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Dive into the research topics where Patrick Petignat is active.

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Featured researches published by Patrick Petignat.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2006

Enhanced Detection and Typing of Human Papillomavirus (HPV) DNA in Anogenital Samples with PGMY Primers and the Linear Array HPV Genotyping Test

François Coutlée; Danielle Rouleau; Patrick Petignat; Georges Ghattas; Janet Kornegay; Peter Schlag; Sean Boyle; Catherine Hankins; Sylvie Vézina; Pierre Côté; John Macleod; Hélène Voyer; Pierre Forest; Sharon Walmsley; Eduardo L. Franco

ABSTRACT The Roche PGMY primer-based research prototype line blot assay (PGMY-LB) is a convenient tool in epidemiological studies for the detection and typing of human papillomavirus (HPV) DNA. This assay has been optimized and is being commercialized as the Linear Array HPV genotyping test (LA-HPV). We assessed the agreement between LA-HPV and PGMY-LB for detection and typing of 37 HPV genotypes in 528 anogenital samples (236 anal, 146 physician-collected cervical, and 146 self-collected cervicovaginal swabs) obtained from human immunodeficiency virus-seropositive individuals (236 men and 146 women). HPV DNA was detected in 433 (82.0%) and 458 (86.7%) samples with PGMY-LB and LA-HPV (P = 0.047), respectively, for an excellent agreement of 93.8% (kappa = 0.76). Of the 17,094 HPV typing results, 16,562 (1,743 positive and 14,819 negative results) were concordant between tests (agreement = 96.9%; kappa = 0.76). The mean agreement between tests for each type was 96.4% ± 2.4% (95% confidence interval [CI], 95.6% to 97.2%; range, 86% to 100%), for an excellent mean kappa value of 0.85 ± 0.10 (95% CI, 0.82 to 0.87). However, detection rates for most HPV types were greater with LA-HPV. The mean number of types per sample detected by LA-HPV (4.2 ± 3.4; 95% CI, 3.9 to 4.5; median, 3.0) was greater than that for PGMY-LB (3.4 ± 3.0; 95% CI, 3.1 to 3.6; median, 2.0) (P < 0.001). The number of types detected in excess by LA-HPV in anal samples correlated with the number of types per sample (r = 0.49 ± 0.06; P = 0.001) but not with patient age (r = 0.03 ± 0.06; P = 0.57), CD4 cell counts (r = 0.06 ± 0.06; P = 0.13), or the grade of anal disease (r = −0.11 ± 0.06; P = 0.07). LA-HPV compared favorably with PGMY-LB but yielded higher detection rates for newer and well-known HPV types.


BMJ | 2007

Diagnosis and management of cervical cancer

Patrick Petignat; Michel Roy

Cervical cancer is the second most common cancer in women worldwide, with more than half a million new cases diagnosed in 2005.1 The disease disproportionately affects the poorest regions—more than 80% of cases are found in developing nations, mainly in Latin America, sub-Saharan Africa, and the Indian subcontinent.1 Cervical cancer is an important cause of early loss of life as it affects relatively young women. Important advances have taken place in the diagnosis and treatment of this cancer in recent years. Surgery or chemoradiotherapy can cure 80-95% of women with early stage disease (stages I and II) and 60% with stage III disease (table⇓).2 3 4 5 View this table: International Federation of Gynaecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) staging classification (FIGO 1995, Montreal): cervical carcinoma #### Summary points We searched the literature to identify all relevant articles published from 1966 to March 2007 (PubMed and Cochrane database) using a combination of the terms “cervical cancer”, “diagnosis”, and “management”. Variables of interest were cervical cancer, surgery, chemotherapy, radiotherapy, chemoradiotherapy, complications of treatment, recurrence, and follow-up. Much of the clinical management discussed in this review was based on meta-analyses, systematic reviews, and phase III randomised controlled trials (RCTs). Infection with high risk types of human papillomavirus is the main cause of cervical cancer.6 This has obvious implications for primary prevention (vaccination) and secondary …


Gynecologic Oncology | 2009

Young patients with endometrial cancer: How many could be eligible for fertility-sparing treatment?

