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Dive into the research topics where Philippe Fourneret is active.

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Featured researches published by Philippe Fourneret.


Lancet Oncology | 2006

Boost radiotherapy in young women with ductal carcinoma in situ: a multicentre, retrospective study of the Rare Cancer Network

Aurelius Omlin; Maurizio Amichetti; D. Azria; Bernard F. Cole; Philippe Fourneret; Philip Poortmans; Diana Naehrig; Robert C. Miller; Marco Krengli; Cristina Gutierrez Miguelez; D.A.L. Morgan; Hadassah Goldberg; Luciano Scandolaro; Pauline Gastelblum; Mahmut Ozsahin; Dagmar Dohr; David Christie; Ulrich Oppitz; Ufuk Abacioglu; Guenther Gruber

BACKGROUND Outcome data in young women with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) are rare. The benefits of boost radiotherapy in this group are also unknown. We aimed to assess the effect of boost radiotherapy in young patients with DCIS. METHODS We included 373 women from 18 institutions who met the following inclusion criteria: having tumour status Tis and nodal status (N)0, age 45 years or younger at diagnosis, and having had breast-conserving surgery. 57 (15%) patients had no radiotherapy after surgery, 166 (45%) had radiotherapy without boost (median dose 50 Gy [range 40-60]), and 150 (40%) had radiotherapy with boost (60 Gy [53-76]). The primary outcome was local relapse-free survival. FINDINGS Median follow-up was 72 months (range 1-281). 55 (15%) patients had local relapse. Local relapse-free survival at 10 years was 46% (95% CI 24-67) for patients given no radiotherapy, 72% (61-83) for those given radiotherapy without boost, and 86% (78-93) for those given radiotherapy and boost (difference between all three groups, p<0.0001). Age, margin status, and radiotherapy dose were significant predictors of local relapse-free survival. Compared with patients who had no radiotherapy, those who had radiotherapy had a decreased risk of local relapse (without boost, hazard ratio 0.33 [95% CI 0.16-0.71], p=0.004; with boost, 0.15 [0.06-0.36], p<0.0001). INTERPRETATION In the absence of randomised trials, boost radiotherapy should be considered in addition to surgery for breast-conserving treatment for DCIS.


Lancet Oncology | 2016

Salvage radiotherapy with or without short-term hormone therapy for rising prostate-specific antigen concentration after radical prostatectomy (GETUG-AFU 16): a randomised, multicentre, open-label phase 3 trial

Christian Carrie; Ali Hasbini; Guy de Laroche; Pierre Richaud; Stéphane Guerif; Igor Latorzeff; S. Supiot; Mathieu Bosset; Jean-Léon Lagrange; V. Beckendorf; François Lesaunier; Bernard Dubray; Jean-Philippe Wagner; Tan Dat Nguyen; Jean-Philippe Suchaud; G. Créhange; Nicolas Barbier; Muriel Habibian; Céline Ferlay; Philippe Fourneret; A. Ruffion; Sophie Dussart

