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Dive into the research topics where Françoise Flamant is active.

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Featured researches published by Françoise Flamant.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2005

Treatment of Nonmetastatic Rhabdomyosarcoma in Childhood and Adolescence: Third Study of the International Society of Paediatric Oncology—SIOP Malignant Mesenchymal Tumor 89

Michael C. Stevens; Annie Rey; Nathalie Bouvet; Caroline Ellershaw; Françoise Flamant; Jean Louis Habrand; H. Basil Marsden; Hélène Martelli; José Sanchez de Toledo; Richard D. Spicer; David Spooner; Marie José Terrier-Lacombe; Adrian van Unnik; Odile Oberlin

PURPOSE To improve outcome for children with nonmetastatic rhabdomyosarcoma and to reduce systematic use of local therapy. PATIENTS AND METHODS Five hundred three previously untreated patients aged from birth to 18 years, recruited between 1989 and 1995, were allocated to one of six treatment schedules by site and stage. RESULTS Five-year overall survival (OS) and event-free survival (EFS) were 71% and 57%, respectively. Primary site, T-stage, and pathologic subtype were independent factors in predicting OS by multivariate analysis. Differences between EFS and OS reflected local treatment strategy and successful re-treatment for some patients after relapse. Patients with genitourinary nonbladder prostate tumors had the most favorable outcome (5-year OS, 94%): the majority were boys with paratesticular tumors treated successfully without alkylating agents. Patients with stage III disease treated with a novel six-drug combination showed improved survival compared with the Malignant Mesenchymal Tumor 84 study (MMT 84; 5-year OS, 60% v 42%, respectively). OS was not significantly better than that achieved in the previous MMT 84 study, but 49% of survivors were cured without significant local therapy. CONCLUSION Selective avoidance of local therapy is justified in some patients, though further work is required to prospectively identify those for whom this is most applicable. Exclusion of alkylating agents is justified for the most favorable subset of patients. The value of the new six-drug chemotherapy combination is being evaluated further in a randomized study (MMT 95).


European Journal of Cancer | 1998

Treatment of non-metastatic rhabdomyosarcomas in childhood and adolescence. Results of the second study of the International Society of Paediatric Oncology: MMT84

Françoise Flamant; Chantal Rodary; Annie Rey; M.-T. Praquin; D. Sommelet; Erica Quintana; S. Theobald; Maud Brunat-Mentigny; Jacques Otten; P.A. Voûte; Jean-Louis Habrand; Hélène Martelli; A. Barrett; M.J. Terrier-Lacombe; Odile Oberlin

The second International Society of Paediatric Oncology (SIOP) study for rhabdomyosarcoma (MMT84) had several goals. The two principal aims were: (1) to improve the survival of children with rhabdomyosarcoma; and (2) to reduce the late effects from therapy by restricting the indications for surgery and/or radiotherapy after good response to initial chemotherapy. A further aim was to investigate the role of high-dose chemotherapy in young patients with parameningeal primary tumours. 186 previously untreated eligible patients entered the study. Patients with completely resected primary tumour received three courses of IVA (ifosfamide, vincristine and actinomycin D). Patients with incompletely resected tumour received six to 10 courses of IVA according to stage. Patients achieving complete remission with chemotherapy alone did not usually receive radiotherapy or undergo extensive surgery, but patients remaining in partial remission received local therapy with surgery and/or radiotherapy. Only patients over 5 years of age with parameningeal disease and patients over 12 years with tumours at any site were given systematic irradiation. Complete remission was achieved in 91% (170/186) of all patients. With a median follow-up of 8 years, the 5-year overall survival was 68% (+/- 3% standard error of the mean (SEM) and the 5-year event-free survival 53% (+/- 4% SEM). These results show an improvement over previous SIOP study (RMS75) in which survival was 52% and event-free survival was 47%. Among the 54 patients who exhibited isolated local relapse, 35% (19/54) survived in further remission longer than 2 years after retreatment, including local therapy (surgery +/- radiotherapy). Analysis of the overall burden of therapy received by all surviving children (including primary treatment and treatment for relapse if required) showed that 24% (28/116) were treated by limited surgery followed by three courses of IVA, 29% (34/116) were treated by chemotherapy alone (after initial biopsy) and 13% (15/116) received chemotherapy plus conservative local treatment (limited surgery or radiotherapy for residual disease). Only 34% (39/116) received intensive local therapy defined as radical wide field radiotherapy or radical surgery or both. Compared with the results obtained in the previous SIOP study, treatment in MMT84 was based on response to initial chemotherapy and, despite an overall reduction of the use of local therapy, significantly improved survival for patients with non-metastatic disease. This trial, also for the first time, provides evidence that retreatment after local relapse can achieve long-term second remissions.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1989

