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Dive into the research topics where Vincent Trudeau is active.

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Featured researches published by Vincent Trudeau.


The Prostate | 2014

Distribution of metastatic sites in patients with prostate cancer: A population-based analysis

Giorgio Gandaglia; Firas Abdollah; Jonas Schiffmann; Vincent Trudeau; Shahrokh F. Shariat; Simon P. Kim; Paul Perrotte; Francesco Montorsi; Alberto Briganti; Quoc-Dien Trinh; Pierre I. Karakiewicz; Maxine Sun

There is few data on what constitutes the distribution of metastatic sites in prostate cancer (PCa). The aim of our study was to systematically describe the most common sites of metastases in a contemporary cohort of PCa patients.


European Urology | 2015

Impact of the Site of Metastases on Survival in Patients with Metastatic Prostate Cancer

Giorgio Gandaglia; Pierre I. Karakiewicz; Alberto Briganti; Niccolò Passoni; Jonas Schiffmann; Vincent Trudeau; Markus Graefen; Francesco Montorsi; Maxine Sun

BACKGROUND Limited data exist on the impact of the site of metastases on survival in patients with stage IV prostate cancer (PCa). OBJECTIVE To investigate the role of metastatic phenotype at presentation on mortality in stage IV PCa. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Overall, 3857 patients presenting with metastatic PCa between 1991 and 2009, included in the Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results-Medicare database were evaluated. OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS AND STATISTIC ANALYSES Overall and cancer-specific survival rates were estimated in the overall population and after stratifying patients according to the metastatic site (lymph node [LN] alone, bone, visceral, or bone plus visceral). Multivariable Cox regression analyses tested the relationship between the site of metastases and survival. All analyses were repeated in a subcohort of patients with a single metastatic site involved. RESULTS AND LIMITATIONS Respectively, 2.8%, 80.2%, 6.1%, and 10.9% of patients presented with LN, bone, visceral, and bone plus visceral metastases at diagnosis. Respective median overall survival and cancer-specific survival were 43 mo and 61 mo for LN metastases, 24 mo and 32 mo for bone metastases, 16 mo and 26 mo for visceral metastases, and 14 mo and 19 mo for bone plus visceral metastases (p<0.001). In multivariable analyses, patients with visceral metastases had a significantly higher risk of overall and cancer-specific mortality versus those with exclusively LN metastases (p<0.001). The unfavorable impact of visceral metastases persisted in the oligometastatic subgroup. Our study is limited by its retrospective design. CONCLUSIONS Visceral involvement represents a negative prognostic factor and should be considered as a proxy of more aggressive disease in patients presenting with metastatic PCa. This parameter might indicate the need for additional systemic therapies in these individuals. PATIENT SUMMARY Patients with visceral metastases should be considered as affected by more aggressive disease and might benefit from the inclusion in clinical trials evaluating novel molecules.


The Journal of Urology | 2014

Emergency Department Visits in the United States for Upper Urinary Tract Stones: Trends in Hospitalization and Charges

Khurshid R. Ghani; Florian Roghmann; Jesse D. Sammon; Vincent Trudeau; Shyam Sukumar; Haider Rahbar; Ramesh Kumar; Pierre I. Karakiewicz; James O. Peabody; Mani Menon; Maxine Sun; Quoc-Dien Trinh

PURPOSE Using the Nationwide Emergency Department Sample (NEDS) we examined trends in visits, hospitalization and charges for patients with upper urinary tract stones who presented to the emergency department in the United States. MATERIALS AND METHODS All visits with a primary diagnosis of kidney calculus (ICD-9-CM code 592.0), ureter calculus (592.1) or urinary calculus unspecified (592.9) were extracted from NEDS between 2006 and 2009. A weighted sample was used to calculate incidence rates. Temporal trends were quantified by the estimated annual percent change. Patient and hospital characteristics associated with hospitalization were evaluated using logistic regression models adjusted for clustering. RESULTS Between 2006 and 2009 there were 3,635,054 emergency department visits for upper urinary tract stones. The incidence increased from 289 to 306/100,000 individuals. More men visited than women but women showed significant increases in visits (estimated annual percent change 2.85%, p = 0.018). Total monthly emergency department visits ranged from 5.8% in February to 8.4% in August. Overall 12.0% of patients were hospitalized and the hospitalization rate remained stable (estimated annual percent change -1.02%, p = 0.634). Patients were more likely to be hospitalized if they were female, more ill, seen at an urban teaching or low volume hospital, or had Medicaid or Medicare (each p <0.001). Sepsis was associated with the highest likelihood of hospital admission (OR 69.64, p <0.001). In 2009 charges for emergency department visits increased to


European Urology | 2016

Prediction of Complications Following Partial Nephrectomy: Implications for Ablative Techniques Candidates

Alessandro Larcher; Nicola Fossati; Zhe Tian; Katharina Boehm; Malek Meskawi; Roger Valdivieso; Vincent Trudeau; Paolo Dell’Oglio; N. Buffi; Francesco Montorsi; Giorgio Guazzoni; Maxine Sun; Pierre I. Karakiewicz

5 billion (estimated annual percent change 10.06%, p = 0.003). CONCLUSIONS Women showed significant annual increases in emergency department visits for upper urinary tract stones. While emergency department charges increased substantially, hospitalization rates remained stable. Greater use of computerized tomography and medical expulsive therapy could be the reasons for this observation, which warrants further study.