BACKGROUND How best to treat rising prostate-specific antigen (PSA) concentration after radical prostatectomy is an urgent clinical question. Salvage radiotherapy delays the need for more aggressive treatment such as long-term androgen suppression, but fewer than half of patients benefit from it. We aimed to establish the effect of adding short-term androgen suppression at the time of salvage radiotherapy on biochemical outcome and overall survival in men with rising PSA following radical prostatectomy. METHODS This open-label, multicentre, phase 3, randomised controlled trial, was done in 43 French study centres. We enrolled men (aged ≥18 years) who had received previous treatment for a histologically confirmed adenocarcinoma of the prostate (but no previous androgen deprivation therapy or pelvic radiotherapy), and who had stage pT2, pT3, or pT4a (bladder neck involvement only) in patients who had rising PSA of 0·2 to less than 2·0 μg/L following radical prostatectomy, without evidence of clinical disease. Patients were randomly assigned (1:1) centrally via an interactive web response system to standard salvage radiotherapy (three-dimensional [3D] conformal radiotherapy or intensity modulated radiotherapy, of 66 Gy in 33 fractions 5 days a week for 7 weeks) or radiotherapy plus short-term androgen suppression using 10·8 mg goserelin by subcutaneous injection on the first day of irradiation and 3 months later. Randomisation was stratified using a permuted block method according to investigational site, radiotherapy modality, and prognosis. The primary endpoint was progression-free survival, analysed in the intention-to-treat population. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00423475. FINDINGS Between Oct 19, 2006, and March 30, 2010, 743 patients were randomly assigned, 374 to radiotherapy alone and 369 to radiotherapy plus goserelin. Patients assigned to radiotherapy plus goserelin were significantly more likely than patients in the radiotherapy alone group to be free of biochemical progression or clinical progression at 5 years (80% [95% CI 75-84] vs 62% [57-67]; hazard ratio [HR] 0·50, 95% CI 0·38-0·66; p<0·0001). No additional late adverse events occurred in patients receiving short-term androgen suppression compared with those who received radiotherapy alone. The most frequently occuring acute adverse events related to goserelin were hot flushes, sweating, or both (30 [8%] of 366 patients had a grade 2 or worse event; 30 patients [8%] had hot flushes and five patients [1%] had sweating in the radiotherapy plus goserelin group vs none of 372 patients in the radiotherapy alone group). Three (8%) of 366 patients had grade 3 or worse hot flushes and one patient had grade 3 or worse sweating in the radiotherapy plus goserelin group versus none of 372 patients in the radiotherapy alone group. The most common late adverse events of grade 3 or worse were genitourinary events (29 [8%] in the radiotherapy alone group vs 26 [7%] in the radiotherapy plus goserelin group) and sexual disorders (20 [5%] vs 30 [8%]). No treatment-related deaths occurred. INTERPRETATION Adding short-term androgen suppression to salvage radiotherapy benefits men who have had radical prostatectomy and whose PSA rises after a postsurgical period when it is undetectable. Radiotherapy combined with short-term androgen suppression could be considered as a reasonable option in this population. FUNDING French Ministry of Health, AstraZeneca, and La Ligue Contre le Cancer.


Medical Physics | 2004

MRI/TRUS data fusion for prostate brachytherapy. Preliminary results.

Christophe Reynier; Jocelyne Troccaz; Philippe Fourneret; Andrée Dusserre; Cécile Gay-Jeune; Jean-Luc Descotes; Michel Bolla; Jean-Yves Giraud

Prostate brachytherapy involves implanting radioactive seeds (I125 for instance) permanently in the gland for the treatment of localized prostate cancers, e.g., cT1c-T2a N0 M0 with good prognostic factors. Treatment planning and seed implanting are most often based on the intensive use of transrectal ultrasound (TRUS) imaging. This is not easy because prostate visualization is difficult in this imaging modality particularly as regards the apex of the gland and from an intra- and interobserver variability standpoint. Radioactive seeds are implanted inside open interventional MR machines in some centers. Since MRI was shown to be sensitive and specific for prostate imaging whilst open MR is prohibitive for most centers and makes surgical procedures very complex, this work suggests bringing the MR virtually in the operating room with MRI/TRUS data fusion. This involves providing the physician with bi-modality images (TRUS plus MRI) intended to improve treatment planning from the data registration stage. The paper describes the method developed and implemented in the PROCUR system. Results are reported for a phantom and first series of patients. Phantom experiments helped characterize the accuracy of the process. Patient experiments have shown that using MRI data linked with TRUS data improves TRUS image segmentation especially regarding the apex and base of the prostate. This may significantly modify prostate volume definition and have an impact on treatment planning.


International Journal of Medical Robotics and Computer Assisted Surgery | 2006

MRI/TRUS data fusion for brachytherapy.

Vincent Daanen; J. Gastaldo; J.-Y. Giraud; Philippe Fourneret; Jean-Luc Descotes; M. Bolla; D. Collomb; Jocelyne Troccaz

Prostate brachytherapy consists in placing radioactive seeds for tumour destruction under transrectal ultrasound imaging (TRUS) control. It requires prostate delineation from the images for dose planning. Because ultrasound imaging is patient‐ and operator‐dependent, we have proposed to fuse MRI data to TRUS data to make image processing more reliable. The technical accuracy of this approach has already been evaluated.


