10 results on '"Clairefond* S"'
Search Results
2. Expression et valeur pronostique de la kératine-7 dans le cancer de la prostate
- Author
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Dariane, C., primary, Clairefond, S., additional, Péant, B., additional, Communal, L., additional, Tian, Z., additional, Ouellet, V., additional, Trudel, D., additional, Benzerdjeb, N., additional, Azzi, F., additional, Méjean, A., additional, Timsit, M., additional, Baurès, M., additional, Karakiewicz, P., additional, Mes-masson, A., additional, Guidotti, J., additional, Goffin, V., additional, and Saad, F., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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3. LB09 - Mouse LSCmed cells are a model of Club/Hillock Cells of the human prostate
- Author
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Baures, M., Dariane, C., Puig Lombardi, E., Rambow, F., Diedisheim, M., Clairefond, S., Saad, F., Guidotti, J.E., and Goffin, V.
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- 2023
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4. Abstraits AUQ 2016 Programme Scientifique - Session 1
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Ramsay* S, Nadeau G, Moore K, Bolduc S, Shamout* S, Biardeau X, Corcos J, Campeau L, Clairefond* S, Ouellet V, Péant B, Barrès V, Fragoso G, and Gebhart J
5. Fit-for-Purpose Ki-67 Immunohistochemistry Assays for Breast Cancer.
- Author
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Torlakovic EE, Baniak N, Barnes PJ, Chancey K, Chen L, Cheung C, Clairefond S, Cutz JC, Faragalla H, Gravel DH, Dakin Hache K, Iyengar P, Komel M, Kos Z, Lacroix-Triki M, Marolt MJ, Mrkonjic M, Mulligan AM, Nofech-Mozes S, Park PC, Plotkin A, Raphael S, Rees H, Seno HR, Thai DV, Troxell ML, Varma S, Wang G, Wang T, Wehrli B, and Bigras G
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Biomarkers, Tumor metabolism, Biomarkers, Tumor analysis, Canada, Sensitivity and Specificity, Tissue Array Analysis methods, Ki-67 Antigen metabolism, Ki-67 Antigen analysis, Breast Neoplasms metabolism, Breast Neoplasms diagnosis, Breast Neoplasms pathology, Immunohistochemistry methods
- Abstract
New therapies are being developed for breast cancer, and in this process, some "old" biomarkers are reutilized and given a new purpose. It is not always recognized that by changing a biomarker's intended use, a new biomarker assay is created. The Ki-67 biomarker is typically assessed by immunohistochemistry (IHC) to provide a proliferative index in breast cancer. Canadian laboratories assessed the analytical performance and diagnostic accuracy of their Ki-67 IHC laboratory-developed tests (LDTs) of relevance for the LDTs' clinical utility. Canadian clinical IHC laboratories enrolled in the Canadian Biomarker Quality Assurance Pilot Run for Ki-67 in breast cancer by invitation. The Dako Ki-67 IHC pharmDx assay was employed as a study reference assay. The Dako central laboratory was the reference laboratory. Participants received unstained slides of breast cancer tissue microarrays with 32 cases and performed their in-house Ki-67 assays. The results were assessed using QuPath, an open-source software application for bioimage analysis. Positive percent agreement (PPA, sensitivity) and negative percent agreement (NPA, specificity) were calculated against the Dako Ki-67 IHC pharmDx assay for 5%, 10%, 20%, and 30% cutoffs. Overall, PPA and NPA varied depending on the selected cutoff; participants were more successful with 5% and 10%, than with 20% and 30% cutoffs. Only 4 of 16 laboratories had robust IHC protocols with acceptable PPA for all cutoffs. The lowest PPA for the 5% cutoff was 85%, for 10% was 63%, for 20% was 14%, and for 30% was 13%. The lowest NPA for the 5% cutoff was 50%, for 10% was 33%, for 20% was 50%, and for 30% was 57%. Despite many years of international efforts to standardize IHC testing for Ki-67 in breast cancer, our results indicate that Canadian clinical LDTs have a wide analytical sensitivity range and poor agreement for 20% and 30% cutoffs. The poor agreement was not due to the readout but rather due to IHC protocol conditions. International Ki-67 in Breast Cancer Working Group (IKWG) recommendations related to Ki-67 IHC standardization cannot take full effect without reliable fit-for-purpose reference materials that are required for the initial assay calibration, assay performance monitoring, and proficiency testing., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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6. High Levels of MFG-E8 Confer a Good Prognosis in Prostate and Renal Cancer Patients.
