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Dive into the research topics where Raymond Miralbell is active.

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Featured researches published by Raymond Miralbell.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2002

Potential reduction of the incidence of radiation-induced second cancers by using proton beams in the treatment of pediatric tumors

Raymond Miralbell; Antony Lomax; Laura Cella; Uwe Schneider

PURPOSE To assess the potential influence of improved dose distribution with proton beams compared to conventional or intensity-modulated (IM) X-ray beams on the incidence of treatment-induced secondary cancers in pediatric oncology. METHODS AND MATERIALS Two children, one with a parameningeal rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) and a second with a medulloblastoma, were used as models for the purpose of this study. After defining the target and critical structures, treatment plans were calculated and optimized, four for the RMS case (conventional X-ray, IM X-rays, protons, and IM protons) and three for the irradiation of the spinal axis in medulloblastoma (conventional X-ray, IM X-rays, protons). Secondary cancer incidence was estimated using a model based on Publication No. 60 of the International Commission on Radiologic Protection. This model allowed estimation of absolute risks of secondary cancer for each treatment plan based on dose-volume distributions for the nontarget organs. RESULTS Proton beams reduced the expected incidence of radiation-induced secondary cancers for the RMS patient by a factor of >or=2 and for the medulloblastoma case by a factor of 8 to 15 when compared with either IM or conventional X-ray plans. CONCLUSIONS The potential for a significant reduction in secondary cancers with pediatric cancers after using proton beams (forward planned or IM) in the treatment of RMS and MBD in children and adolescents represents an additional argument supporting the development of proton therapy for most radiotherapy indications in pediatric oncology.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2012

Dose-Fractionation Sensitivity of Prostate Cancer Deduced From Radiotherapy Outcomes of 5,969 Patients in Seven International Institutional Datasets: α/β = 1.4 (0.9–2.2) Gy

Raymond Miralbell; Stephen A Roberts; Eduardo Zubizarreta; Jolyon H Hendry

PURPOSE There are reports of a high sensitivity of prostate cancer to radiotherapy dose fractionation, and this has prompted several trials of hypofractionation schedules. It remains unclear whether hypofractionation will provide a significant therapeutic benefit in the treatment of prostate cancer, and whether there are different fractionation sensitivities for different stages of disease. In order to address this, multiple primary datasets have been collected for analysis. METHODS AND MATERIALS Seven datasets were assembled from institutions worldwide. A total of 5969 patients were treated using external beams with or without androgen deprivation (AD). Standard fractionation (1.8-2.0 Gy per fraction) was used for 40% of the patients, and hypofractionation (2.5-6.7 Gy per fraction) for the remainder. The overall treatment time ranged from 1 to 8 weeks. Low-risk patients comprised 23% of the total, intermediate-risk 44%, and high-risk 33%. Direct analysis of the primary data for tumor control at 5 years was undertaken, using the Phoenix criterion of biochemical relapse-free survival, in order to calculate values in the linear-quadratic equation of k (natural log of the effective target cell number), α (dose-response slope using very low doses per fraction), and the ratio α/β that characterizes dose-fractionation sensitivity. RESULTS There was no significant difference between the α/β value for the three risk groups, and the value of α/β for the pooled data was 1.4 (95% CI = 0.9-2.2) Gy. Androgen deprivation improved the bNED outcome index by about 5% for all risk groups, but did not affect the α/β value. CONCLUSIONS The overall α/β value was consistently low, unaffected by AD deprivation, and lower than the appropriate values for late normal-tissue morbidity. Hence the fractionation sensitivity differential (tumor/normal tissue) favors the use of hypofractionated radiotherapy schedules for all risk groups, which is also very beneficial logistically in limited-resource settings.


BJUI | 2007

18F-choline and/or 11C-acetate positron emission tomography : detection of residual or progressive subclinical disease at very low prostate-specific antigen values (<1 ng/ml) after radical prostatectomy

Hansjörg Vees; Franz Buchegger; Susanne Albrecht; Haleem Khan; Daniela B. Husarik; Habib Zaidi; Dmitri Soloviev; Thomas F. Hany; Raymond Miralbell

To assess the value of positron emission tomography (PET)/computed tomography (CT) with either 18F‐choline and/or 11C‐acetate, of residual or recurrent tumour after radical prostatectomy (RP) in patients with a prostate‐specific antigen (PSA) level of <1 ng/mL and referred for adjuvant or salvage radiotherapy.