Radiotherapy and Oncology | 2010

Concurrent and adjuvant docetaxel with three-dimensional conformal radiation therapy plus androgen deprivation for high-risk prostate cancer: preliminary results of a multicentre phase II trial.

Michel Bolla; Jean Michel Hannoun-Levi; Jean-Marc Ferrero; Philippe Maingon; Joëlle Buffet-Miny; Agnès Bougnoux; Jacques Bauer; Jean-Luc Descotes; Philippe Fourneret; Florence Jover; Marc Colonna

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE We evaluate the feasibility of concomitant and adjuvant docetaxel combined with three-dimensional conformal radiotherapy (3D-CRT) and androgen deprivation in high-risk prostate carcinomas. METHODS Fifty men with high-risk localized prostate cancer (16), locally advanced (28) or very high-risk prostate cancer (6) were included. Seventy Gy were delivered on prostate and seminal vesicles in 35 fractions, concurrently with weekly docetaxel (20mg/m(2)). Three weeks after the completion of 3D-CRT, docetaxel was given for 3 cycles (60mg/m(2)), every 3 weeks. Patients had to receive LHRH agonist during 3 years. RESULTS The intent to treat analysis shows that four patients out of 15 stopped prematurely the chemotherapy due to grade 3-4 acute toxicity. In the per protocol analysis, 46 patients completed a full-dose chemoradiation regimen representing 413 cycles: five patients experienced a grade 3 toxicity, and 15 patients experienced a grade 2 toxicity. With a median follow-up of 54 months, the 5-year clinical disease-free survival was 66.72% and the 5-year survival was 92.15%. CONCLUSIONS 3D-CRT with androgen deprivation and concurrent weekly docetaxel, followed by three cycles of adjuvant docetaxel may be considered as feasible in high-risk prostate cancer and deserved to be evaluated in a phase III randomized trial.


BJUI | 2007

Adjuvant treatment to radiation: combined hormone therapy and external radiotherapy for locally advanced prostate cancer

Michel Bolla; Jean-Luc Descotes; Xavier Artignan; Philippe Fourneret

The main phase III trials studying the benefit of HT using an LHRH analogue with or without antiandrogen were conducted by the Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG), the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC), and the TransTasman Radiation Oncology Group (TTROG) (Table 1). In the Early Prostate Cancer (EPC) trial programme, the effect of antiandrogen adjuvant to RT was studied in patients receiving standard care, including those receiving RT.


Bulletin Du Cancer | 2008

Apport de l’association radiothérapie externe-hormonothérapie dans le traitement du cancer de la prostate à haut risque

M. Bolla; Philippe Fourneret; Jean-Luc Descotes

Treatment of high-risk prostate cancer - localized or locally advanced - is based on the combination of external irradiation and hormonal treatment by LHRH analogue (aLHRH) according to the results of phases III randomized trials RTOG and/or EORTC trials. These trials show a significant improvement of overall or specific survival. Localized prostate cancer require 6-month complete androgen blockade, while locally advanced prostate cancer need a long-term hormonal treatment for a duration ranging from 2,5 to 3 years. Some trials, which have a long follow-up show that the risk of cardiovascular death is not significantly increased by hormonal treatment.


Cancer Radiotherapie | 2006

Quantification des mouvements prostatiques lors de l'irradiation prostatique

Xavier Artignan; M. Rastkhah; J. Balosso; Philippe Fourneret; Olivier Gilliot; M. Bolla


Cancer Radiotherapie | 2005

Place de l'association de radiothérapie et d'hormonothérapie dans les cancers de la prostate

Michel Bolla; Philippe Maingon; Philippe Fourneret; Xavier Artignan; Jean-Luc Descotes


Cancer Radiotherapie | 2006

Analyse rétrospective de 108 carcinomes canalaires in situ mammaires traités par association radiochirurgicale

Philippe Fourneret; Xavier Artignan; J de Cornulier; Dominique Pasquier; Mh Panh; R Payan; H. Kolodié; F. Vincent; D. Fric; P. Bernard; M. Colona; M. Bolla

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Xavier Artignan

Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Grenoble

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Michel Bolla

Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Grenoble

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M. Bolla

University of Grenoble

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J. Balosso

Joseph Fourier University

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Jocelyne Troccaz

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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