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Featured researches published by Hedia Brixi.


Gastroenterology | 2016

Methotrexate Is Not Superior to Placebo for Inducing Steroid-Free Remission, but Induces Steroid-Free Clinical Remission in a Larger Proportion of Patients With Ulcerative Colitis.

Franck Carbonnel; Jean-Frederic Colombel; Jérôme Filippi; Konstantinos Katsanos; Laurent Peyrin-Biroulet; Mathieu Allez; Maria Nachury; Gottfried Novacek; Silvio Danese; Vered Abitbol; Fabrizio Bossa; Jacques Moreau; Gilles Bommelaer; Arnaud Bourreille; Mathurin Fumery; Xavier Roblin; W. Reinisch; Yoram Bouhnik; Hedia Brixi; Philippe Seksik; Georgia Malamut; Martti Färkkilä; Baya Coulibaly; Olivier Dewit; Edouard Louis; Dominique Deplanque; Pierre Michetti; Hélène Sarter; David Laharie; Julie Demolin

BACKGROUND & AIMS Parenteral methotrexate is an effective treatment for patients with Crohns disease, but has never been adequately evaluated in patients with ulcerative colitis (UC). We conducted a randomized controlled trial to determine its safety and efficacy in patients with steroid-dependent UC. METHODS We performed a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial to evaluate the efficacy of parenteral methotrexate (25 mg/wk) in 111 patients with corticosteroid-dependent UC at 26 medical centers in Europe from 2007 through 2013. Patients were given prednisone (10 to 40 mg/d) when the study began and were randomly assigned to groups (1:1) given placebo or methotrexate (intramuscularly or subcutaneously, 25 mg weekly) for 24 weeks. The primary end point was steroid-free remission (defined as a Mayo score ≤2 with no item >1 and complete withdrawal of steroids) at week 16. Secondary endpoints included clinical remission (defined as a Mayo clinical subscore ≤2 with no item >1) and endoscopic healing without steroids at weeks 16 and/or 24, remission without steroids at week 24, and remission at both weeks 16 and 24. RESULTS Steroid-free remission at week 16 was achieved by 19 of 60 patients given methotrexate (31.7%) and 10 of 51 patients given placebo (19.6%)--a difference of 12.1% (95% confidence interval [CI]: -4.0% to 28.1%; P = .15). The proportion of patients in steroid-free clinical remission at week 16 was 41.7% in the methotrexate group and 23.5% in the placebo group, for a difference of 18.1% (95% CI: 1.1% to 35.2%; P = .04). The proportions of patients with steroid-free endoscopic healing at week 16 were 35% in the methotrexate group and 25.5% in the placebo group--a difference of 9.5% (95% CI: -7.5% to 26.5%; P = .28). No differences were observed in other secondary end points. More patients receiving placebo discontinued the study because of adverse events (47.1%), mostly caused by UC, than patients receiving methotrexate (26.7%; P = .03). A higher proportion of patients in the methotrexate group had nausea and vomiting (21.7%) than in the placebo group (3.9%; P = .006). CONCLUSIONS In a randomized controlled trial, parenteral methotrexate was not superior to placebo for induction of steroid-free remission in patients with UC. However, methotrexate induced clinical remission without steroids in a significantly larger percentage of patients, resulting in fewer withdrawals from therapy due to active UC. ClinicalTrials.gov ID NCT00498589.


Endoscopy | 2013

Updating the management of patients with rectal neuroendocrine tumors.

Louis de Mestier; Hedia Brixi; Rodica Gincul; Thierry Ponchon; Guillaume Cadiot

Rectal neuroendocrine tumors (NETs) account for approximately one-third of all digestive NETs, with an increasing incidence and good overall prognosis. Although recent guidelines have been published, endoscopic techniques have expanded substantially and the most recent reports should be taken into account for clinical practice. The objectives of this report were to review the latest advances on prognosis, pre-interventional explorations, treatment-with particular focus on endoscopy-and surveillance of well-differentiated rectal NETs, excluding poorly differentiated and metastatic tumors.


