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Publication
Featured researches published by Jacques Pinsolle.
American Journal of Surgery | 1999
Claire Majoufre; Alain Faucher; Carine Laroche; Camille De Bonfils; François Siberchicot; Jean-Louis Renaud-Salis; Jacques Pinsolle
BACKGROUND In oral cavity cancer, supraomohyoid neck dissection (SOHND) is becoming more popular for patients with N0 and N1 disease in the neck. The aim of this study was to assess the value of this surgical procedure. METHODS The study included 237 previously untreated patients with oral cavity cancer. The neck treatment consisted of SOHND or functional neck dissection (FND). One hundred sixty patients underwent postoperative radiation therapy. Survival probabilities, neck recurrences, and distant metastases were analyzed according to the surgical procedure. RESULTS For patients having undergone SOHND, the 5-year survival probabilities were 70.2% and 76.5% in N0 and N1 necks, respectively. The neck recurrence rate in SOHND was 2%. CONCLUSIONS SOHND is an effective method of treatment for the clinically negative neck in patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the oral cavity. It also proves efficient, in conjunction with postoperative radiotherapy, for control of neck metastases in selected patients.
American Journal of Surgery | 1992
Jacques Pinsolle; H. Demeaux; Benôit Coustal; François Siberchicot; Michel Caudry; Jean-Philippe Maire; François-Xavier Michelet
The combined use of surgery and radiotherapy is commonly accepted as the most effective treatment for locally advanced head and neck cancers. T3 and T4 tumors of the oral cavity and oropharynx often necessitate extensive local surgery. From 1981 to 1988, 199 patients with T3 and T4 tumors of the oral cavity and oropharynx were treated. One hundred seventeen patients underwent surgery plus postoperative radiotherapy; 78 had flap reconstructions. This series is extremely homogeneous because surgery was always performed by two surgeons, whereas radiotherapy was the responsibility of the same physician. The results of this study show a 96% local control rate at the end of treatment among the patients with combined treatment. The average time by which hospitalization was prolonged due to surgery was 29 days. The type and delay of recurrences and survival in relation with node involvement are also discussed. Extensive surgery in association with radiotherapy remains a reliable treatment in such patients.
Archives of Otolaryngology-head & Neck Surgery | 1997
Jacques Pinsolle; Vincent Pinsolle; Claire Majoufre; Stéphane Duroux; H. Demeaux; François Siberchicot
Archives of Otolaryngology-head & Neck Surgery | 1995
Jacques Pinsolle; Vincent Michelet; Benôit Coustal; François Siberchicot; François-Xavier Michelet
Archives of Otolaryngology-head & Neck Surgery | 1991
Jacques Pinsolle; François San-Galli; François Siberchicot; Philippe Caix; Angel Emparanza; François-Xavier Michelet
Archives of Otolaryngology-head & Neck Surgery | 1989
Jacques Pinsolle; François Siberchicot; Angel Emparanza; Philippe Caix; François-Xavier Michelet
Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery | 1990
Jacques Pinsolle; Isabel Lecluse; Helene Demeaux; Pierre Laur; Janine Rivel; François Siberchicot
Archive | 1994
Jean Luc Cariou; Christophe Charbonnier; Jacques Lebeau; Francois Xavier Michelet; Jacques Pinsolle; Thierry Marty
Archive | 1996
Jean-Louis Blanc; Jean-Louis Carriou; Christophe Charbonnier; Jacques Lebeau; Thierry Mary; François-Xavier Michelet; Jacques Pinsolle
Bulletin Du Cancer | 1999
Jean-Louis Renaud-Salis; Marie-Pierre Blanc-Vincent; Jacques Brugère; François Demard; Alain Faucher; Guillaume Gory-Delabaere; Jacques Pinsolle