International Journal of Urology | 2015

Early radiotherapy after radical prostatectomy improves cancer-specific survival only in patients with highly aggressive prostate cancer: Validation of recently released criteria

Giorgio Gandaglia; Pierre I. Karakiewicz; Alberto Briganti; Vincent Trudeau; Quoc-Dien Trinh; Simon P. Kim; Francesco Montorsi; Paul L. Nguyen; Firas Abdollah; Maxine Sun

BACKGROUND Current guidelines recommend local tumour ablation (LTA) over partial nephrectomy (PN) in nonsurgical candidates; however, objective definitions of these candidates are lacking. OBJECTIVE To identify specific patients who would benefit from LTA more than PN. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS A population-based assessment was performed of 2476 patients in the Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results-Medicare database who had cT1a kidney cancer treated with either LTA or PN, between 2000 and 2009. OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS AND STATISTICAL ANALYSIS The outcome of the study was the relevant perioperative complications rate. A multivariable logistic regression model was fitted to predict the risk of complications after PN. Model-derived coefficients were used to calculate the risk of complication in case of PN among patients treated with LTA. Locally weighted scatterplot smoothing method was used to plot the observed complication rate against the predicted risk of complication in case of PN. RESULTS AND LIMITATIONS At multivariable logistic regression, age (odds ratio [OR]: 1.04; p<0.001), Charlson comorbidity index (OR: 1.14; p<0.001), acute kidney injury (OR: 1.91; p=0.04), or chronic kidney disease (OR: 2.16; p=0.002), tumour size (OR: 1.02; p=0.01), and minimally invasive approach (OR: 0.77; p<0.03) emerged as significant predictors of complications. When LTA was chosen over PN, the reduction in the risk of complications was greatest in high-risk patients, intermediate in intermediate-risk patients, and least in low-risk patients. CONCLUSIONS When postoperative complications are evaluated, the benefit of choosing LTA is not the same in all patients diagnosed with T1a kidney cancer. Specifically, patients at high risk of complications in case of PN may benefit the most from LTA and represent ideal LTA candidates. PATIENT SUMMARY Elderly patients at high risk of complications in case of surgical treatment with partial nephrectomy for kidney cancer should be instructed that local tumour ablation might decrease their perioperative morbidity.


Cuaj-canadian Urological Association Journal | 2014

Robot-assisted versus laparoscopic nephroureterectomy for uppertract urothelial cancer: A population-based assessment of costs and perioperative outcomes

Vincent Trudeau; Giorgio Gandaglia; Jonas Shiffmann; Ioana Popa; Shahrokh F. Shariat; Francesco Montorsi; Paul Perrotte; Quoc-Dien Trinh; Pierre I. Karakiewicz; Maxine Sun

To test the effect of radiotherapy administered within 6 months after radical prostatectomy on cancer‐specific mortality in prostate cancer patients after stratification according to a risk score.


The Journal of Urology | 2014

The Health Care Burden of Skeletal Related Events in Patients with Renal Cell Carcinoma and Bone Metastasis

Carina Antczak; Vincent Q. Trinh; Akshay Sood; Praful Ravi; Florian Roghmann; Vincent Trudeau; Steven L. Chang; Pierre I. Karakiewicz; Adam S. Kibel; Nandita Krishna; Paul L. Nguyen; Fred Saad; Jesse D. Sammon; Shyam Sukumar; Kevin C. Zorn; Maxine Sun; Quoc-Dien Trinh

INTRODUCTION We compared short-term outcomes and costs between robotic-assisted nephroureterectomy (RANU) and laparoscopic radical nephroureterectomy (LNU) in a large population-based cohort of patients with upper-tract urothelial carcinoma (UTUC). METHODS Overall, 1914 patients with UTUC treated with RANU or LNU between 2008 and 2010 within the Nationwide Inpatient Sample were abstracted. Propensity-score matching was performed to account for inherent differences between patients undergoing RANU and LNU. Multivariable logistic regression models were fitted to compare postoperative complications, blood transfusions, prolonged length of stay, and costs between the 2 procedures. RESULTS Overall, a weighted estimate of 1199 (62.6%) and 715 (37.4%) patients received LNU and RANU, respectively. In multivariable analyses no significant differences were observed in postoperative transfusion and length of stay between the 2 surgical approaches (all p > 0.1). However, patients undergoing RANU were less likely to experience any complications compared to their counterparts undergoing LNU (p = 0.04). The utilization of RANU was associated with substantially higher costs compared to the laparoscopic approach. Our study is limited by its retrospective nature and the lack of adjustment for tumour stage and grade. CONCLUSIONS Our results support the safety and feasibility of RANU for the treatment of UTUC. Indeed, the use of the robotic approach was associated with lower probability of experiencing perioperative complications compared to LNU. On the other hand, the utilization of RANU is associated with higher costs compared to LNU.