Gut | 2015

Efficacy of adalimumab in patients with Crohn's disease and symptomatic small bowel stricture: a multicentre, prospective, observational cohort (CREOLE) study

Yoram Bouhnik; Franck Carbonnel; David Laharie; Carmen Stefanescu; Xavier Hébuterne; Vered Abitbol; Maria Nachury; Hedia Brixi; Arnaud Bourreille; Laurence Picon; Anne Bourrier; Matthieu Allez; Laurent Peyrin-Biroulet; Jacques Moreau; Guillaume Savoye; Mathurin Fumery; Stéphane Nancey; Xavier Roblin; Romain Altwegg; Guillaume Bouguen; Gilles Bommelaer; Silvio Danese; Edouard Louis; Magaly Zappa; Jean-Yves Mary

Objective The efficacy of anti-tumour necrosis factors (anti-TNFs) in patients with Crohns disease (CD) and symptomatic small bowel stricture (SSBS) is controversial. The aim of this study was to estimate the efficacy of adalimumab in these patients and to identify the factors predicting success. Design We performed a multicentre, prospective, observational cohort study in patients with CD and SSBS. The included patients underwent magnetic resonance enterography at baseline and subsequently received adalimumab. The primary endpoint was success at week 24, defined as adalimumab continuation without prohibited treatment (corticosteroids after the eight week following inclusion, other anti-TNFs), endoscopic dilation or bowel resection. The baseline factors independently associated with success were identified using a logistic regression model, leading to a simple prognostic score. Secondary endpoints were prolonged success after week 24 (still on adalimumab, without dilation nor surgery) and time to bowel resection in the whole cohort. Results From January 2010 to December 2011, 105 patients were screened and 97 were included. At week 24, 62/97 (64%) patients had achieved success. The prognostic score defined a good prognosis group with 43/49 successes, an intermediate prognosis group with 17/28 successes and a poor prognosis group with 1/16 successes. After a median follow-up time of 3.8 years, 45.7%±6.6% (proportion±SE) of patients who were in success at week 24 (ie, 29% of the whole cohort) were still in prolonged success at 4 years. Among the whole cohort, 50.7%±5.3% of patients did not undergo bowel resection 4 years after inclusion. Conclusions A successful response to adalimumab was observed in about two-thirds of CD patients with SSBS and was prolonged in nearly half of them till the end of follow-up. More than half of the patients were free of surgery 4 years after treatment initiation. Clinical Trial registration number NCT01183403; Results.


Endocrine-related Cancer | 2014

Evaluating digestive neuroendocrine tumor progression and therapeutic responses in the era of targeted therapies: state of the art

Louis de Mestier; Clarisse Dromain; Gaspard d'Assignies; Jean-Yves Scoazec; Nathalie Lassau; Rachida Lebtahi; Hedia Brixi; Emmanuel Mitry; Rosine Guimbaud; Frédéric Courbon; Michèle d'Herbomez; Guillaume Cadiot

Well-differentiated neuroendocrine tumors (NETs) are a group of heterogeneous rare tumors. They are often slow-growing and patients can have very long survival, even at the metastatic stage. The evaluation of tumor progression and therapeutic responses is currently based on Response Evaluation Criteria In Solid Tumors v1.1 (RECIST) criteria. As for other malignancies, RECIST criteria are being reexamined for NETs in the era of targeted therapies because tumor response to targeted therapies is rarely associated with shrinkage, as opposed to prolonged progression-free survival. Therefore, size-based criteria no longer seem to be suitable to the assessment of NET progression and therapeutic responses, especially considering targeted therapies. New imaging criteria, combining morphological and functional techniques, have proven relevant for other malignancies treated with targeted therapies. To date, such studies have rarely been conducted on NETs. Moreover, optimizing the management of NET patients also requires considering clinical, biological, and pathological aspects of tumor evolution. Our objectives herein were to comprehensively review current knowledge on the assessment of tumor progression and early prediction of therapeutic responses and to broaden the outlook on well-differentiated NETs, in the era of targeted therapies.


Neuroendocrinology | 2016

Toward a Preoperative Classification of Lymph Node Metastases in Patients with Small Intestinal Neuroendocrine Tumors in the Era of Intestinal-Sparing Surgery

Sophie Lardière-Deguelte; Louis de Mestier; François Appéré; Marie-Pierre Vullierme; Magaly Zappa; Christine Hoeffel; Marleny Noaves; Hedia Brixi; Olivia Hentic; Philippe Ruszniewski; Guillaume Cadiot; Yves Panis; Reza Kianmanesh

Introduction: In patients with small intestinal neuroendocrine tumors (siNETs), surgical resection of the primary tumor and associated mesenteric lymph nodes (LNs) is recommended, but is not well standardized and can be risky in patients with superior mesenteric vessel involvement. Objective: We aimed to evaluate the correlation between the length of resected small bowel and the number of removed LNs, and to propose a preoperative morphological classification of siNET-associated LNs. Methods: The records of patients operated on for siNETs at two expert centers between August 2005 and November 2013 were analyzed. Two specialist radiologists reviewed the preoperative imaging and classified mesenteric LNs into five stages according to their proximity to the trunk and/or branches of the superior mesenteric artery. Results: 72 patients were included. The mean number of removed LNs was 12 ± 15 and the length of removed small intestine was 53 ± 43 cm. No correlation existed between the length of small bowel resection and the number of removed LNs. Overall, 9 (12%), 13 (18%), 36 (50%), 14 (19%) and 0 patients were classified into LN stages 0, I, II, III and IV. The correlation rate between the two observers was 0.98. Patients with LN stage III (hardly resectable) had more removed LNs than those with LN stages 0, I or II (easily removable). Conclusion: Optimal lymphadenectomy is not always associated with extended small bowel resection. In the era of small bowel-sparing surgery, the preoperative classification of mesenteric LNs could help to standardize the surgical management of patients with siNETs.


