Mounir Bachouchi
Institut Gustave Roussy
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Featured researches published by Mounir Bachouchi.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1991
Hamouda Boussen; Esteban Cvitkovic; J L Wendling; Nasser Azli; Mounir Bachouchi; R Mahjoubi; C Kalifa; P. Wibault; G. Schwaab; Jean-Pierre Armand
Undifferentiated nasopharyngeal carcinoma (UCNT) is known to be radiosensitive and chemosensitive, but the latter has never been studied prospectively with phase II methodology. After an intensive work-up, 49 patients with recurrent (REC) and/or metastatic (MTS) UCNT were treated with three monthly cycles of cisplatin (CDDP) 100 mg/m2 day 1; bleomycin 15 mg intravenously (IV) day 1, and 16 mg/m2/d continuous infusion (CI) days 1 to 5; and fluorouracil (5FU) 650 mg/m2/d CI days 1 to 5 (PBF). Of the 49 patients, 33 were North African. The sex ratio was three males:one female, and the median World Health Organization (WHO) performance status was 1.6. In the 48 patients assessable for response, we observed nine (19%) complete responses (CRs) and 29 (60%) partial responses (PRs) (60%), for a 79% overall response rate (95% confidence interval, 68% to 90%) in the assessable group and a 78% global rate. There were eight CRs (24%) observed in the group without previous chemotherapy (33 patients) compared with one CR in the chemotherapy pretreated group (16 patients). Four patients are still alive without evidence of disease after 52+, 54+, 58+, and 58+ months, respectively. All of them had less than three bone MTS sites, and received radiation therapy in these sites. The results confirm the chemosensitivity of UCNT, and the observation of unmaintained long-term responders makes curability a possible consideration.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2000
Abderrahim Fandi; Mounir Bachouchi; Nacer Azli; Abdelkrim Taamma; Hammouda Boussen; P. Wibault; F. Eschwege; Jean-Pierre Armand; Jonathan Simon; Esteban Cvitkovic
PURPOSE To review incidence and analyze profile of long-term complete responders among patients with undifferentiated carcinoma of nasopharyngeal type (UCNT) treated at a single institution. PATIENTS AND METHODS We present a cohort of 20 long-term unmaintained complete responders to chemotherapy for metastatic UCNT treated at the Institut Gustave Roussy between April 1978 and November 1996. A patient was considered a long-term survivor if he or she was disease-free for more than 36 months without treatment after obtaining a complete response by chemotherapy. Patient characteristics were as follows: sex, 17 men and three women; median age, 28 years (range, 9 to 62 years); median World Health Organization performance status, 1; and initial tumor-node-metastasis stage (International Union Against Cancer-American Joint Committee on Cancer, 1987) of T3 to T4, 60%, and of N2b to N3, 75%. Epstein-Barr virus serology was characteristic in 19 patients. Of 16 pretreated patients, 11 were pretreated by radiotherapy alone and five by chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Thirteen patients had metastatic relapses of locally controlled UCNT. Tumor sites were bone in 15 patients, lung in four, and liver (biopsy-proven) in two. Chemotherapy included the following: cisplatin, bleomycin, and fluorouracil in five patients; bleomycin, epirubicin, and cisplatin in seven patients; fluorouracil, mitomycin, epirubicin, and cisplatin in four patients; and fluorouracil, bleomycin, epirubicin, and cisplatin in one patient. Three patients were treated with platinum-based regimens before 1985. Patients received a median of six cycles (range, three to 13). Thirteen patients with bone metastases received consolidating radiotherapy. RESULTS As of June 1999, 14 of 20 patients were still alive with no evidence of disease after treatment (disease-free survival time, 82+ to 190+ months), three patients died of other causes while in complete response at 61, 109, and 208 months after treatment, and three patients died of disease at 42, 89, and 115 months after treatment. Long-term complete responses were obtained in both bone and visceral disease. CONCLUSION Our data support a curative role for chemotherapy in metastatic UCNT and are a major incentive to continue research for better combinations to increase the percentage of patients with metastatic UCNT who attain complete responses and long-term survival.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1993
