Valerie Panet-Raymond
McGill University Health Centre
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Featured researches published by Valerie Panet-Raymond.
Journal of Applied Clinical Medical Physics | 2012
Valerie Panet-Raymond; Will Ansbacher; B. Bendorffe; Alan Nichol; Pauline T. Truong; W. Beckham; Maria T. Vlachaki
The purpose of this study was to compare dosimetric and radiobiological parameters of treatment plans using coplanar and noncoplanar beam arrangements in patients with fronto‐temporal high‐grade glioma (HGG) generated for intensity‐modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) or volumetric‐modulated arc therapy (VMAT). Ten cases of HGG overlapping the optic apparatus were selected. Four separate plans were created for each case: coplanar IMRT, noncoplanar IMRT (ncIMRT), VMAT, and noncoplanar VMAT (ncVMAT). The prescription dose was 60 Gy in 30 fractions. Dose‐volume histograms and equivalent uniform doses (EUD) for planning target volumes (PTVs) and organs at risk (OARs) were generated. The four techniques resulted in comparable mean, minimum, maximum PTV doses, and PTV EUDs (p≥0.33). The mean PTV dose and EUD averaged for all techniques were 59.98 Gy (Standard Deviation (SD)±0.15) and 59.86 Gy (SD±0.27). Noncoplanar IMRT significantly reduced contralateral anterior globe EUDs (6.7 Gy versus 8.2 Gy, p=0.05), while both ncIMRT and ncVMAT reduced contralateral retina EUDs (16 Gy versus 18.8 Gy, p=0.03). Noncoplanar techniques resulted in lower contralateral temporal lobe dose (22.2 Gy versus 24.7 Gy). Compared to IMRT, VMAT techniques required fewer monitor units (755 vs. 478, p≤0.001) but longer optimization times. Treatment delivery times were 6.1 and 10.5 minutes for coplanar and ncIMRT versus 2.9 and 5.0 minutes for coplanar and ncVMAT. In this study, all techniques achieved comparable target coverage. Superior sparing of contralateral optic structures was seen with ncIMRT. The VMAT techniques reduced treatment delivery duration but prolonged plan optimization times, compared to IMRT techniques. Technique selection should be individualized, based on patient‐specific clinical and dosimetric parameters. PACS number: 87
Cancer | 2011
Valerie Panet-Raymond; Pauline T. Truong; Cheryl Alexander; Mary Lesperance; Rachel E. McDonald; Peter H. Watson
The role of clinicopathologic characteristics of the recurrent tumor in determining survival in a cohort of patients with ipsilateral breast tumor recurrence (IBTR) was investigated.
Journal of Medical Case Reports | 2009
Hooman Hennessey; D.A. Valenti; Tatiana Cabrera; Valerie Panet-Raymond; David Roberge
IntroductionIn liver stereotactic body radiotherapy, reduction of normal tissue irradiation requires daily image guidance. This is typically accomplished by imaging a surrogate to the tumor. The surrogate is often an implanted metal fiducial marker. There are few reports addressing the specific risks of hepatic fiducial marker implantation. These risks are assumed to be similar to percutaneous liver biopsies which are associated with a 1-4% complication rate - almost always pain or bleeding. To the best of our knowledge, we present the first case of such a fiducial marker migrating to the heart.Case presentationAn 81-year-old Caucasian man (5 years post-gastrectomy for a gastric adenocarcinoma) was referred post-second line palliative chemotherapy for radiotherapy of an isolated liver metastasis. It was decided to proceed with treatment and platinum fiducials were chosen for radiation targeting. Under local anesthesia, three Nester embolization coils (Cook Medical Inc., Bloomington, IN, USA) were implanted under computed tomography guidance. Before the placement of each coil, the location of the tip of the delivery needle was confirmed by computed tomography imaging. During the procedure, the third coil unexpectedly migrated through the hepatic vein to the inferior vena cava and lodged at the junction of the vena cava and the right atrium. The patient remained asymptomatic. He was immediately referred to angiography for extraction of the coil. Using fluoroscopic guidance, an EN Snare Retrieval System (Hatch Medical L.L.C., Snellville, GA, USA) was introduced through a jugular catheter; it successfully grasped the coil and the coil was removed. The patient was kept overnight for observation and no immediate or delayed complications were encountered due to the migration or retrieval of the coil. He subsequently went on to be treated using the remaining fiducials.ConclusionImplanted fiducial markers are increasingly used for stereotactic radiotherapy. There is sparse literature on the risks of such procedures. Although uncommon, the risk of migration does exist and therefore physicians (surgeons, oncologists and radiologists) and patients should be aware of this possibility.
