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Featured researches published by Stephane Laframboise.


Gynecologic Oncology | 2010

Sentinel lymph node biopsy vs. pelvic lymphadenectomy in early stage cervical cancer: Is it time to change the gold standard?

L. Gortzak-Uzan; Waldo Jimenez; Sharon Nofech-Mozes; Nadia Ismiil; Mahmoud A. Khalifa; Valérie Dubé; Bruce R. Rosen; Joan Murphy; Stephane Laframboise; Allan Covens

OBJECTIVE To compare the incidence of pelvic lymph node metastases in early stage cervical cancer patients undergoing sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLN) to a matched cohort undergoing pelvic lymphadenectomy. METHODS All patient data were entered prospectively into an ongoing cervical cancer database. Since April 2004, 87 patients with FIGO stage IA/B1 cervical cancer underwent SLN detection with identification of bilateral SLN. This cohort (cases) was compared to a matched group of patients who underwent complete pelvic lymphadenectomy (controls). The groups were matched 3:1 for tumour size (+/-5 mm), histology, depth of invasion (+/-2 mm), and presence of capillary lymphatic space invasion (CLS). Descriptive statistics were calculated for all variables of interest. The association between cases and controls and lymph node metastases was carried out using a conditional logistic regression analysis. RESULTS 81 women in the SLN cohort were matched with 1 control, 72 cases with 2 controls, and 65 cases with 3 controls. Among cases, 14 (17%) had pelvic lymph nodes metastases vs. 15 (7%) in the controls (p=0.0059, odds ratio= 2.8, 95% CI=1.3-5.9). Among the 14 cases of SLN metastases, 11 were detected by frozen section and 3 were detected on final paraffin sectioning. All were detected by H and E stains. The size of the SLN metastases ranged from less than 1 mm to 8 mm. CONCLUSIONS Sentinel lymph node biopsy in early cervical cancer is a more sensitive procedure in detecting pelvic lymph node metastases compared to complete lymphadenectomy.


Gynecologic Oncology | 2008

Radical vaginal trachelectomy vs. radical hysterectomy for small early stage cervical cancer: A matched case-control study

Mario E. Beiner; J. Hauspy; Bruce R. Rosen; Joan Murphy; Stephane Laframboise; Sharon Nofech-Mozes; Nadia Ismiil; Golnar Rasty; Mahmoud A. Khalifa; Allan Covens

OBJECTIVE To determine the efficacy and outcome from radical vaginal trachelectomy (RVT) compared to a matched group of patients undergoing radical hysterectomy for small early stage cervical cancer. METHODS All patient data were entered prospectively. Patients wishing preservation of fertility with cervical cancer, tumor <2 cm, and not meeting the definition of microinvasive cancer were offered RVT. The outcomes were compared to a matched group of patients who underwent radical hysterectomy for stage IA/IB cervical cancer. Groups were matched 1:1 for age (+/-5 years), tumor size (+/-1 mm), histology, grade, depth of invasion (+/-1 mm), presence of capillary lymphatic space invasion, pelvic lymph node metastasis, and adjuvant radiotherapy. RESULTS A total of 137 patients underwent RVT between 1994 and 2007. Of them, 90 patients were successfully matched. Median tumor size was microscopic. Moreover, 43% and 49% were squamous and had adeno/adenosquamous histology. Median depth of invasion was 3.1 mm. Capillary lymphatic space invasion was present in 68% of cases. Of the tumors, 60% were grade 1, 29% were grade 2, and 11% were grade 3. After a median follow-up of 51 and 58 months, 5 and 1 recurrences were diagnosed in the RVT and radical hysterectomy groups, respectively. Five-year recurrence-free survival rates were present in 95% and 100% of the groups, respectively (p=0.17). In addition, 3 and 1 deaths occurred in the RVT and radical hysterectomy groups, resulting in 5-year survival rates of 99% and 100%, respectively (p=0.55). CONCLUSIONS RVT seems to be the procedure of choice for women with small early stage cervical cancers wishing to preserve fertility.


