourse to this modality. In the multivariate analysis, the two factors associated with a favorable outcome were a supratentorial tumor location (P =.0004) and complete surgery (P =.0009). Overall survival at 4 years was 74% (95% CI, 59% to 86%) for the patients in whom resection was radiologically complete and 35% (95% CI, 18% to 56%) for the patients with incomplete resection. CONCLUSION A significant proportion of children with ependymoma can avoid radiotherapy with prolonged adjuvant chemotherapy. Deferring irradiation at the time of relapse did not compromise overall survival of the entire patient population.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1997

N-Myc gene amplification is a major prognostic factor in localized neuroblastoma: results of the French NBL 90 study. Neuroblastoma Study Group of the Société Francaise d'Oncologie Pédiatrique.

Hervé Rubie; Olivier Hartmann; Jean Michon; Didier Frappaz; Carole Coze; Pascal Chastagner; M C Baranzelli; Dominique Plantaz; H Avet-Loiseau; Jean Bénard; Olivier Delattre; M Favrot; M C Peyroulet; A Thyss; Yves Perel; Christophe Bergeron; B Courbon-Collet; J P Vannier; J. Lemerle; D Sommelet

PURPOSE To assess the relevance of N-Myc gene amplification (NMA) as a prognostic factor in localized neuroblastoma (NB) and to evaluate whether less intensive adjuvant treatment is advisable in infants without NMA. PATIENTS AND METHODS Assessment of NBs included clinical and imaging data to allow tumor-node-metastasis (TNM) staging, biologic determinations (N-Myc gene analysis), and standard histology and work-up to eliminate metastatic spread (metaiodobenzylguanidine [MIBG] scintigraphy and extensive bone marrow staging). Resectability was defined according to imaging findings. Chemotherapy was indicated in children older than 1 year at diagnosis who had postoperative residual disease or lymph node (LN) involvement, in infants with NMA, or as primary treatment in children with an unresectable NB, including dumbbell tumors. Radiotherapy was recommended in children older than 1 who presented with persistent gross residual disease at the end of therapy. RESULTS Between 1990 and 1994, 316 consecutive children who presented with a localized NB were registered in the NBL 90 study. The median age was 12 months, and 42 patients had dumbbell tumors (13%). NMA was found in 22 of 225 assessable children (10%) and correlated with adverse prognostic indicators such as age older than 1 year, an abdominal primary tumor, a large tumor (T3), and unresectability. Among 186 children who had primary excision, five died of surgery-related complications. Primary chemotherapy was given to 130 patients, which allowed removal of the tumor in all but four. The 5-year overall survival (OS) and event-free survival (EFS) rates were, respectively, 91% and 84% with a median follow-up time of 36 months. The outcome of infants and older children was similar (P = .2). EFS of patients with resectable tumors was slightly better than with unresectable primary tumors (EFS, 89% v 78%; P = .02). In dumbbell NBs, neurologic recovery was achieved in 74% of cases that presented with symptoms, and initial laminectomy was avoided in 75% of children. In a univariate analysis, large tumors, high neuron-specific enolase (NSE) and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) levels, positive LNs, macroscopic residue, and NMA adversely influenced outcome. In the multivariate analysis, NMA was the most powerful unfavorable predictive indicator: OS and EFS rates for these children were 36% and 32%, compared with 98% and 90% in nonamplified tumors (P < .001). CONCLUSION Our data confirm the overall good prognosis of localized NBs, even when unresectable. NMA is the most relevant adverse prognostic factor in localized NBs, and more intensive treatment should be investigated in these patients. Prospective studies of other biologic factors are warranted to tailor therapy more accurately. The EFS of children who underwent primary surgery was excellent, and further justifies elimination of adjuvant treatment provided they have no NMA. Despite the elimination of postoperative therapy, infants with non-NMA tumors have an excellent outcome, which suggests that initial chemotherapy can be further reduced in case of unresectable NBs.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1998

Multivariate analysis of risk factors in stage 4 neuroblastoma patients over the age of one year treated with megatherapy and stem-cell transplantation: a report from the European Bone Marrow Transplantation Solid Tumor Registry.