Breast Cancer: Basic and Clinical Research | 2011
Nathan R. West; Valerie Panet-Raymond; Pauline T. Truong; Cheryl Alexander; Sindy Babinszky; Katy Milne; Louetta Ross; Steven Loken; Peter H. Watson
Ipsilateral breast tumor recurrence (IBTR) is an increasingly common clinical challenge. IBTRs include True Recurrences (TR; persistent disease) and New Primaries (NP; de novo tumors), but discrimination between these is difficult. We assessed tumor infiltrating leukocytes (TIL) as biomarkers for distinguishing these types of IBTR using primary tumors and matched IBTRs from 24 breast cancer patients, half of which were identified as putative TRs and half as NPs using a previously reported clinical algorithm. Intratumoral lymphocyte populations (CD3, CD8, CD4, CD25, FOXP3, TIA1, CD20) and macrophages (CD68) were quantified by immunohistochemistry in each tumor. Compared to matched primaries, TRs showed significant trends towards increased CD3+ and CD8+ TIL, while these populations were often diminished in NPs. Comparison of IBTRs showed that TRs had significantly higher levels of CD3+ (P = 0.0136), CD8+ (P = 0.0092), and CD25+ (P = 0.0159) TIL than NPs. We conclude that TIL may be a novel diagnostic biomarker to distinguish NP from TR IBTRs.
Archive | 2010
Valerie Panet-Raymond; D.A. Valenti; William Parker; Russell Ruo; Horacio Patrocinio; Piotr Pater; David Roberge
Background: Liver lesions cannot be directly visualized at the time of radiation treatments using conventional imaging techniques. Metal markers are often used as surrogates of tumo
Journal of Neurosurgery | 2018
Shakir I. Shakir; Luis Souhami; Kevin Petrecca; Jose João Mansure; Khushdeep Singh; Valerie Panet-Raymond; George Shenouda; Amal A. Al-Odaini; Bassam Abdulkarim; Marie-Christine Guiot
In patients with postoperative residual atypical meningiomas, by using volumetric instead of linear measurements in follow-up imaging studies, the authors detected disease progression earlier. By using this approach, treatment for recurrent disease can be instituted promptly with potentially better tumor control and less toxicity due to smaller volume of residual disease.
Journal of Neuro-oncology | 2013
Kevin Petrecca; Marie-Christine Guiot; Valerie Panet-Raymond; Luis Souhami
International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2011
Valerie Panet-Raymond; Pauline T. Truong; Rachel E. McDonald; Cheryl Alexander; Louetta Ross; Aleata Ryhorchuk; Peter H. Watson
International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2017
Avishek Chatterjee; Monica Serban; Bassam Abdulkarim; Valerie Panet-Raymond; Luis Souhami; G. Shenouda; Siham Sabri; Bertrand Jean-Claude; J Seuntjens
Journal of Neuro-oncology | 2017
M. Azoulay; Fabiano Santos; G. Shenouda; Kevin Petrecca; A. Oweida; Marie-Christine Guiot; Scott Owen; Valerie Panet-Raymond; Luis Souhami; Bassam Abdulkarim