Gynecologic Oncology | 2014

The impacts of neoadjuvant chemotherapy and of debulking surgery on survival from advanced ovarian cancer

Barry Rosen; Stephane Laframboise; Jason Dodge; Marcus Q. Bernardini; Joan Murphy; Yakir Segev; Ping Sun; Steven A. Narod

OBJECTIVES Women with advanced ovarian cancer are treated with chemotherapy either before (neoadjuvant) or after surgery (primary debulking). The goal is to leave no residual disease post-surgery; for women treated with primary debulking surgery this has been associated with an improvement in survival. It has not been shown that the survival advantage conferred by having no residual disease post-surgery is present for women who receive neoadjuvant chemotherapy. METHODS We reviewed the records of 326 women with stage IIIc or IV serous ovarian cancer. We determined if they received neoadjuvant chemotherapy or primary debulking surgery and we measured the extent of residual disease post-surgery. We estimated seven-year survival rates for women after various treatments. RESULTS Women who had neoadjuvant chemotherapy were more likely to have no residual disease than women who had primary debulking surgery (50.1% versus 41.5%; p=0.03) but they experienced inferior seven-year survival (8.6% versus 41%; p<0.0001). Among women who had primary debulking surgery, those with no residual disease had much better seven-year survival than women who had any residual disease (73.6% versus 21.0%; p<0.0001). Women who had no residual disease after debulking surgery and who received intraperitoneal chemotherapy had a seven-year survival of 90%. CONCLUSIONS Neoadjuvant chemotherapy should be reserved for ovarian cancer patients who are not candidates for primary debulking surgery. Among women with no residual disease after primary debulking surgery, intraperitoneal chemotherapy extends survival.


Gynecologic Oncology | 2010

Pure dysgerminoma of the ovary 35 years on: A single institutional experience

Danielle Vicus; Mario E. Beiner; Shany Klachook; Lisa W. Le; Stephane Laframboise; Helen Mackay

OBJECTIVE The aim of this study was to evaluate clinicopathologic characteristics, long-term outcome and reproductive function in women diagnosed with pure dysgerminoma of the ovary. METHODS Sixty-five women with stage IA to IIIC pure ovarian dysgerminoma were identified and included in this retrospective study. Patients were treated at one institution between 1970 and 2005. RESULTS Median age at diagnosis was 22.2 years (range 8.2-64.1 years). 72.3% of patients presented with stage I, 4.6% stage II and 21.5% stage III disease (1.5% stage unknown). Initial management was surgical for all patients: unilateral oophorectomy in 47 patients (72.2%), bilateral oophorectomy +/- hysterectomy in 14 (21.5%) and cystectomy alone in 3 (4.6%). Seventeen patients received chemotherapy (15 adjuvant, 2 for residual disease), 20 received adjuvant radiotherapy and one patient received both. Recurrence occurred in 6 (9.2%) patients (5 stage IA, 1 stage IIA). All recurrences occurred within 19 months of primary diagnosis. All patients were successfully salvaged with radiotherapy (2 patients), chemotherapy (1 patient) or a combination of surgery and chemotherapy (3 patients). Overall, median follow up from time of recurrence was 22.5 years (range 9.3-31.4 years). Median follow-up of all patients was 10.5 years (range 1.1-31.9 years). Fifteen patients reported an attempt to conceive posttreatment resulting in 12 pregnancies and 12 live births in 8 women. CONCLUSION The long-term outcome of patients with pure ovarian dysgerminoma is excellent. Recurrences occur within 2 years of diagnosis and are treatable. Patients can be treated with fertility-sparing surgery and can expect good reproductive outcomes.


Modern Pathology | 2013

Endometrial sarcomas: an immunohistochemical and JAZF1 re-arrangement study in low-grade and undifferentiated tumors

Kiran Jakate; Farshad Azimi; Rola H. Ali; Cheng-Han Lee; Blaise Clarke; Golnar Rasty; Patricia Shaw; Nataliya Melnyk; David Huntsman; Stephane Laframboise; Marjan Rouzbahman

The current World Health Organization classification divides endometrial sarcomas into low-grade endometrial stromal sarcoma and undifferentiated endometrial sarcoma. Recent studies suggest undifferentiated endometrial sarcoma is a heterogeneous group and a subgroup with uniform nuclei is more akin to low-grade endometrial stromal sarcoma in terms of morphologic, immunohistochemical and genetic features. We classified endometrial sarcomas treated at our institution from 1998 to 2011 into low-grade endometrial stromal sarcoma and undifferentiated endometrial sarcoma, the latter being further categorized into a group with either uniform or pleomorphic nuclei. Morphological features, immunoprofile and fluorescence in situ hybridization rearrangements of JAZF1 and PHF1 genes were correlated with tumor category and outcome. A total of 40 cases were evaluated comprising 23 low-grade endometrial stromal sarcomas, 10 undifferentiated endometrial sarcomas with nuclear uniformity and 7 undifferentiated endometrial sarcomas with nuclear pleomorphism. Low-grade endometrial stromal sarcomas were more often estrogen and progesterone receptor positive (83%) compared with undifferentiated endometrial sarcoma with nuclear uniformity (10%) or with nuclear pleomorphism (0%) (P<0.001). Positivity for p53 was restricted to undifferentiated endometrial sarcomas with more frequent expression in the group with nuclear pleomorphism (57%) than with nuclear uniformity (10%) (P=0.06). Ki-67 proliferation index in >10% of tumor cells more frequent in undifferentiated endometrial sarcoma than low-grade endometrial stromal sarcoma (P=<0.001). JAZF1 rearrangement was detected in 32% of low-grade endometrial stromal sarcomas and in none of the undifferentiated sarcomas. Rearrangement of PHF1 was found in two patients, one with JAZF1−PHF1 fusion. There were no significant differences in clinical behavior between undifferentiated endometrial sarcoma with nuclear uniformity versus nuclear pleomorphism. In conclusion, we found undifferentiated endometrial sarcoma subtypes and low-grade endometrial stromal sarcoma have distinct immunohistochemical and cytogentic profiles. Our data do not show any difference in clinical behavior between subgroups in undifferentiated sarcomas.