Ruth Ladenstein; Thierry Philip; Christine Lasset; Olivier Hartmann; Alberto Garaventa; R. Pinkerton; Jean Michon; J. Pritchard; Thomas Klingebiel; B. Kremens; Andrew D.J. Pearson; Carole Coze; P. Paolucci; Didier Frappaz; Helmut Gadner; F. Chauvin

PURPOSE The European Bone Marrow Transplantation (EBMT) Solid Tumor Registry (STR) contains detailed information on children with advanced neuroblastoma who, after standard-dose induction chemotherapy and surgery, received myeloablative megatherapy (MGT) followed by stem-cell transplantation (SCT). This data base was analyzed to identify factors that predict event-free survival (EFS). PATIENTS AND METHODS Eligibility criteria were stage IV neuroblastoma, age over 1 year at diagnosis, and no relapse before MGT/SCT. Between February 1978 and July 1992, 549 patients were registered by 36 European transplant centers. The median age at diagnosis was 36 months (range, 13 to 216 months) and the male-female ratio was 1:45. Before MGT, 157 patients were in complete remission (CR), 156 in very good partial remission (VGPR), and 208 in partial remission (PR), whereas 24 had had only a minor response (MR). One hundred ten of 546 patients had undergone two successive MGT procedures. The median observation time was 60 months (range, 12 to 187 months). RESULTS Actuarial EFS is 26% at 5 years. Multivariate analysis by the Cox proportional hazards regression model included 529 patients with complete data sets. After adjustment for treatment duration before MGT and double MGT procedures, two adverse, independent risk factors that influenced EFS were identified: (1) persisting skeletal lesions before MGT as defined by technetium (99TC) scans and/or meta-iodobenzylguanidine (mIBG) scans (P = .004) and (2) persisting bone marrow involvement before MGT (P = .03). CONCLUSION After induction treatment, persisting skeletal disease as defined above and persisting bone marrow involvement may be predictive of a particularly poor outcome. Physicians may consider this an additional important tool to decide the patients management.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2003

Progression-Free Survival in Children With Optic Pathway Tumors: Dependence on Age and the Quality of the Response to Chemotherapy—Results of the First French Prospective Study for the French Society of Pediatric Oncology

Veronique Laithier; Jacques Grill; Marie-Cécile Le Deley; Marie-Madeleine Ruchoux; Dominique Couanet; François Doz; Fabienne Pichon; Hervé Rubie; Didier Frappaz; Jean-Paul Vannier; Annie Babin-Boilletot; Eric Sariban; Pascal Chastagner; Michel Zerah; Marie-Anne Raquin; Olivier Hartmann; Chantal Kalifa

PURPOSE To evaluate a strategy aimed at avoiding radiotherapy during first-line treatment of children with progressive optic pathway tumors (OPT), by exclusively administering multiagent chemotherapy during 16 months. PATIENTS AND METHODS Between 1990 and 1998, 85 children with progressive OPT were enrolled onto this multicenter nationwide trial. Chemotherapy alternating procarbazine plus carboplatin, etoposide plus cisplatin, and vincristine plus cyclophosphamide was given every 3 weeks. At the time of relapse or progression, second-line chemotherapy was authorized before recourse to radiotherapy. RESULTS Objective response rate (partial response [PR] + complete response [CR]) to chemotherapy was 42%. Five-year progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival rates were 34% and 89%, respectively. The 5-year radiotherapy-free survival rate was 61%. In the multivariate analysis of the 85 patients that entered onto the study, factors associated with the risk of disease progression were age younger than 1 year at diagnosis (P =.047) and absence of neurofibromatosis type 1 (P =.035). In the multivariate analysis of the 74 patients that remained on study after the first cycle of chemotherapy, factors associated with the risk of disease progression were age younger than 1 year at diagnosis (P =.0053) and no objective response to chemotherapy (P =.0029). Three-year PFS was 44% in infants < or = 1 year versus 66% in children older than 1 year. Three-year PFS was 53% in the absence of an objective response to chemotherapy versus 68% after a PR or CR. CONCLUSION A significant proportion of children with OPT can avoid radiotherapy after prolonged chemotherapy. Deferring irradiation with chemotherapy protocols did not compromise overall survival of the entire population or visual function.