The Prostate | 2011

IκB-Kinase-ε (IKKε/IKKi/IκBKε) expression and localization in prostate cancer tissues.

Benjamin Péant; Valérie Forest; Vincent Trudeau; Mathieu Latour; Anne-Marie Mes-Masson; Frsc Fred Saad Md

PURPOSE We examined temporal trends in skeletal related events and associated charges in patients with renal cell carcinoma metastatic to bone. We also identified patient and hospital characteristics associated with skeletal related events and related mortality. MATERIALS AND METHODS Using the Nationwide Inpatient Sample we abstracted data on patients with renal cell carcinoma who were diagnosed with concomitant bone metastasis between 1998 and 2010. Patients who experienced a skeletal related event were identified and hospital charges were calculated. Multivariate regression models fitted with generalized estimating equations were used to examine predictors of skeletal related events and related in-hospital mortality. RESULTS Between 1998 and 2010 a weighted estimate of 144,889 renal cell carcinoma hospital visits of patients with bone metastasis was identified in the Nationwide Inpatient Sample, of which 20.8% involved a skeletal related event. In these cases from 1998 to 2010 the inflation adjusted mean yearly costs associated with hospital admission increased by 207% in 2013 United States dollars (estimated annual percent change 8.94%, p<0.001). Conversely, the rates of skeletal related events and skeletal related event associated mortality decreased significantly (estimated annual percent change -1.11% and -2.9%, respectively, each p<0.001). CONCLUSIONS The prevalence and in-hospital mortality of skeletal related event associated hospitalization for metastatic renal cell carcinoma is decreasing but such charges to health care in the United States are increasing at an alarming rate. These findings highlight the need for cost-effective treatment strategies to prevent or treat these morbid complications.


Urology | 2016

Comparison of Postoperative Complications and Mortality Between Laparoscopic and Percutaneous Local Tumor Ablation for T1a Renal Cell Carcinoma: A Population-based Study

Vincent Trudeau; Alessandro Larcher; Katharina Boehm; Paolo Dell'Oglio; Maxine Sun; Zhe Tian; Alberto Briganti; Shahrokh F. Shariat; Claudio Jeldres; Pierre I. Karakiewicz

Advanced prostate cancer (PCa) remains a one of the leading causes of cancer related death and is often due to the progression from a hormone sensitive (HS) to a castrate resistant (CR) state for which therapeutic alternatives remain palliative. Molecular events involved in the progression to CR‐PCa remain largely unknown. A previous study reported significantly higher levels of Iκ‐B kinase‐epsilon (IKKε) expression in CR compared to androgen‐responsive cell lines. In the present study, we evaluate IKKε expression in human prostate tissue.


Urologic Oncology-seminars and Original Investigations | 2014

Local tumor destruction in renal cell carcinoma—An inpatient population-based study

Vincent Trudeau; Andreas Becker; Florian Roghmann; Shahrokh F. Shariat; Luis A. Kluth; Nawar Hanna; Al’a Abdo; Giorgio Gandaglia; Zhe Tian; Paul Perrotte; Quoc-Dien Trinh; Pierre I. Karakiewicz; Maxine Sun

OBJECTIVE To evaluate potential differences in local tumor ablation (LTA) perioperative outcomes between the percutaneous LTA (pLTA) and the laparoscopic LTA (lapLTA) approaches. METHODS Using the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results-Medicare, we identified all patients diagnosed with T1a renal cell carcinoma (RCC) who underwent either pLTA or lapLTA between 2000 and 2009. Overall complications at 30 days and mortality at 90 days were examined for both groups. A multivariable logistic regression model was fitted to evaluate the effect of the approach on perioperative complications. A second model was fitted to test for associations between patient or tumor characteristics and type of LTA approach. RESULTS Overall, 516 patients diagnosed with T1a RCC were identified. Of those, 289 (56%) were treated with pLTA and 227 (44%) were treated with lapLTA. LapLTA-treated patients were younger (median 76 vs 78, P < .001) and healthier (median Charlson comorbidity index 2.1 vs 2.7, P = .03) than their counterpart. After pLTA and lapLTA, overall complication rates were 21% and 25%, respectively (P = .3). Similarly, 90-day mortality rates did not differ between the two groups (P = 1). After adjusting for patient and tumor characteristics, LTA approach was not associated with perioperative complications (odds ratio: 1.38, P = .1). However, older and sicker patients were less likely to be treated with lapLTA (both ≤ 0.04). CONCLUSION No differences in 30-day overall complications or 90-day mortality rates were detected between lapLTA and pLTA for T1a RCC. pLTA was more frequently used in older and sicker individuals. Further prospective studies comparing both procedures should be undertaken.

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Maxine Sun

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Zhe Tian

Université de Montréal

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Alessandro Larcher

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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Alberto Briganti

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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Francesco Montorsi

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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Quoc-Dien Trinh

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Giorgio Gandaglia

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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