Lancet Oncology | 2015

Whole-breast irradiation with or without a boost for patients treated with breast-conserving surgery for early breast cancer: 20-year follow-up of a randomised phase 3 trial

Harry Bartelink; Philippe Maingon; Philip Poortmans; Caroline Weltens; A. Fourquet; Jos J. Jager; Dominic Schinagl; Bing Oei; Carla Rodenhuis; Jean Claude Horiot; H. Struikmans; Erik Van Limbergen; Youlia M. Kirova; Paula H.M. Elkhuizen; Rudolf Bongartz; Raymond Miralbell; D.A.L. Morgan; Jean Bernard Dubois; Vincent Remouchamps; René O. Mirimanoff; Sandra Collette; Laurence Collette

BACKGROUND Since the introduction of breast-conserving treatment, various radiation doses after lumpectomy have been used. In a phase 3 randomised controlled trial, we investigated the effect of a radiation boost of 16 Gy on overall survival, local control, and fibrosis for patients with stage I and II breast cancer who underwent breast-conserving treatment compared with patients who received no boost. Here, we present the 20-year follow-up results. METHODS Patients with microscopically complete excision for invasive disease followed by whole-breast irradiation of 50 Gy in 5 weeks were centrally randomised (1:1) with a minimisation algorithm to receive 16 Gy boost or no boost, with minimisation for age, menopausal status, presence of extensive ductal carcinoma in situ, clinical tumour size, nodal status, and institution. Neither patients nor investigators were masked to treatment allocation. The primary endpoint was overall survival in the intention-to-treat population. The trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT02295033. FINDINGS Between May 24, 1989, and June 25, 1996, 2657 patients were randomly assigned to receive no radiation boost and 2661 patients randomly assigned to receive a radiation boost. Median follow-up was 17.2 years (IQR 13.0-19.0). 20-year overall survival was 59.7% (99% CI 56.3-63.0) in the boost group versus 61.1% (57.6-64.3) in the no boost group, hazard ratio (HR) 1.05 (99% CI 0.92-1.19, p=0.323). Ipsilateral breast tumour recurrence was the first treatment failure for 354 patients (13%) in the no boost group versus 237 patients (9%) in the boost group, HR 0.65 (99% CI 0.52-0.81, p<0.0001). The 20-year cumulative incidence of ipsilatelal breast tumour recurrence was 16.4% (99% CI 14.1-18.8) in the no boost group versus 12.0% (9.8-14.4) in the boost group. Mastectomies as first salvage treatment for ipsilateral breast tumour recurrence occurred in 279 (79%) of 354 patients in the no boost group versus 178 (75%) of 237 in the boost group. The cumulative incidence of severe fibrosis at 20 years was 1.8% (99% CI 1.1-2.5) in the no boost group versus 5.2% (99% CI 3.9-6.4) in the boost group (p<0.0001). INTERPRETATION A radiation boost after whole-breast irradiation has no effect on long-term overall survival, but can improve local control, with the largest absolute benefit in young patients, although it increases the risk of moderate to severe fibrosis. The extra radiation dose can be avoided in most patients older than age 60 years. FUNDING Fonds Cancer, Belgium.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1996

Renal toxicity after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation: the combined effects of total-body irradiation and graft-versus-host disease.

Raymond Miralbell; Sabine Bieri; B Mermillod; C Helg; G Sancho; B Pastoors; A Keller; J M Kurtz; B Chapuis

PURPOSE To evaluate retrospectively the cumulative risk probability and factors correlated with renal dysfunction after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT). PATIENTS AND METHODS From October 1984 to July 1994, 84 patients with malignant hematopoietic diseases received allogeneic BMT after conditioning with high-dose chemotherapy and total-body irradiation (TBI). Seventy-nine patients with normal renal function before conditioning are included in this study. Conditioning included high-dose cyclophosphamide without (n = 46) or with (n = 33) other agents (daunorubicin, busulfan, cytarabine, and thiotepa) followed by TBI. The TBI dose prescribed to the center of the abdomen was 10 Gy for 24 patients, 12 Gy for 32, and 13.5 Gy for 23. In vitro T-cell depletion was undertaken in 48 cases. The post-BMT nephrotoxicity of aminoglycosides, vancomycin, amphotericin, and cyclosporine was assessed. Time to renal dysfunction was defined as the time to a persistent increase of serum creatinine (SCr) level greater than 110 mumol/L. The potential influence of sex, age, diagnosis, chimerism, and graft-versus-host disease (GvHD) on renal dysfunction was also assessed. RESULTS The 18-month probability of renal dysfunction-free survival (RDFS) for the whole group was 77%. Only TBI dose and presence of GvHD were significantly correlated with renal dysfunction by multivariate analysis. The 18-month probabilities of RDFS were 95%, 74%, and 55% for the patients conditioned with 10, 12, and 13.5 Gy, respectively. The 18-month RDFS probabilities were 88% and 61% for patients without and with GvHD, respectively. Combining both variables, we have defined two risk categories: low-risk (ie, 10 Gy TBI with/without GvHD and 12 Gy TBI without GvHD) and high-risk (ie, 12 Gy TBI with GvHD and 13.5 Gy TBI with/without GvHD). The predicted 18-month RDFS rates were 93% and 52% for the low- and high-risk groups, respectively. CONCLUSION Renal dysfunction after allogeneic BMT is strongly related to the delivered TBI dose (and dose per fraction) and to the presence of GvHD. Renal shielding should be recommended if a TBI dose greater than 12 Gy (fractionated twice daily over 3 days) is to be prescribed. Furthermore, in those cases with a high risk of developing GvHD (eg, unrelated allogeneic BMT, absence of T-cell depletion), these data suggest that kidney doses greater than 10 Gy should be avoided.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2003

