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Dive into the research topics where Jean Claude Dumon is active.

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Featured researches published by Jean Claude Dumon.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2004

Efficacy and Safety of Ibandronate in the Treatment of Opioid-Resistant Bone Pain Associated With Metastatic Bone Disease: A Pilot Study

Isabelle Mancini; Jean Claude Dumon; Jean-Jacques Body

PURPOSE Bone metastases are associated with severe and sometimes intractable pain, compromising patient quality of life (QOL). This open-label pilot study investigated the effects of short-term intensive treatment with intravenous (i.v.) ibandronate on opioid-resistant bone pain in patients with skeletal metastases. PATIENTS AND METHODS Eighteen patients with advanced tumors and metastatic bone disease received nonstandard treatment with 4 mg of ibandronate administered i.v. (2-hour infusion) for 4 consecutive days (16-mg total dose). Baseline opioid analgesic use was equivalent to 400 mg/d of morphine. Patients were assessed for 6 weeks or until death. Changes from baseline were determined for bone pain, opioid consumption, patient functioning, QOL, performance status, and biochemical markers of calcium metabolism and bone turnover. Renal function was assessed by serum urea and creatinine measurement. RESULTS Short-term, intensive ibandronate treatment significantly reduced bone pain scores within 7 days (P <.001). Pain reductions were sustained over the study period. Ibandronate significantly improved QOL, patient functioning, and performance status (P <.05). Mean values of the urinary cross-links pyridinoline and deoxypyridinoline tended to increase after day 21, returning close to baseline values by day 42. There was no correlation between the change in crosslinks values and the change in pain scores after ibandronate treatment. Ibandronate was well tolerated, with no evidence of renal toxicity. CONCLUSION Nonstandard, intensive treatment with i.v. ibandronate seems to have a marked analgesic effect in patients with opioid-resistant bone pain from metastatic bone disease. Further investigation is warranted.


Maturitas | 1996

Cyclical pamidronate infusions in postmenopausal osteoporosis

Anne Peretz; Jean-Jacques Body; Jean Claude Dumon; Serge Rozenberg; Anouk Hotimski; Jean Philippe Praet; Muriel Moris; Humphrey Ham; Pierre Bergmann

OBJECTIVES Until recently, two bisphosphonates, pamidronate (APD) and etidronate were available for clinical purposes. Contrary to etidronate, pamidronate was not extensively studied in osteoporosis. Therefore, we investigated the effect of cyclic intravenous APD treatment in postmenopausal osteoporosis. METHODS Parameters of bone remodelling and lumbar spine bone mineral density (BMDL) were assessed in 36 postmenopausal women with osteoporosis (BMDL t-score < -2.5). They received five courses of APD. Intervals between courses were defined according to the fasting urinary calcium excretion (UCa/Cr, mg/mg creatinine) which was measured before each APD course and every 2 weeks after the first treatment. The patients were retreated when UCa/Cr had reached baseline levels. Serum biochemical parameters and urinary hydroxyproline (UOHPro/Cr, mg/mg) were measured before each APD. RESULTS UCa/Cr decreased during 21-28 days after each course but UCa/Cr measured before APD infusion remained unchanged. UOHPro/Cr significantly fell after the third APD (P = 0.02). Serum calcium was however not modified. Parameters of bone remodelling decreased with time: bone-GLA protein (BGP) started to fall after the first APD (P = 0.0001) and continued to decrease until the fourth APD course, alkaline phosphatase (ALP) significantly decreased after the first APD (P = 0.005); intact PTH significantly increased at the fifth APD (P = 0.02). BMDL significantly increased after 1 year treatment: +2.9% of baseline value. CONCLUSIONS Cyclical pamidronate treatment of postmenopausal osteoprosis appeared to be effective in reducing bone turnover assessed by BGP, ALP and OHPro/Cr. This effect is followed by an increase in vertebral BMD.


Bone and Mineral | 1991

Efficacy and safety of the bisphosphonate tiludronate for the treatment of tumor-associated hypercalcemia.