Esteban Cvitkovic; Mounir Bachouchi; Hamouda Boussen; Pierre Busson; Germain Rousselet; Rauda Mahjoubi; Patrick Flores; Thomas Tursz; Jean Pierre Armand; Nacer Azli
PURPOSE This study is an analysis of frequency and relationship regarding two undifferentiated carcinoma of nasopharyngeal type (UCNT)-associated paraneoplastic syndromes (PNS): leukemoid reaction (LR) and fever of unknown origin (FUO) with bone marrow invasion (BMI) and metastatic pattern. PATIENTS AND METHODS A consecutive UCNT patient cohort (N = 255) with locally advanced (n = 142) or metastatic (n = 113) disease receiving chemotherapy alone or in combination with radiotherapy was studied. All patients had a complete baseline work-up that included bone marrow biopsy. RESULTS UCNT has distinctive features among head and neck squamous cell cancers (HNSCC). These include early subclinical dissemination, with 70% of metastases appearing within 18 months of first symptoms. Metastases are common in bone (65% v 25% in HNSCC), liver (29% v 23%), and lung (18% v 84%), and BMI is observed in 25% of UCNT patients with metastases. Metastases likelihood is related to lymph node involvement, with 64% of patients with metastases having N3 disease. Involved lymph nodes in contrasted CT scans revealed hypodensity in 26% of UCNT patients versus 79% in patients with other HNSCC. Hypercalcemia was observed in one case. LR was identified in 41 patients (16%); in 26 of the 41 patients (64%) it was observed concomitant with N3 and/or metastatic disease. FUO was found in 23 patients (9%) and was associated in four instances with BMI and in 17 with LR (in four instances with both). Brain metastases or meningeal carcinomatosis were not observed despite the high rate of skull base compromise. Paraneoplastic signs were observed in 47 of 255 cases (18.5%) and were more frequent in patients with metastases. However, PNS were observed in 15 patients with negative metastases work-up. CONCLUSION The PNS described could help in the diagnosis and follow-up of UCNT patients because they may be the first manifestation of the disease or may reappear with relapse. BMI is a frequent finding in patients with metastases and is unrelated to PNS.
European Journal of Cancer | 1992
N Azli; Jean-Pierre Armand; M Rahal; P. Wibault; H. Boussen; F. Eschwege; G. Schwaab; J Gasmi; Mounir Bachouchi; Esteban Cvitkovic
UNLABELLED More than 80% of undifferentiated carcinoma nasopharyngeal type patients with N3 disease (AJC-UICC 1987) will die with or from distant metastases within 3 years after the first symptom. From February 1986 to November 1987 30 consecutive patients with very advanced local disease were entered in a programme with chemotherapy-radiotherapy (CT-RT) alternation after a thorough work-up to eliminate the possibility of distant metastases. PROTOCOL two cycles of cisplatin 100 mg/m2 day 1, bleomycin 15 mg intravenously day 1 and 16 mg/m2 per day by continuous infusion days 1-5; 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) 650 mg/m2 per day by continuous infusion days 1-5 4 weeks apart. This was followed by two series of high-energy radiotherapy, 35 Gy/3.5 weeks, with a third chemotherapy cycle in between. 27 men and 3 women were treated, the median age was 37 years (range 17-71) and the mean WHO performance status was 1 (range 0-3). TNM classification: 15 T4, 9 T3, 6 T2, 28 N3 and 2 N2c. 18 patients had nodes larger than 8 cm and 24 had bulky bilateral cervical nodes. Toxicity for this protocol was moderate, nausea and vomiting being the main side-effects. Results after two CT cycles were 3 complete responses (CR; 10%), 22 partial responses (PR; 73%), 2 disease stabilizations, 2 progressions, and 1 patient inevaluable. Of the 30 patients, 27 patients completed the CT-RT protocol, 2 patients died before radiotherapy and 1 refused treatment after 2 days on protocol. 25 patients were in CR 3 months after the end of radiotherapy. As of August 1991, with a median follow-up of 55 months (range 43-63), there are 17 patients alive, 2 of them with active disease and 15 are NED (2 after salvage therapy).
Head and Neck-journal for The Sciences and Specialties of The Head and Neck | 1997
A. Fandi; Abdelkrim Taamma; N. Azli; Mounir Bachouchi; Bashar Yanes; Jean Pierre Armand; Esteban Cvitkovic
Low‐dose protracted continuous infusion (CI) 5‐fluorouracil (5‐FU), as proposed by Lokich et al, has been reported to be active and well tolerated in colorectal and breast cancers. We initiated a phase II trial with CI 5‐FU in heavily pretreated undifferentiated carcinoma of the nasopharyngeal type (UCNT) patients in February 1989.
