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European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2012

Respiratory complications after oesophagectomy for cancer do not affect disease-free survival

Thomas D'Annoville; Xavier Benoit D'Journo; D. Trousse; G. Brioude; Laetitia Dahan; Jean Francois Seitz; C. Doddoli; Pascal Thomas

OBJECTIVESnRecent studies have suggested that postoperative complications could have a potential negative effect on long-term outcome after oesophagectomy for cancer. Because respiratory failures represent the most frequent postoperative complication, we have investigated the prognostic impact of these complications on disease-free survival (DFS).nnnMETHODSnFrom a prospective single-institution database of 405 consecutive patients who underwent transthoracic oesophagectomy for cancer, we retrospectively analysed medical charts of all patients with microscopically complete resection (R0, n = 384 patients). Complications were graded according to the modified Clavien classification. Respiratory complications were defined as atelectasis, pneumonia or acute respiratory distress syndrome in the absence of early surgical complications. Patients with grade 5 (postoperative mortality, n = 43, 11%) were excluded from the analysis. The remaining 341 patients were analysed for estimation of DFS according to the Kaplan-Meier method. Logistic regression analysis was conducted to discriminate predictive factors affecting DFS.nnnRESULTSnAccording to the modified Clavien classification, postoperative complications rates were grade 0: 147 (44%), grade 1: 7 (2%), grade 2: 56 (16%), grade 3: 69 (20%) and grade 4: 62 (18%). Five-year DFS rates were not significantly different between grade 0 (no complication, 38%, n = 147) and other grades (grade 1, 2, 3 and 4 (64, 45, 56 and 48%, respectively)). Respiratory complications occurred in 107 patients (31%) and the 5-year DFS in this subgroup was 47% compared with 38% observed in grade 0 patients (P = 0.75). Clavien classification and respiratory complications did not come out in the univariate analysis of factors affecting DFS. On logistic regression, only two variables affected DFS: c-N stage and extracapular lymph node involvement.nnnCONCLUSIONSnWhen postoperative mortality is excluded, postoperative complications do not affect DFS in patients with complete resection. This deserves substantial information regarding the prognosis of subgroup of patients in critical situations where incrementing intensive care is debated.


PLOS ONE | 2014

MALDI-ToF mass spectrometry for the rapid diagnosis of cancerous lung nodules.

Fabienne Brégeon; G. Brioude; Florence De Dominicis; Thérèse Atieh; Xavier Benoit D'Journo; Christophe Flaudrops; Jean-Marc Rolain; Didier Raoult; Pascal Thomas

Recently, tissue-based methods for proteomic analysis have been used in clinical research and appear reliable for digestive, brain, lymphomatous, and lung cancers classification. However simple, tissue-based methods that couple signal analysis to tissue imaging are time consuming. To assess the reliability of a method involving rapid tissue preparation and analysis to discriminate cancerous from non-cancerous tissues, we tested 141 lung cancer/non-tumor pairs and 8 unique lung cancer samples among the stored frozen samples of 138 patients operated on during 2012. Samples were crushed in water, and 1.5 µl was spotted onto a steel target for analysis with the Microflex LT analyzer (Bruker Daltonics). Spectra were analyzed using ClinProTools software. A set of samples was used to generate a random classification model on the basis of a list of discriminant peaks sorted with the k-nearest neighbor genetic algorithm. The rest of the samples (nu200a=u200a43 cancerous and nu200a=u200a41 non-tumoral) was used to verify the classification capability and calculate the diagnostic performance indices relative to the histological diagnosis. The analysis found 53 m/z valid peaks, 40 of which were significantly different between cancerous and non-tumoral samples. The selected genetic algorithm model identified 20 potential peaks from the training set and had 98.81% recognition capability and 89.17% positive predictive value. In the blinded set, this method accurately discriminated the two classes with a sensitivity of 86.7% and a specificity of 95.1% for the cancer tissues and a sensitivity of 87.8% and a specificity of 95.3% for the non-tumor tissues. The second model generated to discriminate primary lung cancer from metastases was of lower quality. The reliability of MALDI-ToF analysis coupled with a very simple lung preparation procedure appears promising and should be tested in the operating room on fresh samples coupled with the pathological examination.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2017

Surgical therapy of thymic tumours with pleural involvement: an ESTS Thymic Working Group Project

Bernhard Moser; Elie Fadel; Dominique Fabre; Shaf Keshavjee; Marc de Perrot; Pascal Thomas; G. Brioude; Dirk Van Raemdonck; Sophie Viskens; Loic Lang-Lazdunski; Andrea Bille; Walter Weder; Wolfgang Jungraithmayr; Enrico Ruffini; Francesco Guerrera; David Gomez de Antonio; Moishe Liberman; Nuria Novoa; Marco Scarci; Stefan Janik; Walter Klepetko