Jean Claude Dumon; A. Magritte; Jean-Jacques Body

Tiludronate is a new bisphosphonate whose efficacy has already been reported for the prevention of postmenopausal bone loss. We have evaluated its efficacy and tolerance by a dose-finding study in 19 hypercalcemic cancer patients after adequate intravenous (iv) rehydration. Treatment consisted of 3 days of iv tiludronate given at doses of 3.0 mg/kg/day (n = 3), 4.5 mg/kg/day (n = 3), or 6.0 mg/kg/day (n = 13); this iv therapy was followed by 17 days of oral tiludronate, 400 mg (n = 13) or 800 mg (n = 6) daily. Treatment had to be discontinued in 9 patients, including 3 because of evident treatment failure and 1 because of severe toxicity. After iv tiludronate, 13/18 patients had a normal Ca level, including 10/12 who had received 6.0 mg/kg/day, but Ca2+ levels were fully normalized in only 4/18 and 3/12 patients, respectively. After 6.0 mg/kg/day, Ca levels had fallen from 12.1 +/- 0.3 to 10.0 +/- 0.4 mg/dl (P less than 0.0005), whereas fasting urinary calcium excretion went from 0.639 +/- 0.099 to 0.272 +/- 0.054 mg Ca/mg creatinine on d4 (P less than 0.001). On the other hand, oral tiludronate was unable to normalize Ca in patients who were still hypercalcemic after the iv course, although the daily administration of 800 mg appeared to be more efficient than the 400 mg daily dosage. The administration of tiludronate caused an increase in serum phosphate levels, from 2.9 +/- 0.2 to 3.7 +/- 0.2 mg/dl after the iv course, probably through an increase in the TmP/GFR index, which went from 2.3 +/- 0.2 to 3.6 +/- 0.4 mg/dl (P less than 0.05). Three patients had an increase in serum creatinine levels after the iv course, one obese patient developing an acute renal insufficiency; during oral tiludronate therapy, 5 other patients also presented an increase in serum creatinine levels. Oral tiludronate administration was also associated with occasional nausea and vomiting. In summary, compared with aminobisphosphonates, tiludronate is not indicated for the treatment of tumor-associated hypercalcemia because of the need for high iv doses which are potentially nephrotoxic.


Supportive Care in Cancer | 2000

Decreased efficacy of bisphosphonates for recurrences of tumor-induced hypercalcemia

Jean-Jacques Body; I. Louviaux; Jean Claude Dumon

Abstract Bisphosphonates are now the standard treatment for tumor-induced hypercalcemia (TIH), and pamidronate can normalize serum Ca in at least 90% of the patients treated for the first time. However, there are few data on the treatment of TIH when it recurs, and published results are contradictory. We studied 29 patients with solid tumors, 14 of whom had breast cancer and all of whom were naive to bisphosphonate therapy. They were retreated with pamidronate (median dose 1 mg/kg for both courses) for recurrence of TIH after a median interval of 78 (range 7–297) days. Fourteen of them, 7 of whom had breast cancer, were treated a third time 28 (range 5–79) days after the second course (median dose of pamidronate 1.5 mg/kg). Baseline Ca levels were not significantly different before each course, but the nadirs after each treatment progressively increased, 9.3±0.2 mg/dl, 10.5±0.3 mg/dl, and 12.3±0.4 mg/dl after the 1st, 2nd and 3rd administrations, respectively (P<0.05). The percentage of treatment failures also progressively increased: 10%, 31% and 85% (P<0.05). This decreased hypocalcemic effect was essentially observed in patients without bone metastases or with tumors other than breast cancer. Thus, in patients without bone metastases, Ca levels did not decrease at all after the 3rd course, whereas the responses were not significantly different between the three courses in patients with bone metastases. Baseline urinary hydroxyproline, a marker of bone resorption, increased progressively from course to course, especially in patients with bone metastases or breast cancer, but this was not the case for parameters of bone formation. There was also a progressive increase in PTHrP levels accompanied by an increase in the number of patients with enhanced kidney reabsorption of Ca and a decrease in the threshold for Pi excretion, which was significant in patients without bone metastases. In conclusion, pamidronate was progressively less efficient when hypercalcemia recurred. This was observed mainly in patients with hypercalcemia of humoral origin. Tumor progression is accompanied by an enhanced release of osteolytic factors, notably PTHrP, that increase bone resorption and enhance kidney calcium reabsorption, especially in patients without bone metastases. When both phenomena occur, the response to bisphosphonates becomes minimal and the usefulness of therapy questionable.


British Journal of Cancer | 2004

Steroid-free medium discloses oestrogenic effects of the bisphosphonate clodronate on breast cancer cells

Fabrice Journé; Carole Chaboteaux; Jean Claude Dumon; Guy Leclercq; Guy Laurent; Jean-Jacques Body

