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Featured researches published by Hélène Pacquement.


Oncogene | 1997

A new member of the ETS family fused to EWS in Ewing tumors

Martine Peter; Jérôme Couturier; Hélène Pacquement; Jean Michon; Gilles Thomas; Henri Magdelenat; Olivier Delattre

As a result of chromosome translocations, the EWS gene is fused to a variety of transcription factors in human solid neoplasia. In Ewing tumors EWS can be fused to four different members of the ETS family, namely FLI-1, ERG, ETV1 and E1AF. We have identified a new member of the ETS family, called FEV, which is fused to EWS in a subset of Ewing tumors. FEV encodes a 238 amino acid protein which contains an ETS DNA binding domain closely related to that of FLI-1 and ERG. However, the N-terminal portion of FEV is only 42 amino acids long which suggests that FEV is lacking important transcription regulatory domains contained in FLI-1 and ERG N-terminal parts. The C-terminal end of FEV is rich in alanine residues which may indicate that FEV is a transcription repressor. The FEV gene is encoded by three exons and is located on chromosome 2. FEV expression was only detected in adult prostate and small intestine but not in other adult nor in fetal tissues, thus indicating that FEV has a restricted expression pattern. Following a scheme similar to previously described translocations in Ewing tumors, a t(2;22) chromosome translocation fuses the N-terminal domain of EWS to the ETS DNA binding domain of FEV.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2010

Role of Cancer Treatment in Long-Term Overall and Cardiovascular Mortality After Childhood Cancer

Markhaba Tukenova; Catherine Guibout; Odile Oberlin; Françoise Doyon; Abdeddahir Mousannif; Sylvie Guérin; Hélène Pacquement; Albertine Aouba; Mike Hawkins; Dave Winter; Jean Bourhis; Dimitri Lefkopoulos; Ibrahima Diallo; Florent de Vathaire

PURPOSE The purpose of this study was to assess the role of treatment in long-term overall and cardiovascular mortality after childhood cancer. PATIENTS AND METHODS We studied 4,122 5-year survivors of a childhood cancer diagnosed before 1986 in France and the United Kingdom. Information on chemotherapy was collected, and the radiation dose delivered to the heart was estimated for 2,870 patients who had received radiotherapy. RESULTS After 86,453 person-years of follow-up (average, 27 years), 603 deaths had occurred. The overall standardized mortality ratio (SMR) was 8.3-fold higher (95% CI, 7.6-fold to 9.0-fold higher) in relation to the general populations in France and the United Kingdom. Thirty-two patients had died as a result of cardiovascular diseases (ie, 5.0-fold [95% CI, 3.3-fold to 6.7-fold] more than expected). The risk of dying as a result of cardiac diseases (n = 21) was significantly higher in individuals who had received a cumulative anthracycline dose greater than 360 mg/m(2) (relative risk [RR], 4.4; 95% CI, 1.3 to 15.3) and in individuals who received an average radiation dose that exceeded 5 Gy (RR, 12.5 and 25.1 for 5 to 14.9 Gy and > 15 Gy, respectively) to the heart. A linear relationship was found between the average dose of radiation to the heart and the risk of cardiac mortality (estimated excess [corrected] RR at 1 Gy, 60%). CONCLUSION This study is the first, to our knowledge, to establish a relationship between the radiation dose received by the heart during radiotherapy for a childhood cancer and long-term cardiac mortality. This study also confirms a significant excess risk of cardiac mortality associated with a high cumulative dose of anthracyclines.


Annals of Oncology | 2000

Relapses of childhood anaplastic large-cell lymphoma: Treatment results in a series of 41 children - a report from the French Society of Pediatric Oncology

Laurence Brugières; P. Quartier; M. Le Deley; Hélène Pacquement; Yves Perel; Christophe Bergeron; Claudine Schmitt; J. Landmann; Catherine Patte; M.J. Terrier-Lacombe; Georges Delsol; Olivier Hartmann