- Author
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Geoffroy K, Laplante P, Clairefond S, Azzi F, Trudel D, Lattouf JB, Stagg J, Saad F, Mes-Masson AM, Bourgeois-Daigneault MC, and Cailhier JF
- Abstract
Milk fat globule-epidermal growth factor-8 (MFG-E8) is a glycoprotein secreted by different cell types, including apoptotic cells and activated macrophages. MFG-E8 is highly expressed in a variety of cancers and is classically associated with tumor growth and poor patient prognosis through reprogramming of macrophages into the pro-tumoral/pro-angiogenic M2 phenotype. To date, correlations between levels of MFG-E8 and patient survival in prostate and renal cancers remain unclear. Here, we quantified MFG-E8 and CD68/CD206 expression by immunofluorescence staining in tissue microarrays constructed from renal ( n = 190) and prostate ( n = 274) cancer patient specimens. Percentages of MFG-E8-positive surface area were assessed in each patient core and Kaplan-Meier analyses were performed accordingly. We found that MFG-E8 was expressed more abundantly in malignant regions of prostate tissue and papillary renal cell carcinoma but was also increased in the normal adjacent regions in clear cell renal carcinoma. In addition, M2 tumor-associated macrophage staining was increased in the normal adjacent tissues compared to the malignant areas in renal cancer patients. Overall, high tissue expression of MFG-E8 was associated with less disease progression and better survival in prostate and renal cancer patients. Our observations provide new insights into tumoral MFG-E8 content and macrophage reprogramming in cancer.
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- 2022
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7. High Keratin-7 Expression in Benign Peri-Tumoral Prostatic Glands Is Predictive of Bone Metastasis Onset and Prostate Cancer-Specific Mortality.
- Author
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Dariane C, Clairefond S, Péant B, Communal L, Thian Z, Ouellet V, Trudel D, Benzerdjeb N, Azzi F, Méjean A, Timsit MO, Baurès M, Guidotti JE, Goffin V, Karakiewicz PI, Mes-Masson AM, and Saad F
- Abstract
Background: New predictive biomarkers are needed to accurately predict metastasis-free survival (MFS) and cancer-specific survival (CSS) in localized prostate cancer (PC). Keratin-7 (KRT7) overexpression has been associated with poor prognosis in several cancers and is described as a novel prostate progenitor marker in the mouse prostate., Methods: KRT7 expression was evaluated in prostatic cell lines and in human tissue by immunohistochemistry (IHC, on advanced PC, n = 91) and immunofluorescence (IF, on localized PC, n = 285). The KRT7 mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) was quantified in different compartments by digital analysis and correlated to clinical endpoints in the localized PC cohort., Results: KRT7 is expressed in prostatic cell lines and found in the basal and supra-basal compartment from healthy prostatic glands and benign peri-tumoral glands from localized PC. The KRT7 staining is lost in luminal cells from localized tumors and found as an aberrant sporadic staining (2.2%) in advanced PC. In the localized PC cohort, high KRT7 MFI above the 80th percentile in the basal compartment was significantly and independently correlated with MFS and CSS, and with hypertrophic basal cell phenotype., Conclusion: High KRT7 expression in benign glands is an independent biomarker of MFS and CSS, and its expression is lost in tumoral cells. These results require further validation on larger cohorts.
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- 2022
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8. Expression of ERBB Family Members as Predictive Markers of Prostate Cancer Progression and Mortality.
- Author
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Clairefond S, Ouellet V, Péant B, Barrès V, Karakiewicz PI, Mes-Masson AM, and Saad F
- Abstract
Background: EGFR, ERBB2, ERBB3, and ERBB4 are growth receptors of the ERBB family implicated in the development of epithelial cancers. Studies have suggested a role for EGFR and ERBB3 in the development of prostate cancer (PC), while the involvement of ERBB2 and ERBB4 remains unclear. In this study, we evaluated the expression of all members of the ERBB family in PC tissue from a large cohort and determined their contribution, alone or in combination, as prognostic markers., Methods: Using immunofluorescence coupled with digital image analyses, we quantified the expression of EGFR, ERBB2, ERBB3, and ERBB4 on radical prostatectomy specimens ( n = 285) arrayed on six tissue microarrays. By combining EGFR, ERBB2, and ERBB3 protein expression in a decision tree model, we identified an association with biochemical recurrence (log rank = 25.295, p < 0.001), development of bone metastases (log rank = 23.228, p < 0.001), and cancer-specific mortality (log rank = 24.586, p < 0.001)., Conclusions: Our study revealed that specific protein expression patterns of ERBB family members are associated with an increased risk of PC progression and mortality.
