Publications (3)4.31 Total impact
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Article: Clinical and molecular features in patients with advanced non-small-cell lung carcinoma refractory to first-line platinum-based chemotherapy.
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ABSTRACT: Most of the cases of non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) are diagnosed at an advanced stage and are treated with platinum-doublet chemotherapy. However, some patients are refractory to this treatment. The aim of this study was to identify the clinical and molecular characteristics of patients with refractory disease. All consecutive patients between 2003 and 2006, who received a platinum-doublet chemotherapy as first-line treatment for stage IIIb-IV NSCLC, were included. Refractory patients were defined as early progressive disease (PD) at the first evaluation of chemotherapy according to WHO criteria. The clinical, histo-pathological, and molecular characteristics (EGFR: exon 19, 20, 21 and KRAS: exon 2 by PCR sequencing; ALK by immunohistochemistry) and survival of refractory patients with initial PD (r-patients) and controlled disease (c-patients) were compared by univariate analyses. Factors that differed between the two groups (p-value <0.25 in univariate analyses) were entered into multivariate analysis. In this study, 178 patients were included. The first tumor assessment was carried out after a median of three cycles (range 1-4). Forty-six (25.8%) patients were refractory. Clinical presentation was similar between r- and c-patients. The sarcomatoid histological subtype was more common in r-patients than c-patients (10.9% vs. 1.5%, respectively; p=0.057). The proportion of EGFR (5.2% vs. 9.6%, p=0.224) and KRAS mutations (11.1% vs. 5.7%, p=0.357), and the expression of ALK (6.3% vs. 2.5%, p=0.327) did not differ significantly between the two groups. In multivariate analysis, sarcomatoid histological subtype was the only factor associated with early PD (OR=7.50; 95%CI: 1.02-55.45; p=0.048). r-Patients had significantly shorter survival than c-patients (median 5 months (IQR 3.2-9.9) vs. 15.4 months (IQR 9.9-22.5), respectively; p<0.0001). In conclusion, patients with early PD under platinum-doublet chemotherapy had shorter survival than c-patients. Sarcomatoid histological subtype was the only independent factor associated with early PD.Lung cancer (Amsterdam, Netherlands) 11/2012; · 3.14 Impact Factor -
Article: [A simple view on lung cancer biology: the MET pathway].
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ABSTRACT: MET is a cell membrane tyrosine kinase receptor for its ligand the hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), also called scatter factor (SF). MET conveys mitogenic, motogenic and proangiogenic signals, important during embryonic development and during the development of cancer. Activation of the HGF-MET pathway seems to be associated with a poor prognosis in lung cancer. Activation in lung cancer may be related to several molecular anomalies: ligand overexpression, receptor overexpression, genomic amplification or MET mutation. In MET amplified or mutated lung cancer, MET may be an important oncogene, as the tumor appears "MET addicted". In other lung cancers, MET may be implicated in tumour progression by tissue invasion and formation of metastases. MET amplification is also a mechanism known to be implicated in 20% of secondary resistance to EGFR inhibitors in patients presenting EGFR mutated lung cancer. Different strategies of MET inhibition in lung cancer are being studied, particularly in EGFR mutated lung cancer. In this review we discuss the structure of the MET receptor, the activated pathways, the main genomic anomalies in lung cancer and the development of MET inhibitors.Revue des Maladies Respiratoires 12/2011; 28(10):1241-9. · 0.59 Impact Factor -
Article: [In Process Citation]
Revue des Maladies Respiratoires 12/2008; 25(9):1172. · 0.59 Impact Factor
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Institutions
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2008
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Université Pierre et Marie Curie Paris 6
Paris, Ile-de-France, France
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