Neuro-oncology | 2011

Innovative Therapies for Children with Cancer pediatric phase I study of erlotinib in brainstem glioma and relapsing/refractory brain tumors

Birgit Geoerger; Darren Hargrave; Fabienne Thomas; Anna Ndiaye; Didier Frappaz; Felipe Andreiuolo; Pascale Varlet; Isabelle Aerts; Riccardo Riccardi; T Jaspan; Etienne Chatelut; Marie-Cécile Le Deley; Xavier Paoletti; Christian Saint-Rose; Pierre Leblond; Bruce Morland; Jean-Claude Gentet; Valérie Méresse; Gilles Vassal

This multicenter phase I study aimed to establish the recommended dose (RD) of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) inhibitor erlotinib, given as monotherapy or with radiotherapy to children with malignant brain tumors. Group 1 included patients with refractory or relapsing brain tumors receiving erlotinib alone, and group 2 included newly diagnosed patients with brainstem gliomas receiving radiotherapy and erlotinib. A conventional 3 + 3 dose escalation and a continual reassessment method, respectively, were utilized in 4 dose levels: 75, 100, 125, and 150 mg/m² per day. Fifty-one children were enrolled (30 and 21, respectively); 50 received treatment. The RD of erlotinib was 125 mg/m² per day as monotherapy or in combination with radiotherapy. Overall, 230 adverse events in 44 patients were possibly treatment related (216, grades 1 and 2; 9, grade 3; 1, grade 4; 4, grade 5). Dermatologic and neurologic symptoms were common; intratumoral hemorrhage was confirmed in 3 patients. In group 1, 8 of 29 patients (28%) had stable disease with tumor regression approaching 50% in a malignant glioma and an anaplastic oligoastrocytoma. In group 2, overall survival was 12.0 months. EGFR overexpression by immunohistochemistry was found in 17 of 38 (45%) tumor samples analyzed, with a partial gain of 7p11.2 in 1 glioblastoma; phosphate and tensin homolog loss was frequent in brainstem glioma (15 of 19). Mean (95% CI) apparent clearance and volume of distribution for erlotinib were 4.0 L/h (3.4-4.5 L/h) and 98.6 L (69.8-127.0 L), respectively, and were independent of the dose level; mean half-life was 16.6 hours. Thus, erlotinib 125 mg/m² per day has an acceptable tolerability profile in pediatric patients with brain tumors and can be combined with radiotherapy.


Neuro-oncology | 2010

Oncological patterns of care and outcome for 952 patients with newly diagnosed glioblastoma in 2004

Luc Bauchet; Hélène Mathieu-Daudé; Pascale Fabbro-Peray; Valérie Rigau; Michel Fabbro; Olivier Chinot; Loreleï Pallusseau; Charlotte Carnin; Karl Lainé; Aline Schlama; Agnes Thiebaut; Maria Cristina Patru; Fabienne Bauchet; Martine Lionnet; Michel Wager; Thierry Faillot; Luc Taillandier; Dominique Figarella-Branger; Laurent Capelle; Hugues Loiseau; Didier Frappaz; Chantal Campello; Christine Kerr; Hugues Duffau; Monique Reme-Saumon; Brigitte Trétarre; Jean-Pierre Daurès; Dominique Henin; François Labrousse; Philippe Menei