Isabelle Anne Laure Navarria; Massimo Usel; Elisabetta Rapiti; Isabelle Neyroud-Caspar; Marie-Françoise Pelte; Christine Bouchardy; Patrick Petignat

OBJECTIVES To assess the characteristics of young women with endometrial carcinoma, and evaluate those potentially eligible for conservative therapy. METHODS We identified women diagnosed with endometrial cancer between 1970 and 2005 at the population-based Geneva Cancer Registry (n=1365). We classified patients into two age groups (< or =45 and >45 years old). Differences in demographic, tumor, diagnostic and treatment characteristics were tested with chi square. Kaplan-Meier analysis was used to calculate survival from endometrial cancer and the log-rank test to analyze differences in survival between the two groups. RESULTS The young group comprised 44 (3.2%) women and the old group 1321 (96.8%) women. Synchronous ovarian malignancies were found in six patients (14%) in the young group, compared with 23 (2%) in the old group (P<0.001). Tumor stage was also different between the two groups, principally because of more stage II among the young (P=0.012). Histological tumor type, grade and specific endometrial cancer 5-year survival did not significantly differ between the two groups. According to final histopathologic evaluation, eight patients from the young group had FIGO stage IA, grade I disease, i.e. may have been eligible for fertility-sparing treatment, corresponding to an incidence rate of 0.3/100,000. CONCLUSION No significant difference regarding tumor characteristics and survival between young and older patients was observed, except stage of disease and rate of synchronous ovarian malignancy. Conservative approach is a meaningful quality of life goal for patients with cancer, but only suitable for a limited number of patients.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2005

Self-Sampling Is Associated with Increased Detection of Human Papillomavirus DNA in the Genital Tract of HIV-Seropositive Women

Patrick Petignat; Catherine Hankins; Sharon Walmsley; Deborah M. Money; Diane Provencher; Karina Pourreaux; Janet Kornegay; Fabrice Rouah; François Coutlùe

BACKGROUND Analysis of self-collected swab samples from the genital tract could improve accrual and retention of women in studies of human papillomavirus (HPV) infection and precancerous cervical lesions. Self-collected vaginal swab specimens and physician-collected cervical swab specimens were compared for detection and typing of HPV DNA in 158 HIV-seropositive women. METHODS Paired samples were collected for 157 participants. Beta-globin was not detected in 6 (3.3%) physician-collected specimens and 8 (4.3%) self-obtained specimens collected from 11 women, leaving 146 paired samples suitable for PCR analysis. HPV DNA was amplified with the HPV primers PGMY09 and PGMY11 and typed using the line blot assay. RESULTS HPV DNA was detected more frequently in self-collected samples (95 [65.1%] of 146), compared with physician-collected samples (78 [53.4%] of 146) (P = .04). Self-collected samples contained a greater number of types (mean +/- SD, 1.60 +/- 1.80 types; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.31-1.90), compared with physician-collected samples (mean +/- SD, 1.25 +/- 1.66 types; 95% CI, 0.98-1.52) (P = .04). A good agreement between sampling methods was achieved for detection of any HPV DNA (kappa = 0.73; 95% CI, 0.58-0.89), high-risk types (kappa = 0.84; 95% CI, 0.68-0.99), and low-risk types (kappa = 0.71; 95% CI, 0.67-0.75). Agreement between sampling methods for detection of HPV DNA was found for 24 (88.8%) of 27 follow-up samples collected from a total of 20 women. A comparison of samples collected at consecutive visits revealed agreements for detection of any HPV DNA, detection of high-risk HPV, and HPV typing results between visits of 88.9% (24 of 27 samples), 81.5% (22 of 27), and 55.5% (15 of 27), respectively, for physician-collected samples, and 96.3% (26 of 27 samples), 92.6% (25 of 27), and 55.5% (15 of 27), respectively, for self-collected samples. CONCLUSION Analysis of self-collected vaginal swab samples improved the detection rate of HPV, suggesting that such samples might be of greater value than physician-obtained samples in studies of HPV transmission.


Critical Reviews in Oncology Hematology | 2009

Dissemination of intraperitoneal ovarian cancer: Discussion of mechanisms and demonstration of lymphatic spreading in ovarian cancer model

Anis Feki; Philip Berardi; Geoff Bellingan; Attila Major; Karl-Heinz Krause; Patrick Petignat; Rubab Zehra; Shazib Pervaiz; Irmgard Irminger-Finger