PURPOSE To study response to chemotherapy and the outcome of children treated for a relapsed anaplastic large-cell lymphoma (ALCL) and to evaluate the role of bone marrow transplantation (BMT) in these patients. PATIENTS AND METHODS Clinical data concerning the 41 relapses that occurred in 119 patients with ALCL enrolled in 3 consecutive studies since 1975 were analysed. First-line treatment consisted of intensive chemotherapy according to the COPAD protocol for the first series of 12 patients treated between 1975 and 1989 and to the SFOP (French Society of Pediatric Oncology) HM protocols for the 30 patients treated between 1989 and 1997. Twenty-eight patients were treated with CV(B)A (CCNU, vinblastine, ara-C with or without bleomycin), and the others with miscellaneous protocols for recurrent disease. Fifteen patients underwent autologous BMT and 1 allogeneic BMT while in CR2. RESULTS Thirty-six of forty-one (88%) patients achieved CR2. With a median follow-up of 5 years, 12 patients died, 9 of their disease and 29 patients are alive in CR2 (20 patients), CR3 (5 patients), CR4 (2 patients), CR5 (1 patient) or CR6 (1 patient). Overall and disease-free survival are respectively 69% (53%-82%) and 44% (29%-61%) at three years. In univariate analysis, patients treated with ABMT while in CR2 did not appear to have a better outcome than the other. Remarkably, a long-lasting remission was obtained in 8 of 13 patients treated with weekly vinblastine for a relapse including 6 relapses occurring after ABMT. CONCLUSIONS Relapsed ALCL are highly chemosensitive but over 40% of the patients experience several relapses. Prolonged conventional chemotherapy based on vinblastine might, in some cases, be as efficient as short intensive treatment with ABMT.


European Journal of Cancer | 1997

High-dose Chemotherapy with Carboplatin, Etoposide and Cyclophosphamide Followed by a Haematopoietic Stem Cell Rescue in Patients with High-risk Retinoblastoma: a SFOP and SFGM Study

F Namouni; François Doz; M.L Tanguy; Erica Quintana; Jean Michon; Hélène Pacquement; Eric Bouffet; Jean-Claude Gentet; D. Plantaz; Patrick Lutz; J.P Vannier; Pierre Validire; S. Neuenschwander; Laurence Desjardins; Jean-Michel Zucker

This study investigates the role of high-dose chemotherapy with haematopoietic stem cell rescue as consolidation treatment in high-risk retinoblastoma (extraocular disease at diagnosis or relapse or invasion of cut end of optic nerve). 25 patients received high-dose chemotherapy including carboplatin (250 mg/m2/day from day 1 to day 5 for the 6 first patients and 350 mg/m2/day from day 1 to day 5 for the other patients), etoposide (350 mg/m2/day from day 1 to day 5) and cyclophosphamide (1.6 g/m2/day from day 2 to day 5) (CARBOPEC) followed by autologous haematopoietic stem cell rescue. 19 patients received this drug combination for chemosensitive extraocular relapse. The other 6 patients with histological high-risk factors were given this treatment as consolidation after enucleation and conventional chemotherapy. The three year disease-free survival was 67.1%. In 7 of the 9 relapsing patients, the first site of relapse was the central nervous system. All patients with central nervous system disease died except one. The main toxicity was haematological and digestive (mucositis and diarrhoea). 2 of the 13 evaluable patients had grade III and IV ototoxicity. One patient experienced an acute grade I reversible cardiotoxicity. The CARBOPEC regimen seems to be a promising therapeutic strategy in patients with high-risk retinoblastoma, especially those with bone and/or bone marrow involvement. This treatment did not improve the outcome of patients with central nervous system disease.


Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2007

Feasibility of ovarian tissue cryopreservation for prepubertal females with cancer.

Catherine Poirot; Hélène Martelli; Catherine Genestie; Jean-Louis Golmard; Dominique Valteau-Couanet; Pierre Helardot; Hélène Pacquement; Frédérique Sauvat; Marie-Dominique Tabone; Pascale Philippe-Chomette; Helene Esperou; André Baruchel; Laurence Brugières

Loss of fertility is one of the long‐term adverse effects of high‐dose chemotherapy or total body irradiation for cancer, even in children. Ovarian tissue cryopreservation (OTC) may make it possible for survivors of childhood cancer to have children. We evaluated the feasibility of this technique for prepubertal girls.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2003

Lymphocyte-Predominant Hodgkin’s Lymphoma in Children: Therapeutic Abstention After Initial Lymph Node Resection—A Study of the French Society of Pediatric Oncology

B. Pellegrino; M.J. Terrier-Lacombe; Odile Oberlin; Thierry Leblanc; Yves Perel; Yves Bertrand; C. Beard; C. Edan; Claudine Schmitt; Dominique Plantaz; Hélène Pacquement; Jean-Pierre Vannier; C. Lambilliote; Gérard Couillault; A. Babin-Boilletot; Isabelle Thuret; F. Demeocq; Guy Leverger; G. Delsol; Judith Landman-Parker