This report, an audit requested by the French government, describes oncological patterns of care, prognostic factors, and survival for patients with newly diagnosed and histologically confirmed glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) in France. The French Brain Tumor DataBase, which is a national multidisciplinary (neurosurgeons, neuropathologists, radiotherapists, neurooncologists, epidemiologists, and biostatisticians) network, prospectively collected initial data for the cases of GBM in 2004, and a specific data card was used to retrospectively collect data on the management and follow-up care of these patients between January 1, 2004, and December 1, 2006. We recorded 952 cases of GBM (male/female ratio 1.6, median age 63.9 years, mean preoperative Karnofsky performance status [KPS] 79). Surgery consisted of resection (RS; n = 541) and biopsy (n = 411); 180 patients did not have subsequent oncological treatment. After surgery, first-line treatment (n = 772) consisted of radiotherapy (RT) and temozolomide (TMZ) concomitant +/- adjuvant in 314 patients, RT alone in 236 patients, chemotherapy (CT) alone in 157 patients, and other treatment modalities in 65 patients. Median overall survival was 286 days (95% CI, 266-314) and was significantly affected by age, KPS, and tumor location. Median survival (days, 95% CI) associated with these main strategies, when analyzed by a surgical group, were as follows: RS + RT-TMZ((n=224)): 476 (441-506), biopsy + RT-TMZ((n=90)): 329 (301-413), RS + RT((n=147)): 363 (331-431), biopsy + RT((n=89)): 178 (153-237), RS + CT((n=61)): 245 (190-361), biopsy + CT((n=96)): 244 (198-280), and biopsy only((n=118)): 55 (46-71). This study illustrates the usefulness of a national brain tumor database. To our knowledge, this work is the largest report of recent GBM management in Europe.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2005

Standard-Risk Medulloblastoma Treated by Adjuvant Chemotherapy Followed by Reduced-Dose Craniospinal Radiation Therapy: A French Society of Pediatric Oncology Study

V. Oyharcabal-Bourden; Chantal Kalifa; Jean-Claude Gentet; Didier Frappaz; Christine Edan; Pascal Chastagner; Eric Sariban; A. Pagnier; A. Babin; Fabienne Pichon; S. Neuenschwander; M. Vinchon; D. Bours; Véronique Mosseri; C. Le Gales; M. Ruchoux; C. Carrie; François Doz

OBJECTIVE The primary objective of this study was to decrease the late effects of prophylactic radiation without reducing survival in standard-risk childhood medulloblastoma. PATIENTS AND METHODS Inclusion criteria were as follows: children between the ages of 3 and 18 years with total or subtotal tumor resection, no metastasis, and negative postoperative lumbar puncture CSF cytology. Two courses of eight drugs in 1 day followed by two courses of etoposide plus carboplatin (500 and 800 mg/m(2) per course, respectively) were administered after surgery. Radiation therapy had to begin 90 days after surgery. Delivered doses were 55 Gy to the posterior fossa and 25 Gy to the brain and spinal canal. RESULTS Between November 1991 and June 1998, 136 patients (median age, 8 years; median follow-up, 6.5 years) were included. The overall survival rate and 5-year recurrence-free survival rate were 73.8% +/- 7.6% and 64.8% +/- 8.1%, respectively. Radiologic review showed that 4% of patients were wrongly included. Review of radiotherapy technical files demonstrated a correlation between the presence of a major protocol deviation and treatment failure. The 5-year recurrence-free survival rate of patients included in this study with all optimal quality controls of histology, radiology, and radiotherapy was 71.8% +/- 10.5%. In terms of sequelae, 31% of patients required growth hormone replacement therapy and 25% required special schooling. CONCLUSION Reduced-dose craniospinal radiation therapy can be proposed in standard-risk medulloblastoma provided staging and radiation therapy are performed under optimal conditions.


