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Dive into the research topics where Laurence Brugières is active.

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Featured researches published by Laurence Brugières.


Nature | 2008

Somatic and germline activating mutations of the ALK kinase receptor in neuroblastoma

Isabelle Janoueix-Lerosey; Delphine Lequin; Laurence Brugières; Agnès Ribeiro; Loïc de Pontual; Valérie Combaret; Virginie Raynal; Alain Puisieux; Gudrun Schleiermacher; Gaëlle Pierron; Dominique Valteau-Couanet; Thierry Frebourg; Jean Michon; Stanislas Lyonnet; Jeanne Amiel; Olivier Delattre

Neuroblastoma, a tumour derived from the peripheral sympathetic nervous system, is one of the most frequent solid tumours in childhood. It usually occurs sporadically but familial cases are observed, with a subset of cases occurring in association with congenital malformations of the neural crest being linked to germline mutations of the PHOX2B gene. Here we conducted genome-wide comparative genomic hybridization analysis on a large series of neuroblastomas. Copy number increase at the locus encoding the anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) tyrosine kinase receptor was observed recurrently. One particularly informative case presented a high-level gene amplification that was strictly limited to ALK, indicating that this gene may contribute on its own to neuroblastoma development. Through subsequent direct sequencing of cell lines and primary tumour DNAs we identified somatic mutations of the ALK kinase domain that mainly clustered in two hotspots. Germline mutations were observed in two neuroblastoma families, indicating that ALK is a neuroblastoma predisposition gene. Mutated ALK proteins were overexpressed, hyperphosphorylated and showed constitutive kinase activity. The knockdown of ALK expression in ALK-mutated cells, but also in cell lines overexpressing a wild-type ALK, led to a marked decrease of cell proliferation. Altogether, these data identify ALK as a critical player in neuroblastoma development that may hence represent a very attractive therapeutic target in this disease that is still frequently fatal with current treatments.


Nature | 2011

A SUMOylation-defective MITF germline mutation predisposes to melanoma and renal carcinoma

Corine Bertolotto; Fabienne Lesueur; Sandy Giuliano; Thomas Strub; Mahaut de Lichy; Karine Bille; Philippe Dessen; Benoit d'Hayer; Hamida Mohamdi; Audrey Remenieras; Eve Maubec; Arnaud de la Fouchardière; Vincent Molinié; Pierre Vabres; Stéphane Dalle; Nicolas Poulalhon; Tanguy Martin-Denavit; Luc Thomas; Pascale Andry-Benzaquen; Nicolas Dupin; F. Boitier; Annick Rossi; Jean Luc Perrot; B. Labeille; Caroline Robert; Bernard Escudier; Olivier Caron; Laurence Brugières; Simon Saule; Betty Gardie

So far, no common environmental and/or phenotypic factor has been associated with melanoma and renal cell carcinoma (RCC). The known risk factors for melanoma include sun exposure, pigmentation and nevus phenotypes; risk factors associated with RCC include smoking, obesity and hypertension. A recent study of coexisting melanoma and RCC in the same patients supports a genetic predisposition underlying the association between these two cancers. The microphthalmia-associated transcription factor (MITF) has been proposed to act as a melanoma oncogene; it also stimulates the transcription of hypoxia inducible factor (HIF1A), the pathway of which is targeted by kidney cancer susceptibility genes. We therefore proposed that MITF might have a role in conferring a genetic predisposition to co-occurring melanoma and RCC. Here we identify a germline missense substitution in MITF (Mi-E318K) that occurred at a significantly higher frequency in genetically enriched patients affected with melanoma, RCC or both cancers, when compared with controls. Overall, Mi-E318K carriers had a higher than fivefold increased risk of developing melanoma, RCC or both cancers. Codon 318 is located in a small-ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO) consensus site (ΨKXE) and Mi-E318K severely impaired SUMOylation of MITF. Mi-E318K enhanced MITF protein binding to the HIF1A promoter and increased its transcriptional activity compared to wild-type MITF. Further, we observed a global increase in Mi-E318K-occupied loci. In an RCC cell line, gene expression profiling identified a Mi-E318K signature related to cell growth, proliferation and inflammation. Lastly, the mutant protein enhanced melanocytic and renal cell clonogenicity, migration and invasion, consistent with a gain-of-function role in tumorigenesis. Our data provide insights into the link between SUMOylation, transcription and cancer.