Outcome and prognostic factors in orbital lymphoma: a Rare Cancer Network study on 90 consecutive patients treated with radiotherapy.

Sylvie Martinet; Mahmut Ozsahin; Yazid Belkacemi; Christine Landmann; Philip Poortmans; Christoph Oehlere; Luciano Scandolaro; Marco Krengli; Philippe Maingon; Raymond Miralbell; Gabriela Studer; B. Chauvet; Simone Marnitz; Abderrahim Zouhair; René-Olivier Mirimanoff

PURPOSE To assess the outcome and prognostic factors in patients with orbital lymphoma treated by radiotherapy (RT). METHODS AND MATERIALS Between 1980 and 1999, 90 consecutive patients with primary orbital lymphoma were treated in 13 member institutions of the Rare Cancer Network. A full staging workup was completed in 56 patients. Seventy-eight patients had low-, 6 intermediate-, and 6 high-grade lymphoma, and 75 had a single orbital localization. All patients underwent RT with a median dose of 34.2 Gy (range 4.0-50.4). Eleven patients received chemotherapy in addition to RT. RESULTS After RT, local control was achieved in 97% of the patients. Local progression occurred in 2% and local relapse 1%. The rate of systemic relapse was 20%, and 9% of the patients developed metachronous contralateral eye involvement. The 5-year disease-free survival, overall survival, and cause-specific survival rate was 65%, 78%, and 87%, respectively. In univariate analyses, the statistically significant favorable prognostic factors were younger age, low grade, normal erythrocyte sedimentation rate, absence of muscular infiltration, complete response to treatment, conjunctival localization, and normal lactate dehydrogenase value for overall survival, disease-free survival, and freedom from treatment failure. In multivariate analysis, the favorable factors were younger age and low grade for overall and disease-free survival; a favorable response, conjunctival localization, and complete staging were highly significant for disease-free survival and freedom from treatment failure. Neither the RT technique nor the total dose influenced the outcome. Cataract and xerophthalmia were the most prominent late toxicities. CONCLUSION Moderate- to low-dose RT alone is able to control primary orbital lymphoma with low morbidity. A full staging workup is warranted in these patients. Prognostic factors were identified that could be useful in the overall management of this uncommon site of primary lymphoma.


Clinical Nutrition | 2013

Green tea polyphenol epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG) as adjuvant in cancer therapy.

Elena Lecumberri; Yves Marc Dupertuis; Raymond Miralbell; Claude Pichard

BACKGROUND & AIMS Green tea catechins, especially epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG), have been associated with cancer prevention and treatment. This has resulted in an increased number of studies evaluating the effects derived from the use of this compound in combination with chemo/radiotherapy. This review aims at compiling latest literature on this subject. METHODS Keywords including EGCG, cancer, chemotherapy, radiotherapy and side effects, were searched using PubMed and ScienceDirect databases to identify, analyze, and summarize the research literature on this topic. Most of the studies on this subject up to date are preclinical. Relevance of the findings, impact factor, and date of publication were critical parameters for the studies to be included in the review. RESULTS Additive and synergistic effects of EGCG when combined with conventional cancer therapies have been proposed, and its anti-inflammatory and antioxidant activities have been related to amelioration of cancer therapy side effects. However, antagonistic interactions with certain anticancer drugs might limit its clinical use. CONCLUSIONS The use of EGCG could enhance the effect of conventional cancer therapies through additive or synergistic effects as well as through amelioration of deleterious side effects. Further research, especially at the clinical level, is needed to ascertain the potential role of EGCG as adjuvant in cancer therapy.