PURPOSE To clarify treatment strategy for lymphocyte-predominant Hodgkins lymphoma (LPHL), the French Society of Pediatric Oncology initiated a prospective, nonrandomized study in 1988. Patients received either standard treatment for Hodgkins lymphoma or were not treated beyond initial adenectomy. PATIENTS AND METHODS From 1988 to 1998, 27 patients were available for study. Twenty-four patients were male, and median age was 10 years (range, 4 to 16 years). Twenty-two, two, and three patients had stage I, II, and III disease, respectively. Thirteen patients (stage I, n = 11; stage III, n = 2) received no further treatment after initial surgical adenectomy (SA). Fourteen patients received combined treatment (CT; n = 10), involved-field radiotherapy alone (n = 1), or chemotherapy alone (n = 3). The two groups were comparable for clinical status, treatment, and follow-up. RESULTS Twenty-three of 27 patients achieved complete remission (CR). With a median follow-up time of 70 months (range, 32 to 214 months), overall survival to date is 100%, and overall event-free survival (EFS) is 69% +/- 10% (SA, 42% +/- 16%; CT, 90% +/- 8.6%; P <.04). If we considered only the patients in CR after initial surgery (n = 12), EFS was no longer significantly different between the two groups. Patients with residual mass after initial surgery (n = 15) had worse EFS if they did not receive complementary treatment (P <.05). CONCLUSION Although based on a small number of patients, our study showed that (1). no further therapy is a valid therapeutic approach in LPHL patient in CR after initial lymph node resection, and (2). complementary treatment diminishes relapse frequency but has no impact on survival.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2009

Single-Drug Vinblastine As Salvage Treatment for Refractory or Relapsed Anaplastic Large-Cell Lymphoma: A Report From the French Society of Pediatric Oncology

Laurence Brugières; Hélène Pacquement; Marie-Cécile Le Deley; Guy Leverger; Patrick Lutz; Catherine Paillard; André Baruchel; Didier Frappaz; Brigitte Nelken; Laurence Lamant; Catherine Patte

PURPOSE To evaluate the efficacy of vinblastine for relapsed/refractory anaplastic large-cell lymphoma (ALCL). PATIENTS AND METHODS Data were reviewed on all 36 patients included prospectively in the French database for pediatric ALCL who were treated with vinblastine (6 mg/m(2)/wk) for resistant primary disease (one), a first relapse (15), or subsequent relapses (20). Fifteen patients had undergone hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation (HSCT) for a previous relapse. RESULTS Six patients were not evaluable for response, 25 (83%) of 30 evaluable patients achieved a complete remission (CR), and five experienced progressive disease. Among the 31 patients who achieved a CR with vinblastine or before its initiation, six patients were treated with HSCT and 25 with vinblastine alone (median duration, 14 months). Overall, nine of 25 patients treated with vinblastine alone have remained in CR (median, 7 years since the end of treatment), and 16 patients have relapsed. Vinblastine was still efficient for subsequent relapses. With a median follow-up of 9.2 years, 12 patients have died (four as a result of toxicity after HSCT and eight as a result of disease), and 24 patients are alive (15 following treatment with single-agent vinblastine for the last event). Five-year overall survival is 65% (95% CI, 48% to 79%), and 5-year event-free survival is 30% (95% CI, 17% to 47%). CONCLUSION Vinblastine is highly efficient in relapsed ALCL and may produce durable remissions. The optimal treatment duration still has to be assessed. These results should be borne in mind when designing future phase II studies with the targeted therapies directed against anaplastic lymphoma kinase.


Environmental Health Perspectives | 2007

Household Exposure to Pesticides and Risk of Childhood Hematopoietic Malignancies: The ESCALE Study (SFCE)

Jérémie Rudant; Florence Menegaux; Guy Leverger; André Baruchel; Brigitte Nelken; Yves Bertrand; Catherine Patte; Hélène Pacquement; Cécile Vérité; Alain Robert; Gérard Michel; Geneviève Margueritte; Virginie Gandemer; Denis Hémon; Jacqueline Clavel