Laryngoscope | 1992
Thierry Guillot; Marc Spielmann; Jean Kac; B. Luboinski; Eduardo Tellez‐Bernal; Jean-Nicolas Munck; Mounir Bachouchi; Jean-Pierre Armand; Esteban Cvitkovic
A consecutive series of 22 patients with multiple synchronous squamous cell carcinomas of the upper aerodigestive tract was retrospectively reviewed. These patients were treated initially with cis‐platinum combination chemotherapy before definitive locoregional therapy (surgery and/or radiation therapy).
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1993
Germain Rousselet; Mounir Bachouchi; Pierre Busson; F. De Vathaire; Hiro Wakasugi; G. Schwaab; Nasser Azli; Jean-Pierre Armand; Esteban Cvitkovic; Thomas Tursz
PURPOSE In contrast with other carcinoma cells, cells from nude mice transplanted undifferentiated carcinoma of nasopharyngeal type (UCNT) release the soluble fragment of the CD23 antigen (sCD23). We sought to study the level of sCD23 in sera of untreated UCNT patients. PATIENTS AND METHODS Pretherapeutic sera from 65 consecutive, locally advanced, initially nonmetastatic UCNT patients were assayed for sCD23. Patients were treated with a neoadjuvant chemotherapy/full-dose radiotherapy sequence. The mean follow-up duration is 50.5 months (range, 28 to 77). The Cox proportional hazards model was used to study the association between sCD23 levels and clinical signs and disease evolution. RESULTS sCD23 levels showed an association with disease-free survival (DFS; P = .08) and overall survival (OVS; P = .08). Patients with sCD23 levels greater than a cutoff value of 0.6 ng/mL (greater cutoffs were found to be equally significant, but less sensitive), have a relative risk (RR) of relapse of 3.3 (95% confidence interval, 1.6 to 6.9; P = .002), and an RR of death of 2.9 (95% confidence interval, 1.2 to 7.3; P = .02), when taking other prognostic factors into account. CD23 does not correlate with either the response to treatment or the development of metastases, but appears to be related to local control (cutoff, 0.6 ng/mL; RR = 5.1 [95% confidence interval, 1.2 to 21.7]; P = .02). CONCLUSION The serum level of sCD23 appears to be an independent prognostic factor for initially nonmetastatic, locally advanced UCNT patients, treated with chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Our data indicate an association between this marker and local relapses. Thus, a simple enzyme-linked immunoadsorbent assay (ELISA) could help to identify a high-risk group among nonmetastatic UCNT patients. CD23 could be a marker for two groups of UCNT tumors, with distinct biologic characteristics and clinical behaviors.
Archive | 1991
Jean-Pierre Armand; Esteban Cvitkovic; Mounir Bachouchi
UCNT is a clinical entity distinguished from other head and neck carcinomas by its particular histology (first described by Regaud and Schminke), its geographic distribution, its Epstein-Barr Virus and its natural history. This tumor is very radiosensitive. Even if its chemo-sensitivity was noticed early it has never been proven, and its use has never been well established in the management of UCNT.
Archive | 1991
Mounir Bachouchi; Esteban Cvitkovic; Jean-Pierre Armand
Undifferentiated carcinoma of nasopharyngeal: type {UCNT), an endemic Epstein-Barr Virus {EBV) related carcinoma of epidermoid origin that arises in the nasopharyngeal mucosa was first described by Schmincke (1) and Regaud (2). This tumor is a clinical and histopathological variant from squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of the head and neck. Reasons other than the geographic distribution are: a) The high incidence of metastatic disease, especially in patients with large nodal volume at presentation. Most cancer deaths (z80%) are the result of metastatic disease, often latent clinically and biologically for long periods of time (3). b) The overall natural history is relative!y short, 80% of the metastases appear within 18 months from the first symptoms, especially in patients with high volume disease (3). c) UCNT is traditionally a very radiosensitive tumor with a high local control rate (≥85%) achieved by cobalt and/or high energy radiation therapy only (4). Nevertheless, the 5-year survival rate reported in published series varies between 15% and 40%, depending on patient eligibility criteria and follow up performance. The main prognostic determinant is advanced nodal disease (3, 5). d) UCNT is also very chemo-sensitive. Systemic cytotoxic therapy has been used as neoadjuvant (6) adjuvant(7), and simultaneously with radiotherapy (8). Long term complete responses have been obtained in disseminated disease
Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 1990
Mounir Bachouchi; Esteban Cvitkovic; Nasser Azli; Jamal Gasmi; Hernan Cortes-Funes; Hamouda Boussen; Mohamed Rahal; Chantal Kalifa; G. Schwaab; F. Eschwege; P. Wibault; Jean Pierre Armand