Tamoxifen is the standard first-line endocrine therapy for breast cancer, but recent data indicate that it is likely to be replaced by the effective aromatase inhibitors (AIs), in both the metastatic and adjuvant settings. Aromatase inhibitors induce complete oestrogen deprivation that leads to clinically significant bone loss. Several ongoing or planned trials combine AIs with bisphosphonates, even more so that recent data reveal that clodronate may reduce the incidence of bone metastases and prolong survival in the adjuvant setting. Bisphosphonates can inhibit breast cancer cell growth in vitro, but they have never been studied in steroid-free medium (SFM), an in vitro environment that mimics the effects of AIs in vivo. Quite surprisingly, in SFM, clodronate stimulated MCF-7 cell growth in a time- and dose-dependent manner by up to two-fold (crystal violet staining assay), whereas it had no mitogenic activity in complete medium. The bisphosphonate similarly increased the proliferation of IBEP-2 cells, which also express a functional oestrogen receptor (ER), while it weakly inhibited the growth of the ER-negative MDA-MB-231 cells. Expectedly, 17β-oestradiol stimulated the growth of MCF-7 and IBEP-2 cells cultured in SFM, and had no effect on MDA-MB-231 cells. Moreover, partial (4-OH-tamoxifen) and pure antioestrogens (fulvestrant, ICI 182,780), in combination with clodronate, completely suppressed the mitogenic effect of the bisphosphonate, suggesting that it was mediated by an activation of ER. In accordance with this view, clodronate induced ER downregulation, weakly increased progesterone receptor expression, and stimulated the transcription of an oestrogen-responsive reporter gene. In conclusion, we report a previously unknown stimulatory effect of clodronate on MCF-7 cells grown in SFM, in vitro conditions that are potentially relevant to the use of AIs for breast cancer. Moreover, our data suggest that ER is involved in these effects of clodronate on cancer cell growth.


Calcified Tissue International | 1992

Nasal human calcitonin for tumor-induced hypercalcemia

Jean Claude Dumon; A. Magritte; Jean-Jacques Body

SummaryWe treated four hypercalcemic cancer patients by nasal hCT, 3×2 mg daily, which has been reported to be active in Pagets disease at lower doses. Only one patient became normocalcemic and mean (± SEM) calcium levels fell from 11.6±0.2 mg/dl before therapy to 10.7±0.6 mg/dl 2–3 days after starting hCT. The tolerance was excellent but, because of insufficient efficacy, we do not recommend this form of therapy for cancer hypercalcemia.


Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy | 1994

Circulating concentrations of interleukin-6 in cancer patients and their pathogenic role in tumor-induced hypercalcemia

Bernadette Vanderschueren; Jean Claude Dumon; Véronique Oleffe; Corine Heymans; Jean Gerain; Jean-Jacques Body

Circulating interleukin-6 (IL-6) concentrations correlate with disease activity in severe inflammatory conditions, in sepsis and in some hematological malignancies. On the other hand, IL-6 is a potent stimulator of osteoclastogenesis and has been implicated as a contributory factor in the genesis of osteopenic conditions. We measured circulating IL-6 levels by a sensitive (detection limit of 10 U/ml) and specific bioassay in 103 patients with advanced cancer, including 41 with tumor-induced hypercalcemia before any specific hypocalcemic therapy. We related IL-6 concentrations to clinical features and to biochemical parameters of bone metabolism, including blood Ca, Ca2+, Pi, intact parathyroid hormone, parathyroid hormone-related protein, osteocalcin, 1,25-(OH)2-vitamin D and, as markers of bone resorption, the fasting urinary excretion of calcium (Ca/creatinine) and hydroxyproline. IL-6 levels were increased, i.e. detectable, in 23% of the patients, 8/41 (20%) hypercalcemic and 16/62 (26%) normocalcemic patients (NS); the distribution of the values was similar in the two groups. The presence of increased IL-6 concentrations was not related to any clinical characteristic, notably not to the survival nor to the existence of bone metastases, whether in hypercalcemic or normocalcemic patients; e.g., only 3/12 (25%) hypercalcemic subjects without bone metastases had elevated IL-6 levels. We found no significant correlations between IL-6 concentrations and any of the biochemical parameters studied. Hypercalcemic subjects with increased IL-6 had higher urinary Ca/creatinine levels than patients with normal IL-6 levels (P<0.005) but this was not the case in normocalcemic subjects. Mean concentrations of inflammatory or other bone metabolism markers were not significantly different between patients with normal or with elevated IL-6 levels. In summary, circulating IL-6 levels were increased in 23% of 103 patients with advanced cancer, but the frequency of increased IL-6 concentrations was not related to the presence of hypercalcemia or to any marker of calcium metabolism or bone turnover. The pathogenic importance of circulating IL-6 in patients with solid tumors remains to be demonstrated and our data indicate that increased circulating levels of IL-6, possibly reflecting the activation of the immune system, only contribute in a minor way to the osteolytic process in patients with tumor-induced hypercalcemia.