Objectives We investigated the role of household exposure to pesticides in the etiology of childhood hematopoietic malignancies. Methods The national registry-based case–control study ESCALE (Etude sur les cancers de l’enfant) was carried out in France over the period 2003–2004. Population controls were frequency matched with the cases on age and sex. Maternal household use of pesticides during pregnancy and paternal use during pregnancy or childhood were reported by the mothers in a structured telephone questionnaire. Insecticides (used at home, on pets, or for garden crops), herbicides, and fungicides were distinguished. We estimated odds ratios (ORs) using unconditional regression models closely adjusting for age, sex, degree of urbanization, and type of housing (flat or house). Results We included a total of 764 cases of acute leukemia (AL), 130 of Hodgkin lymphoma (HL), 166 of non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), and 1,681 controls. Insecticide use during pregnancy was significantly associated with childhood AL [OR = 2.1; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.7–2.5], both lymphoblastic and myeloblastic, NHL (OR = 1.8; 95% CI, 1.3–2.6), mainly for Burkitt lymphoma (OR = 2.7; 95% CI, 1.6–4.5), and mixed-cell HL (OR = 4.1; 95% CI, 1.4–11.8), but not nodular sclerosis HL (OR = 1.1; 95% CI, 0.6–1.9). Paternal household use of pesticides was also related to AL (OR = 1.5; 95% CI, 1.2–1.8) and NHL (OR = 1.7; 95% CI, 1.2–2.6); but for AL the relationships did not remain after adjustment for maternal pesticide use during pregnancy. Conclusion The study findings strengthen the hypothesis that domestic use of pesticides may play a role in the etiology of childhood hematopoietic malignancies. The consistency of the findings with those of previous studies on AL raises the question of the advisability of preventing pesticide use by pregnant women.


Pediatric Radiology | 2004

Imaging of malignant tumours of the long bones in children: monitoring response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy and preoperative assessment

Hervé Brisse; L. Ollivier; Veronique Edeline; Hélène Pacquement; Jean Michon; Christophe Glorion; S. Neuenschwander

This review focuses on imaging of osteosarcoma and Ewing’s sarcoma of the long bones in children during preoperative neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Morphological criteria on plain films and conventional static MRI are insufficiently correlated with histological response. We review the contribution of dynamic MRI, diffusion-weighted MR and nuclear medicine (18FDG-PET) to monitor tumoural necrosis. MRI is currently the best method to evaluate local extension prior to tumour resection, especially to assess the feasibility of conservative surgery. Quantitative models in dynamic MRI and 18FDG-PET are currently being developed in order to find new early prognostic criteria, but for the time being, treatment protocols are still based on the gold standard of histological response.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1999

Outcome of Radiation-Related Osteosarcoma After Treatment of Childhood and Adolescent Cancer: A Study of 23 Cases

Marie-Dominique Tabone; Philippe Terrier; Hélène Pacquement; Maud Brunat-Mentigny; Claudine Schmitt; Annie Babin-Boilletot; Hazem Mahmoud; Chantal Kalifa

PURPOSE We analyzed the clinical features and outcome of patients with radiation-associated osteosarcoma treated during the era of contemporary chemotherapy. PATIENTS AND METHODS The characteristics and outcome of 23 patients (17 males and six females) treated during childhood or adolescence for a solid tumor who later developed osteosarcomas within the radiation field between 1981 and 1996 were reviewed. RESULTS The median dose of radiation delivered to the first cancer was 47 Gy. Nineteen patients also received chemotherapy. The median time between radiotherapy and the diagnosis of secondary osteosarcoma was 8 years. Histologic slide review showed conventional central osteosarcoma with various differentiation patterns in 21 cases, together with one case of high-grade surface osteosarcoma and one of periosteal osteosarcoma. The sites of involvement were the craniofacial bones in six cases, the first cervical vertebra in one, the girdle bones in seven, and the extremities of long bones in nine. Three patients had metastatic disease at the diagnosis of osteosarcoma. Palliative therapy was administered to seven patients. The aim of treatment was curative for 16 patients, two of whom underwent amputation without further therapy. Intensive chemotherapy regimens were administered to 14 patients before and/or after surgery. Fifteen patients achieved complete surgical remission. Twelve patients were alive and disease-free at a median follow-up duration of 7.5 years. Overall and event-free survivals at 8 years were 50% and 41%, respectively. CONCLUSION Patients with radiation-related osteosarcoma and resectable lesions can be cured with surgery and intensive preoperative and postoperative chemotherapy.

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Claudine Schmitt

Catholic University of Leuven

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