Ovarian cancer is often accompanied by severe ascites. This complication aggravates the disease per se and the chances for its successful treatment. The etiology of ascites is not well understood nor are efficient therapies for ascites available. These empirical observations support the view that ascites might be caused by blocking of lymphatic vessels. Furthermore, it suggests that cancer cells might be the blocking agent and could use lymphatic vessels for metastatic spreading. To test this hypothesis, we used labeled cancer cells in an immuno-competent animal model of ovarian cancer and followed their dissemination. These NuTu-19 cells are ovarian cancer cells derived from normal rat ovarian epithelial cells, the origin of the most frequent ovarian cancer. Thus studying NuTu-19 cell behavior in an animal model is likely to reflect the progression of the human disease. To unambiguously document the migration of NuTu-19 cells from the peritoneum to remote organs, we generated EGFP expressing NuTu-19 cells by transduction with EGFP-lentiviral vectors. The EGFP positive NuTu-19 cells were injected intraperitoneally into immuno-competent FISHER 344 rats, and the metastatic spreading was monitored. Metastases were observed on the peritoneum, the omentum and in the parathymus. This clearly demonstrates that systemic spreading of NuTu-19 ovarian cancer cells is conducted by lymphatic ways. Animals die 7 weeks after injection, with severe ascites, which suggests that blockage of lymphatic drainage by the cancer cell growth is an important complication of the disease.


BMC Women's Health | 2011

Awareness of HPV and cervical cancer prevention among Cameroonian healthcare workers

Catherine Mccarey; David Pirek; Pierre Marie Tebeu; Michel Boulvain; Anderson Sama Doh; Patrick Petignat

BackgroundCervical cancer, although largely preventable, remains the most common cause of cancer mortality among women in low-resource countries.The objective of this study was to assess knowledge and awareness of cervical cancer prevention among Cameroonian healthcare workers.MethodsA cross-sectional self-administered questionnaire in 5 parts with 46 items regarding cervical cancer etiology and prevention was addressed to healthcare workers in six hospitals of Yaoundé, Cameroon. The investigators enlisted heads of nursing and midwifery to distribute questionnaires to their staff, recruited doctors individually, in hospitals and during conferences and distributed questionnaires to students in Yaoundé University Hospital and Medical School. Eight hundred and fifty questionnaires were distributed, 401 collected. Data were analyzed with SPSS version 16.0. Chi-square tests were used and P-values < 0.05 were considered significant.ResultsMean age of respondents was 38 years (range 20-71 years). Most participants were aware that cervical cancer is a major public health concern (86%), were able to identify the most important etiological factors (58%) and believed that screening may prevent cervical cancer (90%) and may be performed by Pap test (84%). However, less than half considered VIA or HPV tests screening tests (38 and 47%, respectively). Knowledge about cancer etiology and screening was lowest among nurse/midwives.ConclusionKnowledge of cervical cancer and prevention by screening showed several gaps and important misconceptions regarding screening methods.Creating awareness among healthcare workers on risk factors and current methods for cervical cancer screening is a necessary step towards implementing effective prevention programs.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2011

Human Papillomavirus (HPV) DNA Triage of Women with Atypical Squamous Cells of Undetermined Significance with cobas 4800 HPV and Hybrid Capture 2 Tests for Detection of High-Grade Lesions of the Uterine Cervix

Simon Grandjean Lapierre; Philippe Sauthier; Marie-Hélène Mayrand; Simon F. Dufresne; Patrick Petignat; Diane Provencher; Pierre Drouin; Philippe Gauthier; Marie-Josée Dupuis; Bertrand Michon; Stéphan Ouellet; Rachid Hadjeres; Alex Ferenczy; Eduardo L. Franco; François Coutlée

ABSTRACT The triage of women with high-risk (HR) human papillomavirus (HPV)-positive smears for atypical squamous cells of undetermined significance (ASC-US) to colposcopy is now an integrated option in clinical guidelines. The performance of cobas 4800 HPV and that of Hybrid Capture 2 (HC2) for HR HPV DNA detection in cervical samples in PreservCyt were compared in 396 women referred to colposcopy for ASC-US. Of these, 316 did not have cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN), 47 had CIN1, 29 had CIN2 or CIN3 (CIN2+), and 4 had CIN of unknown grade. HR HPV was detected in 129 (32.6%) and 149 (37.6%) samples with HC2 and cobas 4800 HPV, respectively (P = 0.15). The clinical sensitivities and specificities for detecting CIN2+ were 89.7% (95% confidence interval [CI], 72.8 to 97.2%) and 66.7% (95% CI, 61.7 to 71.3%) with cobas 4800 HPV and 93.1% (95% CI, 77.0 to 99.2%) and 72.2% (95% CI 67.4 to 76.5%) with HC2. The performance of cobas 4800 HPV was similar to that of HC2 for identifying women with ASC-US who would benefit the most from colposcopy.