Maturitas | 2003

Response to alendronate in osteoporotic women previously treated with pamidronate

Anne Peretz; Vania Siderova; Jean-Jacques Body; Jean Claude Dumon; Serge Rozenberg; Caroline Fellemans; Michel Fuss; Pierre Bergmann

INTRODUCTION Different bisphosphonates have been shown to increase bone mineral density (BMD) and reduce the risk of fracture in osteoporotic patients. It is unclear how shifting from a treatment with one bisphosphonate to another will influence the evolution of BMD and bone turnover. METHODS In the present study, we followed BMD (DXA, Hologic QDR1000) of the lumbar spine (BMDL) and of the total hip (BMDH), bone alkaline phosphatase (Ostase, Hibritech), and urinary collagen cross links (pyridinoline, deoxypyridinoline, Biorad) in 39 patients treated with IV pamidronate (60 mg/3 months) since at least 2 years and who were shifted to oral alendronate (10 mg/day, n=18) or left to IV pamidronate (n=21) for 2 more years. RESULTS BMD increased similarly and significantly in both groups after 2 additional years of treatment as compared to baseline (P<0.05, sign test). BMDL: +3.8% in the alendronate group vs +4.1% in the pamidronate group; BMDH: +4.3% in alendronate group vs +3.6% in pamidronate group, There was no significant change in the biological parameters of bone turnover in any group. CONCLUSION The increase of BMD with both bisphosphonates in these previously treated patients was as expected after a 2 more years of treatment. Alendronate administration did not induce a larger gain in BMD as compared to cyclic pamidronate. Bone turnover was no longer affected by switching the bisphosphonate treatment.


European Journal of Cancer | 1997

The bone isoenzyme of alkaline phosphatase in hypercalcaemic cancer patients

Jean-Jacques Body; Jean Claude Dumon; Didier Blocklet; Claude Darte

Alkaline phosphatase (AP) is the classic marker of bone formation, especially in cancer patients, but the interpretation of its measurement is complicated by the existence of various circulating isoenzymes, especially of liver origin. The introduction of a mass measurement of the bone isoenzyme of AP (BAP) by an immunoradiometric assay has markedly improved the sensitivity and the specificity of the determination. We measured BAP and other markers of bone turnover in 46 patients with tumour-induced hypercalcaemia (TIH), which is an interesting model for evaluating markers of bone formation because of the uncoupling between bone formation and bone resorption found by histomorphometric techniques. The extent of bone metastatic involvement was evaluated by planimetry on bone scintigraphy. Mean (+/- S.D.) BAP concentrations were slightly higher in patients with TIH than in healthy subjects, 15.5 +/- 8.5 versus 12.4 +/- 3.5 micrograms/L (P < 0.05). However, the scatter of the data in TIH patients was quite marked. Increased values (10/46 patients, 22%) occurred only in patients with bone metastases. Total AP, gamma GT and BGP levels, as well as markers of bone resorption, were not significantly different between patients with or without bone metastases. BAP levels were significantly correlated with AP (rs = 0.63; P < 0.01) but not with BGP levels nor with markers of bone resorption. BAP levels were also correlated with the extent of bone uptake at scintigraphy (rs = 0.54; P < 0.01), but this was not the case for total AP or BGP. In the 36 patients re-evaluated when normocalcemic after pamidronate therapy, BAP levels increased from 16.3 +/- 9.2 to 22.2 +/- 21.3 micrograms/L (P < 0.05) but there were no significant changes in AP or BGP concentrations. In summary, our data confirm the existence of an uncoupling in bone turnover in TIH and indicate that cancer hypercalcaemia is another pathological condition characterised by a discordance between BAP and BGP concentrations. BAP levels appear to be a better reflection of bone metastatic involvement than total AP or BGP and their short-term increase after pamidronate therapy could reflect the recently described effects of bisphosphonates on osteoblasts.


Journal of Surgical Oncology | 1996

Tumor-induced hypercalcemia in a patient with extensive soft tissue sarcoma: Effects of bisphosphonate therapy and surgery

Véronique Oleffe; Jean Claude Dumon; Jean-Jacques Body

Tumor‐induced hypercalcemia (TIH) is a frequent complication of advanced cancer, but it has been rarely reported in patients with sarcoma. We describe the case of a young female patient with TIH and with an extensive synoviosarcoma of the left lower limb destroying the bony structures. Hypercalcemia was severe (18.3 mg/dl) and accompanied by low serum Pi and suppressed parathyroid hormone (PTH) and 1,25(OH)2 vit D3 serum concentrations. Hypercalcemia was successfully treated with ibandronate, a new third‐generation bisphosphonate, and radical surgery was performed when the patient was normocalcemic. Circulating levels of PTH‐related protein (PTHrP) were elevated at 22.5 pmol/L (NI <9) PTHrP levels did not change after successful therapy of TIH, in contrast with PTH, which increased sharply. PTHrP levels were normalized after radical surgery. Moreover, low serum Pi with reduced threshold for phosphate excretion and increased tubular calcium reabsorption supported the notion that PTHrP was indeed the essential mediator of paraneoplastic hypercalcemia in this case despite the extensive bone destruction.

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Jean-Jacques Body

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Anne Peretz

Free University of Brussels

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Anny Cleeren

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Fabrice Journé

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Guy Leclercq

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Pierre Bergmann

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Serge Rozenberg

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Véronique Oleffe

Université libre de Bruxelles

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