Madeleine Etienne
University of Lyon
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Featured researches published by Madeleine Etienne.
Haematologica | 2014
Gabriel Etienne; Stéphanie Dulucq; Franck-Emmanuel Nicolini; Stéphane Morisset; Marie-Pierre Fort; Anna Schmitt; Madeleine Etienne; Sandrine Hayette; Eric Lippert; Caroline Bureau; Isabelle Tigaud; Didier Adiko; Gerald Marit; Josy Reiffers; François-Xavier Mahon
Sustained imatinib treatment in chronic myeloid leukemia patients can result in complete molecular response allowing discontinuation without relapse. We set out to evaluate the frequency of complete molecular response in imatinib de novo chronic phase chronic myeloid leukemia patients, to identify base-line and under-treatment predictive factors of complete molecular response in patients achieving complete cytogenetic response, and to assess if complete molecular response is associated with a better outcome. A random selection of patients on front-line imatinib therapy (n=266) were considered for inclusion. Complete molecular response was confirmed and defined as MR 4.5 with undetectable BCR-ABL transcript levels. Median follow up was 4.43 years (range 0.79–10.8 years). Sixty-five patients (24%) achieved complete molecular response within a median time of 32.7 months. Absence of spleen enlargement at diagnosis, achieving complete cytogenetic response before 12 months of therapy, and major molecular response during the year following complete cytogenetic response was predictive of achieving further complete molecular response. Patients who achieved complete molecular response had better event-free and failure-free survivals than those with complete cytogenetic response irrespective of major molecular response status (95.2% vs. 64.7% vs. 27.7%, P=0.00124; 98.4% vs. 82.3% vs. 56%, P=0.0335), respectively. Overall survival was identical in the 3 groups. In addition to complete cytogenetic response and major molecular response, further deeper molecular response is associated with better event-free and failure-free survivals, and complete molecular response confers the best outcome.
The Lancet Haematology | 2015
Franck E. Nicolini; Gabriel Etienne; Viviane Dubruille; Lydia Roy; Françoise Huguet; Laurence Legros; Stéphane Giraudier; Valérie Coiteux; Agnès Guerci-Bresler; Pascal Lenain; Pascale Cony-Makhoul; Martine Gardembas; Eric Hermet; Philippe Rousselot; Shanti Ame; Marie-Claude Gagnieu; Christine Pivot; Sandrine Hayette; Véronique Maguer-Satta; Madeleine Etienne; Stéphanie Dulucq; Delphine Rea; François-Xavier Mahon
BACKGROUND Nilotinib is now recommended for patients with newly diagnosed chronic myeloid leukaemia in chronic phase and leads to important rates of molecular response 4·5 log (MR(4·5)), allowing the prospect of therapy cessation. However, most patients do not reach this criterion and nilotinib is taken for lengthy periods, resulting in chronic or late-onset adverse events. Nilotinib combined with interferon might further increase rates of MR(4·5), avoid late side-effects, and allow therapy cessation. In a phase 2 trial we aimed to assess the feasibility, safety, and deep molecular response of the combination of nilotinib (600 mg daily) and peginterferon alfa-2a in newly diagnosed patients with chronic-phase chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML). METHODS In a non-randomised, open-label, phase 2 trial, we enrolled adult patients (age ≥18 years) without any organ failure who had BCR-ABL-positive, chronic-phase CML, at diagnosis. After a priming procedure with 90 μg per week of peginterferon alfa-2a alone for a month, we gave patients peginterferon alfa-2a 45 μg per week combined with nilotinib 600 mg daily until 24 months after interferon initiation. The primary endpoint was the cumulative incidence of MR(4·5) at 12 months after initiation of peginterferon alfa-2a. Data were analysed by a modified intention-to-treat principle. This trial is registered at the European Clinical Trials Database (EudraCT), number 2010-019786-28. FINDINGS Between March 24, 2011, and Sept 27, 2011, we enrolled 42 patients. One patient withdrew consent before receiving any study treatment so was excluded from analysis; 41 patients received treatment with peginterferon alfa-2a and nilotinib. At 12 months, seven (17%) patients had achieved MR(4·5). Haematological and hepatic adverse events were frequent-with grade 3-4 neutropenias occurring in ten (24%) patients, grade 3-4 thrombocytopenias occurring in ten (24%) patients, grade 3-4 cholestatic events occurring in seven (17%) patients, and grade 3-4 elevations in aspartate aminotransferase or alanine aminotransferase occurring in three (7% patients-particularly during the first 3 months. However, 30 (73%) patients remained on interferon therapy at 1 year. Three grade 3-4 cardiac events (7% of patients, all coronary stenoses) occurred at later timepoints. INTERPRETATION The combination of peginterferon alfa-2a resulted in good molecular responses in patients. Despite substantial toxic effects, most patients remained on the study drugs for more than a year. This combination should now be tested in a randomised controlled trial. FUNDING Novartis Pharma.