World journal of clinical oncology | 2015

Cervical cancer screening in developing countries at a crossroad: Emerging technologies and policy choices

Rosa Catarino; Patrick Petignat; Gabriel Dongui; Pierre Vassilakos

Cervical cancer (CC) represents the fourth most common malignancy affecting women all over the world and is the second most common in developing areas. In these areas, the burden from disease remains important because of the difficulty in implementing cytology-based screening programmes. The main obstacles inherent to these countries are poverty and a lack of healthcare infrastructures and trained practitioners. With the availability of new technologies, researchers have attempted to find new strategies that are adapted to low- and middle-income countries (LMIC) to promote early diagnosis of cervical pathology. Current evidence suggests that human papillomavirus (HPV) testing is more effective than cytology for CC screening. Therefore, highly sensitive tests have now been developed for primary screening. Rapid molecular methods for detecting HPV DNA have only recently been commercially available. This constitutes a milestone in CC screening in low-resource settings because it may help overcome the great majority of obstacles inherent to previous screening programmes. Despite several advantages, HPV-based screening has a low positive predictive value for CC, so that HPV-positive women need to be triaged with further testing to determine optimal management. Visual inspection tests, cytology and novel biomarkers are some options. In this review, we provide an overview of current and emerging screening approaches for CC. In particular, we discuss the challenge of implementing an efficient cervical screening adapted to LMIC and the opportunity to introduce primary HPV-based screening with the availability of point-of-care (POC) HPV testing. The most adapted screening strategy to LMIC is still a work in progress, but we have reasons to believe that POC HPV testing makes part of the future strategies in association with a triage test that still needs to be defined.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2009

Anatomic Distribution of Posterior Deeply Infiltrating Endometriosis on MRI After Vaginal and Rectal Gel Opacification

Pierre Loubeyre; Patrick Petignat; Sandrine Jacob; Jean-François Egger; Jean-Bernard Dubuisson; Jean-Marie Wenger

OBJECTIVE The challenges of imaging posterior deeply infiltrating endometriosis with MRI are to image a small anatomic area encompassing several thin fibromuscular anatomic structures such as uterosacral ligaments, and the vaginal and rectal walls; and to image endometriotic lesions, which are fibromuscular structures and have an MRI signal intensity very close to those of surrounding fibromuscular anatomic structures. CONCLUSION We show the capability and potential of MRI in diagnosing and staging of posterior deeply infiltrating endometriosis after vaginal and rectal gel opacification.


Reproductive Biomedicine Online | 2014

AMH concentration is not related to effective time to pregnancy in women who conceive naturally

Isabelle Streuli; Jacques de Mouzon; Céline Paccolat; Charles Chapron; Patrick Petignat; Olivier Irion; Dominique de Ziegler

This study determined whether anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH) concentration influences the time necessary to conceive a live-born child--effective time to pregnancy (eTTP)--in a population of women who conceived naturally. This is an observational study of 87 women with a planned spontaneous pregnancy resulting in a live birth. eTTP was assessed retrospectively by a questionnaire and AMH was measured in a frozen serum sample from first trimester of pregnancy. eTTP was correlated with age (r=-0.24, P=0.02), but not with AMH (r=-0.10) or body mass index (r=0.05). With logistic regressions, the only variable that affected the probability of pregnancy within 3 or 6 months was age, irrespective of whether an AMH concentration limit of 1.0 ng/ml or 2.0 ng/ml was chosen. In conclusion, this study suggests that there is no relationship between AMH concentration and eTTP and therefore speaks against determining AMH in women who are not infertile for the purpose of predicting their chances of pregnancy. The findings are concordant with previous reports describing AMH as a quantitative but not a qualitative marker of ovarian reserve and therefore does not reflect a womans ability to become pregnant. Anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH) is secreted by small growing ovarian follicles and reflects a womans ovarian reserve - the number of primordial follicles at a given time. AMH concentrations has been extensively studied in infertile women but there are only scarce data on AMH in non-infertile women. Our objective was to determine whether AMH concentrations influence the time necessary to conceive a live-born child - also called effective time to pregnancy (eTTP) - in a population of women who conceived naturally. We conducted an observational study between 2007 and 2009 in which we assessed eTTP retrospectively in 87 women who had delivered a live-born child and measured AMH in a frozen blood sample collected during the first trimester of pregnancy. The results of our study show, as expected, a decrease of AMH concentrations as age increases but no relationship between AMH and eTTP. In conclusion, our study results suggest AMH concentrations do not influence the time necessary to conceive a live-born child spontaneously and therefore speak against determining AMH in women who are not infertile for the purpose of predicting their chances of pregnancy. Our findings are concordant with previous reports describing AMH as a quantitative but not a qualitative marker of ovarian function that does therefore not reflect a womans ability to become pregnant.

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