Gynecologic Oncology | 2013

Fertility sparing treatment of complex atypical hyperplasia and low grade endometrial cancer using oral progestin

Andrea N. Simpson; Tomer Feigenberg; Blaise Clarke; Lilian T. Gien; Nadia Ismiil; Stephane Laframboise; Christine Massey

OBJECTIVE Oral progestin is an alternative to hysterectomy for women with complex atypical hyperplasia (CAH) or grade one endometrial cancer (G1EC) who wish fertility preservation. We evaluated treatment efficacy and fertility outcomes in this population. METHODS Women <45 y treated with oral progestin for CAH or G1EC were identified from two cancer centers. Data were obtained from medical records and telephone questionnaires. Time until complete response (CR), and from CR until recurrence was censored for patients without events and analyzed for associations with patient and treatment characteristics; cumulative incidence functions were used to estimate event probability over time. RESULTS 44 patients were identified, 19 (43%) with CAH and 25 (57%) with G1EC. Median age was 36.5 y (26-44). 24 (55%) achieved CR (median time: 5.7 months). Older age was associated with a lower likelihood of CR (HR 0.84, p=0.0003, 95% CI, 0.8-0.9). CR probability appeared to plateau after 12 months of therapy. Among those with CR, 13 (54%) recurred (median time 3.5 y). 24 patients (55%) underwent hysterectomy; 3 (13%) were upstaged. 11 (25%) underwent fertility treatment with the following outcomes: 6 (55%) no pregnancy, 2 (18%) at least one live infant, and 3 (27%) spontaneous abortion. One achieved a live birth without intervention. CONCLUSION Oral progestin is an effective temporizing fertility-sparing treatment for women with CAH/G1EC. Fertility specialist involvement is recommended due to the low live birth rate without intervention. Progestin therapy should be re-evaluated at 1 year in non-responders due to a low probability of success. Hysterectomy is recommended after childbearing due to a high recurrence rate.


International Journal of Cancer | 2014

High tumor interstitial fluid pressure identifies cervical cancer patients with improved survival from radiotherapy plus cisplatin versus radiotherapy alone

Michael Milosevic; Melania Pintilie; David W. Hedley; Robert G. Bristow; Bradly G. Wouters; Amit M. Oza; Stephane Laframboise; Richard P. Hill; Anthony Fyles

Radiotherapy (RT) with concurrent cisplatin (CRT) is standard treatment for locally advanced cervical cancer. However, not all patients benefit from the addition of cisplatin to RT alone. This study explored the value of pretreatment tumor interstitial fluid pressure (IFP) and hypoxia measurements as predictors of cisplatin response in 291 patients who were treated with RT (1994–1998) or RT plus concurrent cisplatin (1999–2009). Clinical characteristics were similar between the two groups, apart from a greater proportion of patients with pelvic lymph node metastases and hypoxic tumors in the CRT cohort. Patients were followed for a median duration of 5.6 years. Information about recurrence and survival was recorded prospectively. The addition of cisplatin to RT improved survival compared to treatment with RT alone (HR 0.61, p = 0.0097). This improvement was confined to patients with high‐IFP tumors at diagnosis (HR 0.40, p = 0.00091). There was no benefit of adding cisplatin in those with low‐IFP tumors (HR 1.05, p = 0.87). There was no difference in the effectiveness of cisplatin in patients with more or less hypoxic tumors. In conclusion, patients with locally advanced cervical cancer and high tumor IFP at diagnosis have greater benefit from the addition of cisplatin to RT than those with low IFP. This may reflect high tumor cell proliferation, which is known to influence IFP, local tumor control and patient survival.