Haematologica | 2016
Gaelle Fossard; Emilie Blond; Marie Balsat; Stéphane Morisset; Stéphane Giraudier; Martine Escoffre-Barbe; Hélène Labussière-Wallet; Maël Heiblig; Arthur Bert; Madeleine Etienne; Jocelyne Drai; Mohamad Sobh; Isabelle Redonnet-vernhet; Jean-Christophe Lega; François-Xavier Mahon; Gabriel Etienne; Franck E. Nicolini
In chronic phase chronic myeloid leukemia (CP-CML), nilotinib (Tasigna®, Novartis, second-generation tyrosine kinase inhibitor, TKI2) as second-line therapy1 results in successful responses and tolerance in ~50% of patients in the long-term.2 As a consequence, some patients have been on nilotinib for approximately 9–10 years now. Recently, nilotinib, introduced as first-line treatment, induced superior cytogenetic and molecular responses and significantly decreased the risk of progression,3 and has been approved in this setting since 2010.
European Journal of Haematology | 2018
Marie Balsat; Madeleine Etienne; Mohamed Elhamri; Sandrine Hayette; Gilles Salles; Xavier Thomas
Management of pregnant patients with BCR‐ABL‐positive leukemia is challenging. Managing a patient who has been diagnosed while pregnant requires a different approach as compared to a patient who plans to become pregnant while on the treatment with tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI). Interferon (IFN)‐alpha is a useful option in both situations due to teratogenic potential of TKIs.
Blood | 2013
Marie-Claude Gagnieu; Maël Heiblig; Emilie Blond; Laurence Legros; Yann Guillermin; Stéphane Morisset; Fiorenza Barraco; Madeleine Etienne; Oriane Le Borgne; Jeremy Ruby; Mohamad Sobh; Gaelle Richard-Colmant; Celine Fettig; Mauricette Michallet; Delphine Rea
Blood | 2011
Franck E. Nicolini; Sandrine Hayette; Hélène Labussière; Madeleine Etienne; Marie-Pierre Fort; Elodie Gadolet; Isabelle Tigaud; Kaddour Chabane; Eric Lippert; Mohamad Sobh; Stéphanie Dulucq; Stéphane Morisset; Mauricette Michallet; François-Xavier Mahon; Gabriel Etienne
Blood | 2010
Franck E. Nicolini; Stéphane Morisset; Andreas Hochhaus; Giovanni Martinelli; Dong-Wook Kim; Inge Høgh Dufva; Michael J. Mauro; Jorge Cortes; Charles Chuah; Jane F. Apperley; François Guilhot; Giuseppe Saglio; Martin C. Müller; Simona Soverini; Selim Corm; Isabelle Tigaud; Madeleine Etienne; Catherine Roche-Lestienne; Sandrine Hayette; Senaka Peter; Wei Zhou; Mauricette Michallet
Blood | 2014
Gaelle Fossard; Emilie Blond; Stephane Giraudier; Stéphane Morisset; Jeremy Ruby; Martine Escoffre-Barbe; Hélène Labussière-Wallet; Maël Heiblig; Madeleine Etienne; Jocelyne Drai; Mohamad Sobh; Mauricette Michallet; Isabelle Redonnet-vernhet; Jean-Christophe Lega; Gabriel Etienne; Franck E. Nicolini
Blood | 2015
Franck E. Nicolini; Gabriel Etienne; Viviane Dubruille; Lydia Roy; Françoise Huguet; Laurence Legros; Stéphane Giraudier; Valérie Coiteux; Agnès Guerci-Bresler; Pascal Lenain; Delphine Rea; Shanti Ame; Pascale Cony-Makhoul; Martine Gardembas; Eric Hermet; Philippe Rousselot; Marie-Claude Gagnieu; Stéphane Morisset; Christine Pivot; Madeleine Etienne; François Guilhot; Stéphanie Dulucq; François-Xavier Mahon
Blood | 2013
Mohamad Sobh; Hélène Labussière; Lila Gilis; Fiorenza Barraco; Madeleine Etienne; Oriane Le Borgne; Isabelle Tigaud; Sandrine Hayette; Sophie Ducastelle; Xavier Thomas