Male gonadal function after chemotherapy for solid tumors in childhood.

F Aubier; Françoise Flamant; R Brauner; J M Caillaud; J M Chaussain; J. Lemerle

The testicular function of 30 adolescent or adult males having undergone polychemotherapy in childhood was assessed by means of a spermogram or testicular biopsy. At the time of examination, the patients were pubertal and had completed chemotherapy between 1 and 20 years previously (mean, 9 years). All patients who were prepubertal or intrapubertal at the time of treatment achieved normal puberty with normal growth. Twenty patients presented with azoospermia and/or severe disturbances in the germinal line on biopsy. This series confirms the toxicity of alkylating agents, in particular that of the mechlorethamine, vincristine, procarbazine, and prednisone combination (MOPP) and that of cyclophosphamide (CPM). However, dactinomycin, vinblastine, and vincristine did not appear to have a toxic effect on spermatogenesis. The prepubertal state did not protect the gonads of 19 patients who were prepubertal at diagnosis: 12 are now sterile as a result of the treatment. An increase in basal follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) levels gives a good indication of testicular damage, although normal levels do not rule out the possibility of azoospermia.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1999

Conservative Treatment for Girls With Nonmetastatic Rhabdomyosarcoma of the Genital Tract: A Report From the Study Committee of the International Society of Pediatric Oncology

Hélène Martelli; Odile Oberlin; Annie Rey; Jan Godzinski; Richard D. Spicer; Nathalie Bouvet; Christine Haie-Meder; Marie-Josée Terrier-Lacombe; José Sanchez de Toledo; David Spooner; Danielle Sommelet; Françoise Flamant; Michael C. Stevens

PURPOSE To report the results of a conservative multimodal approach in girls with nonmetastatic rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) of the genital tract, treated in International Society of Pediatric Oncology (SIOP) Malignant Mesenchymal Tumors 84 and 89 protocols. PATIENTS AND METHODS From 1984 to 1994, 38 girls with RMS of the genital tract (vulva, vagina, uterus) were treated in SIOP protocols. With the exception of patients with rare small tumors, which were resected at the start of the studies, all patients received initial chemotherapy (CHT) (ifosfamide, vincristine, and actinomycin D). Local treatment including surgery, brachytherapy (BT), and external-beam radiotherapy (ERT) was given only to girls who did not achieve complete remission (CR) with CHT or who subsequently relapsed. RESULTS The primary tumor originated in the vulva or vagina in 27 girls and in the uterus in 11. The overall survival rate (+/- SE) was 91% +/- 6% at 5 years, and the event-free survival rate was 78% +/- 7%. At a median follow-up of 5 years, 30 girls were alive and in first CR and five were alive and in second CR. Four patients treated with complete resection of the tumor at diagnosis received less CHT. Thirteen patients were treated with CHT alone. In 17 patients, local treatment was necessary to achieve complete local control, for a residual mass after initial CHT (10 patients), for viable tumor on biopsy (three patients), or for local relapse (four patients). The local treatment used was radiotherapy (RT) (ERT in three patients, BT in seven), radical surgery with uterine ablation (three patients), RT and radical surgery (three patients), and conservative surgery with RT (one patient). CONCLUSION Girls with nonmetastatic RMS of the genital tract have an excellent prognosis. We found no difference in outcome between uterine and vulvovaginal RMS. Local treatment does not seem necessary in patients who have a complete response to CHT. When a local treatment is needed, BT may be an alternative to radical surgery or ERT.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1989

Hemorrhagic cystitis following high-dose chemotherapy and bone marrow transplantation in children with malignancies: incidence, clinical course, and outcome.