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- 2021
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9. PUMA and NOXA Expression in Tumor-Associated Benign Prostatic Epithelial Cells Are Predictive of Prostate Cancer Biochemical Recurrence.
- Author
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Clairefond S, Péant B, Ouellet V, Barrès V, Tian Z, Trudel D, Karakiewicz PI, Mes-Masson AM, and Saad F
- Abstract
Background: Given that treatment decisions in prostate cancer (PC) are often based on risk, there remains a need to find clinically relevant prognostic biomarkers to stratify PC patients. We evaluated PUMA and NOXA expression in benign and tumor regions of the prostate using immunofluorescence techniques and determined their prognostic significance in PC., Methods: PUMA and NOXA expression levels were quantified on six tissue microarrays (TMAs) generated from radical prostatectomy samples ( n = 285). TMAs were constructed using two cores of benign tissue and two cores of tumor tissue from each patient. Association between biomarker expression and biochemical recurrence (BCR) at 3 years was established using log-rank (LR) and multivariate Cox regression analyses., Results: Kaplan-Meier analysis showed a significant association between BCR and extreme levels (low or high) of PUMA expression in benign epithelial cells (LR = 8.831, p = 0.003). Further analysis revealed a significant association between high NOXA expression in benign epithelial cells and BCR (LR = 14.854, p < 0.001). The combination of extreme PUMA and high NOXA expression identified patients with the highest risk of BCR (LR = 16.778, p < 0.001) in Kaplan-Meier and in a multivariate Cox regression analyses (HR: 2.935 (1.645-5.236), p < 0.001)., Conclusions: The combination of PUMA and NOXA protein expression in benign epithelial cells was predictive of recurrence following radical prostatectomy and was independent of PSA at diagnosis, Gleason score and pathologic stage.
- Published
- 2020
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10. WISP1 is associated to advanced disease, EMT and an inflamed tumor microenvironment in multiple solid tumors.
- Author
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Gaudreau PO, Clairefond S, Class CA, Boulay PL, Chrobak P, Allard B, Azzi F, Pommey S, Do KA, Saad F, Trudel D, Young M, and Stagg J
- Abstract
Background : WNT1-Inducible Signaling Pathway Protein 1 (WISP1) is implicated in prostate cancer growth and metastasis and the regulation of inflammation in diverse benign diseases. The objectives of this study were to assess the prognostic value of WISP1, its association to inflammation and its relevance as a biomarker for immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) response. Methods : Publicly available RNA-seq datasets were used to evaluate the prognostic value of WISP1 gene expression and its association with tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes, inflamed tumor microenvironment, and anti-PD-1 ICB response. A tissue microarray (TMA) including 285 radical prostatectomy specimens was used to confirm these associations in prostate cancer. The effect of recombinant WISP1 (rWISP1) on inflammatory cytokines was assessed in vitro . Results : High levels of WISP1 correlated with BCR-free survival in prostate adenocarcinoma and overall survival in primary melanoma, low-grade glioma, and kidney papillary cell carcinoma. Some effects could be accounted for by higher WISP1 expression in advanced disease. High WISP1 expression in prostate adenocarcinoma was correlated with CD8+ cells density. In vitro , rWISP1 increased inflammatory cytokine production. High WISP1 gene expression in RNA-seq datasets was correlated with gene signatures of multiple immune cell types as well as an inflammatory cytokine, immune checkpoint, and epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) gene expression. WISP1 mRNA expression was associated with primary resistance to ICB in datasets showing EMT. Conclusions : Our results support an association between WISP1 expression and advanced disease, EMT and an inflamed tumor microenvironment in multiple solid tumors. The consequences of WISP1 expression on cancer immunotherapy remains to be addressed.
- Published
- 2019
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