Neuroendocrinology | 2017

Impact of Liver and Whole-Body Diffusion-Weighted MRI for Neuroendocrine Tumors on Patient Management: A Pilot Study

Frédérick Moryoussef; Louis de Mestier; Mohamed Belkebir; Sophie Deguelte-Lardiere; Hedia Brixi; Reza Kianmanesh; Christine Hoeffel; Guillaume Cadiot

Background: Computed tomography scan is the current standard cross-sectional imaging modality for neuroendocrine tumor (NET) workup. Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DW-MRI) has proven to be more sensitive than standard sequences to diagnose liver metastases; whole-body DW-MRI may be more sensitive than whole-body MRI. Clinical implications have not yet been assessed. Thus, we evaluated radiological and clinical contributions of liver and whole-body DW-MRI to manage NETs. Methods: Twenty-five abnormal liver and 22 abnormal whole-body standard MRIs were first analyzed retrospectively. MR images were then reanalyzed after adding DW sequences. The standard of reference for metastasis confirmation was a combination of radiological follow-up and histological proof. Clinical impact was defined as MRI changes of liver invasion (unilobar to bilobar and/or <50 to >50% of liver) or therapeutic management changes made during a dedicated multidisciplinary meeting after whole-body MRI. Results: Thirty-two patients with mainly small intestine NETs (24/32) were studied. Adding DW to standard liver MRI yielded additional findings for 45% of the patients with 1.78 times more new lesions, mainly infracentimetric; it induced a management change for 18% of the patients. DW sequences added to whole-body MRI yielded additional findings for 71% of the patients, with 1.72 times more lesions, mainly infracentimetric, and induced a change in management for 19% of the patients. Conclusion: Adding DW sequences to standard MRI revealed additional metastases and led to modifications of patient management. Prospective studies are needed to confirm these results.


Gut | 2017

Are random biopsies still useful for the detection of neoplasia in patients with IBD undergoing surveillance colonoscopy with chromoendoscopy

Driffa Moussata; Matthieu Allez; Dominique Cazals-Hatem; Xavier Treton; David Laharie; Jean-Marie Reimund; Philippe Bertheau; Arnaud Bourreille; Anne Lavergne-Slove; Hedia Brixi; Julien Branche; Jean-Marc Gornet; Carmen Stefanescu; Jacques Moreau; Philippe Marteau; Anne-Laure Pelletier; Franck Carbonnel; Philippe Seksik; Marion Simon; Jean-François Fléjou; Jean-Frederic Colombel; Anne-Laure Charlois; Xavier Roblin; Stéphane Nancey; Yoram Bouhnik; Françoise Berger; Bernard Flourié

Background Colonoscopy with pan-chromoendoscopy (CE) is superior to standard colonoscopy in detecting neoplasia in patients with IBD. Performing random biopsies in unsuspicious mucosa after CE remains controversial. Methods Consecutive patients with IBD who underwent surveillance colonoscopy using CE were prospectively included. The standardised procedure used CE, performed targeted biopsies or endoscopic resection on suspicious lesions and then quadrant random biopsies every 10 cm. A panel of five expert pathologists reviewed histological slides with dysplasia. Logistic regression model was used to evidence the factors associated with neoplasia in any or in random biopsies. Results 1000 colonoscopes were performed in 1000 patients (495 UC, 505 Crohns colitis). In 82 patients, neoplasia was detected from targeted biopsies or removed lesions, and among them dysplasia was detected also by random biopsies in 7 patients. Importantly, in 12 additional patients dysplasia was only detected by random biopsies. Overall, 140 neoplastic sites were found in 94 patients, 112 (80%) from targeted biopsies or removed lesions and 28 (20%) by random biopsies. The yield of neoplasia by random biopsies only was 0.2% per-biopsy (68/31 865), 1.2% per-colonoscopy (12/1000) but 12.8% per-patient with neoplasia (12/94). Dysplasia detected by random biopsies was associated with a personal history of neoplasia, a tubular appearing colon and the presence of primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC). Conclusions Despite their low yield, random biopsies should be performed in association with CE in patients with IBD with a personal history of neoplasia, concomitant PSC or a tubular colon during colonoscopy. Trial registration number IRB 001508, Paris 7 University.