Laurence Brugières; Olivier Hartmann; J P Travagli; E Benhamou; Jose Luis Pico; D Valteau; Chantal Kalifa; Catherine Patte; Françoise Flamant; J. Lemerle

Two hundred ninety-one courses of high-dose chemotherapy (HDC) with bone marrow transplantation (BMT) in children with malignancies were reviewed in order to assess the incidence, clinical course, outcome, and predisposing factors of hemorrhagic cystitis. Hemorrhagic cystitis occurred in 19 HDC courses (6.5%). Three patients had grade I hematuria linked to thrombopenia, nine had grade II hematuria despite platelet levels greater than 50 x 10(9)/L, and seven had grade III hematuria with clots and bladder obstruction. Severe complications occurred in grade III patients, but no deaths were directly linked to the cystitis. Fourteen patients recovered within two to 120 days of onset. The other patients died before the cystitis resolved, either of a relapse of the malignancy or of infection. Predisposing factors were age (increased incidence in older children), conditioning regimen containing cyclophosphamide, previous vesical irradiation, association with prolonged aplasia, and hepatic complications. The role of busulfan was also probable. No viral agent was found.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1988

Juvenile granulosa cell tumor of the ovary in children: a clinical study of 15 cases.

G Vassal; Françoise Flamant; J M Caillaud; F Demeocq; C Nihoul-Fekete; J Lemerle

Juvenile granulosa cell tumor (JGCT) in children accounted for 12% of all ovarian tumors treated in the Institut Gustave-Roussy (IGR) Pediatric Department from 1967 to 1985. The median age of the 15 girls was 8 years 7 months (range, 22 months to 15 years 7 months). Precocious pseudopuberty was present in six of the seven girls under 8 years. Of the other seven girls, one developed virilization symptoms. Surgery was the first treatment in each case. According to the Wollner classification, there were six stage I, one stage II, six stage III (including four ruptured tumors), and one stage IV JGCT cases. One patient was not available for staging. An adjuvant treatment (five chemotherapy and one radiotherapy combined with chemotherapy) was administered to six patients. Eleven girls are alive and free of disease, with a median follow-up of 6 years (range, 2 to 18 years). Four girls relapsed 6 to 17 months after surgery and died. Two of these relapses occurred in bone. The prognosis for JGCT in children is favorable for the lower stages when treated with surgery, but the best treatment for extensive and recurrent disease has yet to be determined.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1993

RADIOTHERAPY AFTER OVARIAN TRANSPOSITION: OVARIAN FUNCTION AND FERTILITY PRESERVATION

Christine Haie-Meder; N. Mlika-Cabanne; Guy Michel; E. Briot; A. Gerbaulet; C. Lhomme; Jean-Marc Cosset; D. Sarrazin; Françoise Flamant; M. Hayatu

The outcome of ovarian function preservation and fertility after ovarian transposition was examined in women treated for cancer. Of 134 patients, 126 were treated with radiotherapy and 72 with chemotherapy. In a multivariate analysis, three factors appeared to be prognostic of ovarian castration: the age over 25, MOPP chemotherapy and a total dose to the ovaries higher than 5 Gy. The incidence of birth was lower in the general population but no abnormality was observed.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1986

High-dose busulfan and cyclophosphamide with autologous bone marrow transplantation support in advanced malignancies in children: a phase II study.