Journal of Negative Results in Biomedicine | 2011

Histopathological grading of pediatric ependymoma: reproducibility and clinical relevance in European trial cohorts

David W. Ellison; Mehmet Kocak; Dominique Figarella-Branger; Giangaspero Felice; Godfraind Catherine; Torsten Pietsch; Didier Frappaz; Maura Massimino; Jacques Grill; James M. Boyett; Richard Grundy

BackgroundHistopathological grading of ependymoma has been controversial with respect to its reproducibility and clinical significance. In a 3-phase study, we reviewed the pathology of 229 intracranial ependymomas from European trial cohorts of infants (2 trials - SFOP/CNS9204) and older children (2 trials - AIEOP/CNS9904) to assess both diagnostic concordance among five neuropathologists and the prognostic utility of histopathological variables, particularly tumor grading.ResultsIn phase 1, using WHO criteria and without first discussing any issue related to grading ependymomas, pathologists assessed and independently graded ependymomas from 3 of 4 trial cohorts. Diagnosis of grade II ependymoma was less frequent than grade III, a difference that increased when one cohort (CNS9204) was reassessed in phase 2, during which the pathologists discussed ependymoma grading, jointly reviewed all CNS9204 tumors, and defined a novel grading system based on the WHO classification. In phase 3, repeat independent review of two cohorts (SFOP/CNS9904) using the novel system was associated with a substantial increase in concordance on grading. Extent of tumor resection was significantly associated with progression-free survival (PFS) in SFOP and AIEOP, but not in CNS9204 and CNS9904. Strength of consensus on grade was significantly associated with PFS in only one trial cohort (AIEOP). Consensus on the scoring of individual histopathological features (necrosis, angiogenesis, cell density, and mitotic activity) correlated with PFS in AIEOP, but in no other trial.ConclusionsWe conclude that concordance on grading ependymomas can be improved by using a more prescribed scheme based on the WHO classification. Unfortunately, this appears to have utility in limited clinical settings.


Neuro-oncology | 2013

SIOP CNS GCT 96: final report of outcome of a prospective, multinational nonrandomized trial for children and adults with intracranial germinoma, comparing craniospinal irradiation alone with chemotherapy followed by focal primary site irradiation for patients with localized disease

Gabriele Calaminus; Rolf Dieter Kortmann; Jennifer Worch; James Nicholson; Claire Alapetite; Maria Luisa Garrè; Catherine Patte; Umberto Ricardi; Frank Saran; Didier Frappaz

BACKGROUND We conducted a nonrandomized international study for intracranial germinoma that compared chemotherapy followed by local radiotherapy with reduced-dose craniospinal irradiation (CSI) alone, to determine whether the combined treatment regimen produced equivalent outcome and avoided irradiation beyond the primary tumor site(s). METHODS Patients with localized germinoma received either CSI or 2 courses of carboplatin and etoposide alternating with etoposide and ifosfamide, followed by local radiotherapy. Metastatic patients received CSI with focal boosts to primary tumor and metastatic sites, with the option to be preceded with chemotherapy. RESULTS Patients with localized germinoma (n = 190) received either CSI alone (n = 125) or combined therapy (n = 65), demonstrating no differences in 5-year event-free or overall survival, but a difference in progression-free survival (0.97 ± 0.02 vs 0.88 ± 0.04; P = .04). Seven of 65 patients receiving combined treatment experienced relapse (6 with ventricular recurrence outside the primary radiotherapy field), and only 4 of 125 patients treated with CSI alone experienced relapse (all at the primary tumor site). Metastatic patients (n = 45) had 0.98 ± 0.023 event-free and overall survival. CONCLUSIONS Localized germinoma can be treated with reduced dose CSI alone or with chemotherapy and reduced-field radiotherapy. The pattern of relapse suggests inclusion of ventricles in the radiation field. Reduced-dose craniospinal radiation alone is effective in metastatic disease.

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C. Mottolese

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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A. Szathmari

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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