Neuroendocrinology | 2015

Updating the surgical management of peritoneal carcinomatosis in patients with neuroendocrine tumors.

Louis de Mestier; Sophie Lardière-Deguelte; Hedia Brixi; Dermot O'Toole; Philippe Ruszniewski; Guillaume Cadiot; Reza Kianmanesh

Well-differentiated digestive neuroendocrine tumors (NET) are a heterogeneous group of neoplasms usually associated with slow growth but a high rate of metastases, including peritoneal carcinomatosis (PC). Herein, we aimed to comprehensively review the current knowledge of PC in terms of implications for the management and prognosis of patients with NET, including the latest studies and expert statements. NET-derived PC concerns about 17% of NET patients and up to 30% of those with small intestine primary NET. It has an independent pejorative prognostic impact. The extent of PC in NET patients and its severity can be expressed by analogy to other malignancies. However, it must be placed in the context of NET disorders, which usually vary from other PC-related malignancies. Recently, a gravity PC score was proposed by a consensus European Neuroendocrine Tumor Society (ENETS) expert group, but it requires validation. In addition, the form of peritoneal involvement (nodular or fusiform/infiltrative) might influence its prognosis and management. Aggressive surgical management seems justified for subsets of NET-related PC but requires careful selection of the candidates most likely to benefit. Cytoreductive surgery prolongs survival, especially when the peritoneal lesions are completely resected. Too little is known about the benefit of hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy for NET-derived PC, but if it confers an advantage, it would have to be counterbalanced by its high morbidity.


European Journal of Endocrinology | 2014

Sunitinib achieved fast and sustained control of VIPoma symptoms.

Louis de Mestier; Thomas Walter; Hedia Brixi; Catherine Lombard-Bohas; Guillaume Cadiot

VIPomas are rare-functioning neuroendocrine tumors (NETs). Overproduction of vasointestinal peptide (VIP) leads to the Verner-Morrison syndrome, whose management is challenging when refractory to somatostatin analogs. Two patients with progressive metastatic pancreatic NETs and refractory VIPoma symptoms were treated with sunitinib. This led to fast and sustained total relief of VIPoma symptoms, enabling earlier discharge from hospital and improvement in their quality of life. In both cases, sunitinib discontinuation led to the quick recurrence of watery diarrhea, which resolved within a few days after reintroducing sunitinib. The anti-secretory effect of sunitinib on VIPoma syndrome was probably not related to any anti-tumor effect. These observations agree with the rare reported cases of anti-secretory effects with targeted therapies. The sunitinib-driven inhibition of multiple-tyrosine kinase receptors might act on secretory pathways and describe sunitinibs ability to improve VIPoma symptoms. Sunitinib could be a therapeutic option to control refractory VIPoma symptoms in patients with NETs.


Radiotherapy and Oncology | 2015

Exclusive moderate-dose radiotherapy in gastric marginal zone B-cell MALT lymphoma: Results of a prospective study with a long term follow-up

Agnès Ruskoné-Fourmestraux; Tamara Matysiak-Budnik; Bettina Fabiani; Pascale Cervera; Hedia Brixi; Karine Le Malicot; Isabelle Nion-Larmurier; Jean-Fançois Fléjou; Christophe Hennequin; Laurent Quero

BACKGROUND In gastric MALT lymphomas persisting after Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) eradication, a treatment by moderate-dose radiotherapy (RT) has been proposed but its efficacy has not been confirmed in large prospective series with long term endoscopic follow-up. METHOD Patients with localised gastric MALT lymphoma persisting after H. pylori eradication were offered moderate-dose RT (30Gy, 2Gy/fraction) and followed with annual endoscopies. All biopsies before and after RT were reviewed by a committee of pathologists. RESULTS From 1995 to 2011, out of the 232 patients followed prospectively, 53 received RT for persistence of lymphoma after H. pylori eradication: either macroscopic ulcer (n=31), or microscopic lymphomatous infiltrate (n=22), after a mean follow-up of 12 and 31months, respectively. All lymphomas were localised (45 stage IE and 8 stage IIE) and 38 (72%) were H. pylori-positive. The mean clinical and endoscopic follow-up from diagnosis was 7.6years (2.2-19.1). No acute or late toxicity occurred. A complete remission was achieved in all patients but one (98%) with no relapse after a median follow-up of 4.9years (1.3-16.6) after completion of RT. Overall survival and 5-year disease specific survival were 94% and 100%, respectively. One patient died of gastric adenocarcinoma. CONCLUSION Moderate-dose RT (30Gy) is effective and safe for localised gastric MALT lymphoma persisting after H. pylori eradication.

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Xavier Roblin

Joseph Fourier University

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