Abstract OBJECTIVES: Surgery for thymic epithelial tumours (TETs) with pleural involvement is infrequently performed. Thus, the value of surgical therapy for primary or recurrent TETs with pleural involvement is not sufficiently defined yet. METHODS: Twelve institutions contributed retrospective data on 152 patients undergoing surgery (1977–2014) on behalf of the ESTS Thymic Working group. Outcome measures included overall (OS), cause-specific (CSS) and disease-free (DFS) survival as well as freedom from recurrence (FFR). RESULTS: In 70.4% of cases, pleural involvement was present at the time of primary intervention, whereas 29.6% had surgery for recurrent disease involving the pleura. Pleural involvement resulted from thymomas (88.8%) and thymic carcinomas (11.2%). Forty extrapleural pneumonectomies (EPPs), 23 total pleurectomies (TPs), and 88 local pleurectomies (LPs) were performed (completeness of resection in 76.8%). OS for the entire patient population at 1, 3, 5 and 10 years was 96.4%, 91.0%, 87.2% and 62.7%, respectively. There was no statistically significant difference regarding FFR and OS for patients with local or advanced disease undergoing EPP, TP or LP. Thymic carcinomas in comparison with thymomas had a negative impact on OS [hazard ratio 6.506, Pu2009=u20090.002], CSS and FFR. Incomplete resections predicted worse OS [hazard ratio 6.696, Pu2009=u20090.003]. CONCLUSIONS: Complete resection remains the mainstay of treatment for TETs with pleural involvement. Study populations treated with EPP, TP and LP had similar survival that may be factual as observed, but in the presence of selection bias, we can further conclude from the results that EPP, TP and LP are equally effective procedures. Procedural choice depends upon the extent of tumour distribution. EPPs, TPs and LPs performed within a multimodality setting seem to be efficient procedures for local control of disease, as they yield excellent results regarding OS, DFS, CSS and FFR.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Rapid Diagnosis of Lung Tumors, a Feasability Study Using Maldi-Tof Mass Spectrometry

G. Brioude; Fabienne Brégeon; D. Trousse; Christophe Flaudrops; Véronique Secq; Florence De Dominicis; Eric Chabrières; Xavier-Benoit D’journo; Didier Raoult

Objective Despite recent advances in imaging and core or endoscopic biopsies, a percentage of patients have a major lung resection without diagnosis. We aimed to assess the feasibility of a rapid tissue preparation/analysis to discriminate cancerous from non-cancerous lung tissue. Methods Fresh sample preparations were analyzed with the Microflex LTTM MALDI-TOF analyzer. Each main reference spectra (MSP) was consecutively included in a database. After definitive pathological diagnosis, each MSP was labeled as either cancerous or non-cancerous (normal, inflammatory, infectious nodules). A strategy was constructed based on the number of concordant responses of a mass spectrometry scoring algorithm. A 3-step evaluation included an internal and blind validation of a preliminary database (n = 182 reference spectra from the 100 first patients), followed by validation on a whole cohort database (n = 300 reference spectra from 159 patients). Diagnostic performance indicators were calculated. Results 127 cancerous and 173 non-cancerous samples (144 peripheral biopsies and 29 inflammatory or infectious lesions) were processed within 30 minutes after biopsy sampling. At the most discriminatory level, the samples were correctly classified with a sensitivity, specificity and global accuracy of 92.1%, 97.1% and 95%, respectively. Conclusions The feasibility of rapid MALDI-TOF analysis, coupled with a very simple lung preparation procedure, appears promising and should be tested in several surgical settings where rapid on-site evaluation of abnormal tissue is required. In the operating room, it appears promising in case of tumors with an uncertain preoperative diagnosis and should be tested as a complementary approach to frozen-biopsy analysis.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2016

Long-term outcome of open versus hybrid minimally invasive Ivor Lewis oesophagectomy: a propensity score matched study†

Philippe Rinieri; Moussa Ouattara; G. Brioude; Anderson Loundou; Henri De Lesquen; D. Trousse; C. Doddoli; Pascal Thomas; Xavier Benoit D’Journo