Olivier Hartmann; E Benhamou; F Beaujean; Jose Luis Pico; Chantal Kalifa; Catherine Patte; Françoise Flamant; J Lemerle

Twenty children with advanced, nonleukemic malignancies entered a phase II study of high-dose busulfan-cyclophosphamide followed by bone marrow transplantation (BMT). All had disease refractory to conventional and/or high-dose chemotherapy (HDC). There were ten neuroblastoma patients, six non-Hodgkins lymphoma, three Ewings sarcoma, and one rhabdomyosarcoma. Eight had primarily resistant disease, ten were in second progressive relapse, and two in third progressive relapse. One patient was not evaluable for response. Among the 19 evaluable patients the responses observed were complete response (CR), seven; partial response (PR), three; objective effect, five; and failure, four. However, survival was poor: 15 patients died, two are alive with disease, and three are alive with no evidence of disease (NED) at 8+, 11+, 14+ months post-BMT. Toxicity was high but considered as acceptable, taking into account the terminal state of these patients. Seven treatment-related deaths were observed. This combination therapy proved to be highly effective, with a response rate of 50%, and its value for eradication of residual disease in less advanced patients should be investigated.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1991

Twenty years experience of interstitial iridium brachytherapy in the management of soft tissue sarcomas

Jean-Louis Habrand; A. Gerbaulet; M.H. Pejovic; G. Contesso; S. Durand; C. Haie; J Genin; G. Schwaab; Françoise Flamant; M. Albano; D. Sarrazin; Marc Spielmann; D. Chassagne

From February 1968 to February 1988, 50 patients above 10 years of age with a soft tissue sarcoma were treated with interstitial brachytherapy, combined with a wide excision. After pathologic review, 48 were included in the final analysis. A pathological grading was made possible in 41, which showed a majority of high grades (2 + 3 = 86%). Patients presented mainly with small (less than 5 cm: 36) or mid-size lesions (greater than 5 cm: 12). The tumor was located in the limbs (32), trunk (9), and head and neck (7). Four patients had metastases at the time of treatment. Brachytherapy was part of the initial treatment in 22 cases, and of a salvage procedure after previous excision(s) combined or not with another form of treatment in 26. A uniform technique of iridium 192 wires after-loaded in plastic tubing was used. Sixty Gy median doses were delivered with brachytherapy alone (44) or combined with external beam (4). Sixteen patients also received an adjuvant chemotherapy. Follow up ranged from 16 months to 20 years (median 82 months). At the time of analysis, two patients (4%) only had failed in the irradiated volume, but the marginal failures rate (14:31%) was unexpectedly high. Seven of the patients who failed (43%) were salvaged by a second similar procedure. The 5-year survival was 62% in non-previously treated patients and 56.5% in previously treated ones (pNS). By multivariate analysis, only the tumor location appeared predictive of LF (p less than 0.01), which in turn was strongly correlated with the metastatic outcome (p less than 0.01). Necroses were observed in 17 cases (35%) and associated with a benign course in most of them. High dose brachytherapy combined with conservative surgery is highly effective in small and mid-size soft tissue sarcomas located in the extremities and head and neck, whereas in trunk and in recurrent tumors, the adjunction of large fields external radiotherapy and/or possibly polychemotherapy appears necessary.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1987

Repeated high-dose chemotherapy followed by purged autologous bone marrow transplantation as consolidation therapy in metastatic neuroblastoma.

Olivier Hartmann; E Benhamou; F Beaujean; Chantal Kalifa; Odile Lejars; Catherine Patte; C Behard; Françoise Flamant; A Thyss; A Deville

Among 62 children over 1 year of age at diagnosis, who were treated for stage IV neuroblastoma, 33 entered complete remission (CR) or good partial remission (GPR) after conventional therapy and received high-dose chemotherapy (HDC) with in vitro purged autologous bone marrow transplantation (ABMT) as consolidation therapy. The HDC was a combination of carmustine (BCNU), teniposide (VM-26), and melphalan. Thirty-three patients received one course of this regimen, and 18 received two courses. At present, 16 of the 33 grafted patients are alive in continuous CR, with a median follow-up of 28 months. Toxicity of this regimen was tolerable, principally marked by bone marrow depression and gastrointestinal (GI) tract complications. Four complication-related deaths were observed. Relapse post-ABMT occurred most often in the bone marrow. Under this treatment, actuarial disease-free survival is improved compared with that observed under conventional therapy.

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J. Lemerle

Institut Gustave Roussy

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Annie Rey

Institut Gustave Roussy

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P. A. Voute

Boston Children's Hospital

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A. Gerbaulet

Institut Gustave Roussy

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D. Sarrazin

Institut Gustave Roussy

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