Cancer Cell | 2008

Hepatic Stem-like Phenotype and Interplay of Wnt/β-Catenin and Myc Signaling in Aggressive Childhood Liver Cancer

Stefano Cairo; Carolina Armengol; Aurélien de Reyniès; Yu Wei; Emilie Thomas; Claire-Angélique Renard; Andrei Goga; Asha Balakrishnan; Michaela Semeraro; Lionel Gresh; Marco Pontoglio; Helene Strick-Marchand; Florence Levillayer; Yann Nouët; David S. Rickman; Frédéric Gauthier; Sophie Branchereau; Laurence Brugières; Veronique Laithier; Raymonde Bouvier; Françoise Boman; Giuseppe Basso; Jean-François Michiels; Paul Hofman; Francine Arbez-Gindre; Hélène Jouan; Marie-Christine Rousselet-Chapeau; Dominique Berrebi; Luc Marcellin; François Plenat

Hepatoblastoma, the most common pediatric liver cancer, is tightly linked to excessive Wnt/beta-catenin signaling. Here, we used microarray analysis to identify two tumor subclasses resembling distinct phases of liver development and a discriminating 16-gene signature. beta-catenin activated different transcriptional programs in the two tumor types, with distinctive expression of hepatic stem/progenitor markers in immature tumors. This highly proliferating subclass was typified by gains of chromosomes 8q and 2p and upregulated Myc signaling. Myc-induced hepatoblastoma-like tumors in mice strikingly resembled the human immature subtype, and Myc downregulation in hepatoblastoma cells impaired tumorigenesis in vivo. Remarkably, the 16-gene signature discriminated invasive and metastatic hepatoblastomas and predicted prognosis with high accuracy.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2001

Sensitivity and predictive value of criteria for p53 germline mutation screening.

Agnès Chompret; Anne Abel; Dominique Stoppa-Lyonnet; Laurence Brugières; Sabine Pagès; Jean Feunteun; Catherine Bonaïti-Pellié

Editor—The history of Li-Fraumeni syndrome (LFS) is a good illustration of the delineation of dominantly inherited family cancer syndromes. The identification of this syndrome is the result of the combination of two kinds of evidence, firstly, a number of reports on particular familial aggregations1 ,2 and, secondly, systematic family studies of childhood sarcomas.3-6 Among these studies, the decisive contribution came from Li and Fraumeni3 who were the first to publish the results of a family study on 641 children with rhabdomyosarcoma which led to the identification of four families in which a sib or a cousin was affected by rhabdomyosarcoma or another soft tissue sarcoma (STS). These families also had several members who were affected by diverse types of malignant tumours, in particular sarcomas and breast cancer at a very young age. This prompted the authors to propose the existence of a new familial syndrome.7 A prospective study on these families over 12 years provided evidence of a strong predisposition to cancer with a strikingly high frequency of multiple tumours.8 The term “Li-Fraumeni syndrome” was used for the first time in 19829 and the criteria, which subsequently became the classical definition of the syndrome, were proposed by Li and Fraumeni in 1988.10 These were a proband with a sarcoma before 45 years of age, a first degree relative with cancer before this age, and another close (first or second degree) relative in the lineage with either cancer before this age or a sarcoma at any age. These criteria led to the selection of 24 families which exhibited a wide variety of tumours including bone sarcomas, STS, breast cancer, brain tumours, leukaemia, adrenocortical carcinoma, lymphoma, lung, stomach, pancreas, and prostate cancer, but only the first six types were significantly in excess …


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2006

Impact of the MDM2 SNP309 and p53 Arg72Pro polymorphism on age of tumour onset in Li-Fraumeni syndrome

Gaëlle Bougeard; Stéphanie Baert-Desurmont; Isabelle Tournier; Stéphanie Vasseur; Cosette Martin; Laurence Brugières; Agnès Chompret; Brigitte Bressac-de Paillerets; Dominique Stoppa-Lyonnet; Catherine Bonaïti-Pellié; Thierry Frebourg

Li-Fraumeni syndrome, resulting from p53 (TP53) germline mutations, represents one of the most devastating genetic predispositions to cancer. Recently, the MDM2 SNP309 (T→G variation) was shown to be associated with accelerated tumour formation in p53 mutation carriers. The impact of the common p53 codon 72 polymorphism on cancer risk remains controversial. We therefore investigated the effect of these two polymorphisms in 61 French carriers of the p53 germline mutation. The mean age of tumour onset in MDMD2 SNP309 G allele carriers (19.6 years) was significantly different from that observed in patients homozygous for the T allele (29.9 years, p<0.05). For the p53 codon 72 polymorphism, the mean age of tumour onset in Arg allele carriers (21.8 years) was also different from that of Pro/Pro patients (34.4 years, p<0.05). We observed a cumulative effect of both polymorphisms because the mean ages of tumour onset in carriers of the MDM2G and p53Arg alleles (16.9 years) and those with the MDM2T/T and p53Pro/Pro genotypes (43 years) were clearly different (p<0.02). Therefore, our results confirm the impact of the MDM2 SNP309 G allele on the age of tumour onset in germline p53 mutation carriers, and suggest that this effect may be amplified by the p53 72Arg allele. Polymorphisms affecting p53 degradation therefore represent one of the rare examples of modifier genetic factors identified to date in mendelian predispositions to cancer.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2010