OBJECTIVES: It has been suggested that laparoscopic Ivor Lewis (IL) oesophagectomy reduces postoperative morbidity and mortality rates. However, data related to the long-term outcomes of this hybrid minimally invasive procedure are scarce. METHODS: All of the patients who had an IL oesophagectomy for cancer were extracted from a prospective database. Patients were matched one to one according to the surgical approach (laparoscopy versus laparotomy) and on the basis of a propensity score including eight variables: age, gender, American Society of Anaesthesiologists score, forced expiratory volume in 1 s, surgery (first-line treatment, after neoadjuvant treatment and salvage surgery), histology, location and pathological stage. The first end point was the assessment of the 5-year survival and disease-free survival rates. The secondary end points were R0 resection rate, number of resected lymph nodes (LNs) and patterns of recurrence. RESULTS: Over a 12-year period, 272 IL oesophagectomies were performed. A total of 140 patients were matched in two homogeneous groups: laparotomy (n = 70) and laparoscopy (n = 70). The 5-year overall survival and disease-free survival rates were 65% and 48% in laparotomy group and 73% and 51% in the laparoscopy group (P = 0.891; P = 0.912). R0 resection rates were, respectively, 93% vs 97% (P = 0.441). The number and distribution of resected LNs were similar between the groups except at the level of the celiac axis (P < 0.001). Depending on the surgical approach, the patterns of recurrence were similar in both groups. CONCLUSIONS: Laparoscopic IL oesophagectomy does not compromise the long-term oncological outcome compared to open IL oesophagectomy. The quality of the operations is similar for both techniques except for the number of resected LNs at the level of the celiac trunk. Further randomized controlled trials are necessary to confirm these results.


Revue des Maladies Respiratoires Actualités | 2017

Stratégie chirurgicale : quelles nouvelles techniques ? La chirurgie minimalement invasive (RATS/VATS). Les exérèses d’épargne parenchymateuse. Les parcours de soin accélérés

Lucile Gust; G. Brioude; N. Ghourchidian; Stephanie Dizier; Aude Charvet; D. Trousse; Xavier Benoit D’Journo; C. Doddoli; Marc Leone

Resume La chirurgie thoracique a beneficie de nombreuses innovations techniques au cours des dernieres decennies. En parallele les programmes de depistage permettent de diagnostiquer des cancers bronchiques primitifs a des stades plus precoces. Les pratiques chirurgicales se sont donc modifiees d’une part par la generalisation des voies mini-invasives, d’autre part par l’apparition des resections anatomiques infralobaires (segmentectomies) que l’on pourraient qualifier de « chirurgie de precision » qui apparaissent comme des alternatives valables a la lobectomie dans des situations definies, et enfin par la mise en place de parcours de soins acceleres et personnalises, parfois meme ambulatoires. L’objet de cette revue, sera de detailler ces aspects modernes de la chirurgie thoracique au travers de ces trois points, intrinsequement lies les uns aux autres.


Revue De Pneumologie Clinique | 2012

Pathologie vasculaire pulmonaire non tumorale de l’adulte

Bastien Orsini; C. Doddoli; G. Brioude; Xavier Benoit D’Journo; D. Trousse; Jean-Yves Gaubert


Revue Des Maladies Respiratoires | 2016

Faisabilité de la spectrométrie de masse (MALDI-Tof) pour l’analyse des prélèvements obtenus par écho-endoscopie bronchique (EBUS) dans le cadre du diagnostic ou du bilan d’extension du cancer broncho-pulmonaire

X. Elharrar; H. De Lesquen; L. Noirez; C. Flaudrops; G. Brioude; Sophie Laroumagne; H. Dutau; S. Martinez; Didier Raoult; Philippe Astoul; Fabienne Brégeon


Revue Des Maladies Respiratoires | 2016

Diagnostic rapide peropératoire du cancer sur parenchyme pulmonaire : étude de faisabilité de l’analyse protéomique de type MALDI-TOF

G. Brioude; H. De Lesquen; Xavier Benoit D’Journo; V. Secq; A. Thomas; F. Brégeon


Interactive Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery | 2016

B-005SURGICAL THERAPY OF THYMIC TUMOURS WITH PLEURAL INVOLVEMENT: AN ESTS THYMIC WORKING GROUP SURVEY

Bernhard Moser; E. Fadel; Dominique Fabre; Shaf Keshavjee; M. de Perrot; P. Thomas; G. Brioude; D. Van Raemdonck; S. Viskens; L. Lang-Lazdunski; Andrea Billè; Walter Weder; Wolfgang Jungraithmayr; Enrico Ruffini; Francesco Guerrera; D. Gómez De Antonio; Moishe Liberman; Nuria Novoa; Marco Scarci; Stefan Janik; Walter Klepetko

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D. Trousse

Aix-Marseille University

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C. Doddoli

Aix-Marseille University

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Didier Raoult

Aix-Marseille University

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Pascal Thomas

Aix-Marseille University

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H. De Lesquen

Aix-Marseille University

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Lucile Gust

Aix-Marseille University

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