European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging | 2009

Assessment of various strategies for 18F-FET PET-guided delineation of target volumes in high-grade glioma patients

Hansjörg Vees; Srinivasan Senthamizhchelvan; Raymond Miralbell; Damien C. Weber; Osman Ratib; Habib Zaidi

PurposeThe purpose of the study is to assess the contribution of 18F-fluoro-ethyl-tyrosine (18F-FET) positron emission tomography (PET) in the delineation of gross tumor volume (GTV) in patients with high-grade gliomas compared with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) alone.Materials and methodsThe study population consisted of 18 patients with high-grade gliomas. Seven image segmentation techniques were used to delineate 18F-FET PET GTVs, and the results were compared to the manual MRI-derived GTV (GTVMRI). PET image segmentation techniques included manual delineation of contours (GTVman), a 2.5 standardized uptake value (SUV) cutoff (GTV2.5), a fixed threshold of 40% and 50% of the maximum signal intensity (GTV40% and GTV50%), signal-to-background ratio (SBR)-based adaptive thresholding (GTVSBR), gradient find (GTVGF), and region growing (GTVRG). Overlap analysis was also conducted to assess geographic mismatch between the GTVs delineated using the different techniques.ResultsContours defined using GTV2.5 failed to provide successful delineation technically in three patients (18% of cases) as SUVmax < 2.5 and clinically in 14 patients (78% of cases). Overall, the majority of GTVs defined on PET-based techniques were usually smaller than GTVMRI (67% of cases). Yet, PET detected frequently tumors that are not visible on MRI and added substantially tumor extension outside the GTVMRI in six patients (33% of cases).ConclusionsThe selection of the most appropriate 18F-FET PET-based segmentation algorithm is crucial, since it impacts both the volume and shape of the resulting GTV. The 2.5 SUV isocontour and GF segmentation techniques performed poorly and should not be used for GTV delineation. With adequate setting, the SBR-based PET technique may add considerably to conventional MRI-guided GTV delineation.


International Journal of Cancer | 2008

Recent trends in prostate cancer mortality show a continuous decrease in several countries

Christine Bouchardy; Gérald Fioretta; Elisabetta Rapiti; Helena M. Verkooijen; Charles Henry Rapin; Raymond Miralbell; Roberto Zanetti

Prostate specific antigen (PSA) screening was introduced to detect prostate cancer at an early stage and to reduce prostate cancer‐specific mortality. Until results from clinical trials are available, the efficacy of PSA screening in reducing prostate cancer mortality can be estimated by surveillance of prostate cancer mortality trends. Our study analyzes recent trends in prostate cancer mortality in 38 countries. We used the IARC‐WHO cancer mortality database and performed joinpoint analysis to examine prostate cancer mortality trends and identified 3 patterns. In USA, and to a lesser extent in Germany, Switzerland, Canada, France, Italy and Spain, prostate cancer‐specific mortality decreased to a level lower than before the introduction of PSA screening. In Australia, New Zealand, Austria, Finland, The Netherlands, Norway, United Kingdom, Hungary, Slovakia, Israel, Singapore, Sweden and Portugal, mortality from prostate cancer decreased but rates remain higher than before the introduction of PSA screening. Prostate cancer mortality continued to increase in Belgium, Denmark, Greece, Ireland, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Belarus, Ukraine, Russian Federation, Romania, Poland, Argentina, Chile, Cuba, Mexico, Japan, China Hong Kong and the Republic of Korea. The trends in prostate cancer mortality rates in examined countries suggest that PSA screening may be effective in reducing mortality from prostate cancer.


European Urology | 2016

Progression-free Survival Following Stereotactic Body Radiotherapy for Oligometastatic Prostate Cancer Treatment-naive Recurrence: A Multi-institutional Analysis

Piet Ost; Barbara Alicja Jereczek-Fossa; Nicholas Van As; Thomas Zilli; Alexander Muacevic; Kenneth R. Olivier; D. Henderson; Franco Casamassima; Roberto Orecchia; Alessia Surgo; Lindsay C. Brown; A. Tree; Raymond Miralbell; Gert De Meerleer

UNLABELLED The literature on metastasis-directed therapy for oligometastatic prostate cancer (PCa) recurrence consists of small heterogeneous studies. This study aimed to reduce the heterogeneity by pooling individual patient data from different institutions treating oligometastatic PCa recurrence with stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT). We focussed on patients who were treatment naive, with the aim of determining if SBRT could delay disease progression. We included patients with three or fewer metastases. The Kaplan-Meier method was used to estimate distant progression-free survival (DPFS) and local progression-free survival (LPFS). Toxicity was scored using the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events. In total, 163 metastases were treated in 119 patients. The median DPFS was 21 mo (95% confidence interval, 15-26 mo). A lower radiotherapy dose predicted a higher local recurrence rate with a 3-yr LPFS of 79% for patients treated with a biologically effective dose ≤100Gy versus 99% for patients treated with >100Gy (p=0.01). Seventeen patients (14%) developed toxicity classified as grade 1, and three patients (3%) developed grade 2 toxicity. No grade ≥3 toxicity occurred. These results should serve as a benchmark for future prospective trials. PATIENT SUMMARY This multi-institutional study pools all of the available data on the use of stereotactic body radiotherapy for limited prostate cancer metastases. We concluded that this approach is safe and associated with a prolonged treatment progression-free survival.

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