Successful Treatment of Childhood High-Risk Hepatoblastoma With Dose-Intensive Multiagent Chemotherapy and Surgery: Final Results of the SIOPEL-3HR Study

Jozsef Zsiros; Rudolf Maibach; Elizabeth Shafford; Laurence Brugières; Penelope Brock; Piotr Czauderna; Derek J. Roebuck; Margaret Childs; Arthur Zimmermann; Veronique Laithier; Jean-Bernard Otte; Beatriz de Camargo; Gordon A. MacKinlay; Marcelo Scopinaro; Daniel C. Aronson; Jack Plaschkes; Giorgio Perilongo

PURPOSE The primary objective was to determine the efficacy of a newly designed preoperative chemotherapy regimen in an attempt to improve the cure rate of children with high-risk hepatoblastoma. PATIENTS AND METHODS High risk was defined as follows: tumor in all liver sections (ie, Pretreatment Extension IV [PRETEXT-IV]), or vascular invasion (portal vein [P+], three hepatic veins [V+]), or intra-abdominal extrahepatic extension (E+), or metastatic disease, or alpha-fetoprotein less than 100 ng/mL at diagnosis. Patients were treated with alternating cycles of cisplatin and carboplatin plus doxorubicin (preoperatively, n = 7; postoperatively, n = 3) and delayed tumor resection. RESULTS Of the 151 patients (150 evaluable for response) 118 (78.7%) achieved a partial response to chemotherapy. Complete resection of the liver tumor could be achieved in 115 patients (76.2%) either by partial hepatectomy (55.6%) or by liver transplantation (20.6%). In 106 children (70.2%), complete resection of all tumor lesions (including metastases) was achieved. Among the patients with initial lung metastases, 52.2% achieved complete remission of the lung lesions with chemotherapy alone. In half of the patients with initial PRETEXT-IV tumor as the only high-risk feature, the tumor could be completely resected with partial hepatectomy. Event-free (EFS) and overall survival (OS) estimates at 3 years were 65% (95% CI, 57% to 73%) and 69% (95% CI, 62% to 77%) for the whole group. EFS and OS for all patients with PRETEXT-IV tumor were 68% and 69%, respectively, and they were 56% and 62%, respectively, for patients with metastasis. CONCLUSION The applied treatment rendered a great proportion of tumors resectable, and, in comparison with previously published results, led to an improved survival in patients with high-risk hepatoblastoma.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2009

Cisplatin versus Cisplatin plus Doxorubicin for Standard-Risk Hepatoblastoma

Giorgio Perilongo; Rudolf Maibach; Elisabeth Shafford; Laurence Brugières; Penelope Brock; Bruce Morland; Beatriz de Camargo; Jozsef Zsiros; Derek J. Roebuck; Arthur Zimmermann; Daniel C. Aronson; Margaret Childs; Eva Widing; Veronique Laithier; Jack Plaschkes; Jon Pritchard; Marcello Scopinaro; Gordon A. MacKinlay; Piotr Czauderna

BACKGROUND Preoperative cisplatin alone may be as effective as cisplatin plus doxorubicin in standard-risk hepatoblastoma (a tumor involving three or fewer sectors of the liver that is associated with an alpha-fetoprotein level of >100 ng per milliliter). METHODS Children with standard-risk hepatoblastoma who were younger than 16 years of age were eligible for inclusion in the study. After they received one cycle of cisplatin (80 mg per square meter of body-surface area per 24 hours), we randomly assigned patients to receive cisplatin (every 14 days) or cisplatin plus doxorubicin administered in three preoperative cycles and two postoperative cycles. The primary outcome was the rate of complete resection, and the trial was powered to test the noninferiority of cisplatin alone (<10% difference in the rate of complete resection). RESULTS Between June 1998 and December 2006, 126 patients were randomly assigned to receive cisplatin and 129 were randomly assigned to receive cisplatin plus doxorubicin. The rate of complete resection was 95% in the cisplatin-alone group and 93% in the cisplatin-doxorubicin group in the intention-to-treat analysis (difference, 1.4%; 95% confidence interval [CI], -4.1 to 7.0); these rates were 99% and 95%, respectively, in the per-protocol analysis. Three-year event-free survival and overall survival were, respectively, 83% (95% CI, 77 to 90) and 95% (95% CI, 91 to 99) in the cisplatin group, and 85% (95% CI, 79 to 92) and 93% (95% CI, 88 to 98) in the cisplatin-doxorubicin group (median follow-up, 46 months). Acute grade 3 or 4 adverse events were more frequent with combination therapy (74.4% vs. 20.6%). CONCLUSIONS As compared with cisplatin plus doxorubicin, cisplatin monotherapy achieved similar rates of complete resection and survival among children with standard-risk hepatoblastoma. Doxorubicin can be safely omitted from the treatment of standard-risk hepatoblastoma. (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00003912.)