Gynecologic Oncology | 2011

Ovarian immature teratoma: Treatment and outcome in a single institutional cohort

Danielle Vicus; Mario E. Beiner; Blaise Clarke; Shany Klachook; Lisa W. Le; Stephane Laframboise; Helen Mackay

OBJECTIVE The aim of this study was to evaluate clinicopathologic characteristics, treatment outcome and reproductive function in women diagnosed with ovarian immature teratoma. METHODS Thirty-four women with ovarian immature teratoma stages IA to IIIA were identified and included in this study. Patients were treated at one institution; Princess Margaret Hospital, Toronto, Canada between 1970 and 2005. RESULTS The median age at diagnosis was 25.0 years (range: 9.8-60.2 years). Twenty seven (79%) presented with stage IA disease, 5 (15%) with stage IC, 1 (3%) with stage 2B, and 1 (3%) with stage IIIA disease. Thirteen (38%) of the tumors were found to be grade 1, 12 (35%) grade 2, and 9 (27%) grade 3. Initial management was surgical for all patients: 22 (65%) unilateral oophorectomy, 7 (20%) cystectomy only, and 5 (15%) bilateral oophorectomy (4 with hysterectomy). Fourteen (41.8%) patients received adjuvant therapy. The median follow up was 4.8 years (range 0.2-24.3 years). Four patients recurred (histological grade 2 or 3) within 22 months (87.1% 2-year progression free survival). Only one clinical stage I patient who received adjuvant chemotherapy developed a recurrence. Three of the patients who recurred died from their disease. Eleven patients reported an attempt to conceive resulting in 11 pregnancies in 6 women (3 post chemotherapy). CONCLUSION The majority of patients diagnosed with an immature teratoma are cured of their disease. However, grade 2 or 3 tumors are associated with a greater chance of recurrence that can be fatal, predominantly within 2 years of diagnosis.


Gynecologic Oncology | 2015

Stage I granulosa cell tumours: A management conundrum? Results of long-term follow up

Michelle K. Wilson; Peter C.C. Fong; Soizick Mesnage; Kathryn F. Chrystal; Andrew N. Shelling; Kathryn Payne; Helen Mackay; Lisa Wang; Stephane Laframboise; Marjan Rouzbahman; Wilfred Levin; Amit M. Oza

UNLABELLED Optimal management of women with early stage granulosa cell tumours (GCT) presents a management conundrum - they have excellent prognosis but a third will relapse. Advances uncovering the molecular characteristics of GCT have not been matched by improvements in our understanding and treatment. METHODS Stage I GCT patients referred to Auckland City Hospital (1955-2012) and Princess Margaret Cancer Centre (1992-2012) were identified. Baseline characteristics, histopathology and outcomes were recorded retrospectively. RESULTS One hundred and sixty stage I GCT patients were identified with a median age of 49 years. Median follow-up was 7.0 years (range 0.1-44.2 years). Fifty-one patients (32%) relapsed with a median time to relapse (TTR) of 12.0 years (1.3-17.7 years) - 20 initial relapses occurred 10 years post-diagnosis. Higher relapse rates (43% vs. 24% p=0.02) and shorter TTR (10.2 vs. 16.2 years p=0.007) were seen with stage Ic versus stage Ia disease. Cyst rupture was associated with increased relapse (p=0.03). Surgery was the main therapeutic modality at relapse. Eighty six percent of patients received non-surgical management at least once post-relapse. Clinical benefit rate was 43% with chemotherapy, 61% with hormonal therapy and 86% with radiation. Five- and 10-year overall survival (OS) were 98.5 and 91.6%, respectively. Median OS was similar in patients with (24.3 years) and without relapse (22.3 years). CONCLUSION Surgery remains fundamental at diagnosis and relapse. Caution should be exercised in recommending adjuvant chemotherapy at initial diagnosis given median OS was greater than 20 years even with relapse. Hormonal therapy at relapse appears encouraging but needs further assessment. Novel treatment strategies need exploration with international collaboration essential for this.


Journal of Lower Genital Tract Disease | 2008

Pagetoid eccrine carcinoma of the vulva: report of an unusual case with review of the literature.

Andrea Grin; Terrence J. Colgan; Stephane Laframboise; Patricia Shaw; Danny Ghazarian

Sweat gland carcinoma of the vulva is rare and may be classified as being of eccrine, apocrine, or mixed origin. Most reported cases of vulvar sweat gland carcinomas associated with extramammary Paget disease describe a tumor of apocrine origin. We report a case of a vulvar sweat gland carcinoma of eccrine origin associated with Pagetoid extension. A review of the literature and the differential diagnosis are also presented. To our knowledge, this is the second case of vulvar sweat gland carcinoma of eccrine origin associated with extramammary Paget disease.

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Patricia Shaw

University Health Network

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Taymaa May

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Anthony Fyles

Princess Margaret Cancer Centre

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