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.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2014

Diagnostic criteria for constitutional mismatch repair deficiency syndrome: suggestions of the European consortium ‘Care for CMMRD’ (C4CMMRD)

Katharina Wimmer; Christian P. Kratz; Hans F. A. Vasen; Olivier Caron; Chrystelle Colas; Natacha Entz-Werle; Anne-Marie Gerdes; Yael Goldberg; Denisa Ilencikova; Martine Muleris; Alex Duval; Noémie Lavoine; Clara Ruiz-Ponte; Irene Slavc; Brigit Burkhardt; Laurence Brugières

Constitutional mismatch repair deficiency (CMMRD) syndrome is a distinct childhood cancer predisposition syndrome that results from biallelic germline mutations in one of the four MMR genes, MLH1, MSH2, MSH6 or PMS2. The tumour spectrum is very broad, including mainly haematological, brain and intestinal tract tumours. Patients show a variety of non-malignant features that are indicative of CMMRD. However, currently no criteria that should entail diagnostic evaluation of CMMRD exist. We present a three-point scoring system for the suspected diagnosis CMMRD in a paediatric/young adult cancer patient. Tumours highly specific for CMMRD syndrome are assigned three points, malignancies overrepresented in CMMRD two points and all other malignancies one point. According to their specificity for CMMRD and their frequency in the general population, additional features are weighted with 1–2 points. They include multiple hyperpigmented and hypopigmented skin areas, brain malformations, pilomatricomas, a second childhood malignancy, a Lynch syndrome (LS)-associated tumour in a relative and parental consanguinity. According to the scoring system, CMMRD should be suspected in any cancer patient who reaches a minimum of three points by adding the points of the malignancy and the additional features. The diagnostic steps to confirm or refute the suspected diagnosis are outlined. We expect that application of the suggested strategy for CMMRD diagnosis will increase the number of patients being identified at the time when they develop their first tumour. This will allow adjustment of the treatment modalities, offering surveillance strategies for second malignancies and appropriate counselling of the entire family.


The Lancet | 1997

Radiation and genetic factors in the risk of second malignant neoplasms after a first cancer in childhood

Sabine J Kony; Florent de Vathaire; Agnès Chompret; Akthar Shamsaldim; Emmanuel Grimaud; Marie-Anne Raquin; Odile Oberlin; Laurence Brugières; Jean Feunteun; F. Eschwege; Jean Chavaudra; J. Lemerle; Catherine Bonaïti-Pellié

BACKGROUND Radiotherapy and chemotherapy are associated with an increased risk of second malignant neoplasm (SMN). An association between SMN and familial aggregation has also been shown. The aim of this study was to investigate the role of familial factors in the risk of SMN and their potential interaction with the effect of treatment. METHODS We devised a case-control study of 25 children with SMN (cases) and 96 children with no SMN after a cancer treatment (controls), taken from a cohort of 649 children treated at our institution between 1953 and 1985. A complete family history was obtained for patients and controls and a familial index defined to evaluate the degree of familial aggregation. The radiation dose given at 151 sites in the body was estimated for each radiotherapy course for each child. FINDINGS Among family members of the 25 SMN cases, there were ten with early-onset (< or = 45 years) cancer, compared with eight among relatives of the 96 controls. Compared with patients who had no family history of early-onset cancer, those with one or more affected family members had an odds ratio for SMN of 4.7 (95% CI 1.3-17.1; p = 0.02). Adjustment for local radiation dose and exclusion of patients known to be predisposed to SMN (carriers of p53 mutation and those with Recklinghausens disease) did not affect this risk substantially. INTERPRETATION Both genetic factors and exposure to ionising radiation have independent effects on the risk of SMN. Follow-up of children treated for cancer should be especially vigilant when there is a family history of early-onset cancer.

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J. Lemerle

Institut Gustave Roussy

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