616 results on '"P. Ducimetière"'
Search Results
2. Connecting the changing trace elements spectrum and survival in sarcoma: a pilot study
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Collet, Laetitia, Telouk, Philippe, Albarede, Francis, Girodet, Magali, Maqua, Clémence, Rogasik, Muriel, Ducimetière, Françoise, Tabone-Eglinger, Séverine, Brahmi, Mehdi, Dufresne, Armelle, Thomas, David M., Ballinger, Mandy L., Blay, Jean-Yves, and Ray-Coquard, Isabelle
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- 2024
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3. On the liquid film instability of an internally coated horizontal tube
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Eghbali, Shahab, Ducimetiere, Yves-Marie, Boujo, Edouard, and Gallaire, Francois
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Physics - Fluid Dynamics - Abstract
We study numerically and theoretically the gravity-driven flow of a viscous liquid film coating the inner side of a horizontal cylindrical tube and surrounding a shear-free dynamically inert gaseous core. The liquid-gas interface is prone to the Rayleigh-Plateau and Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities. Here, we focus on the limit of low and intermediate Bond numbers, Bo, where the capillary and gravitational forces are comparable and the Rayleigh-Taylor instability is known to be suppressed. We first study the evolution of the axially invariant draining flow, initiating from a uniform film thickness until reaching a quasi-static regime as the bubble approaches the upper tube wall. We then investigate the flow linear stability within two frameworks: frozen time-frame (quasi-steady) stability analysis and transient growth analysis. We explore the effect of the surface tension (Bo) and inertia (measured by the Ohnesorge number, Oh) on the flow and its stability. The linear stability analysis suggests that the interface deformation at large Bo results in the suppression of the Rayleigh-Plateau instability in the asymptotic long-time limit. Furthermore, the transient growth analysis suggests that the initial flow evolution does not lead to any considerable additional amplification of initial interface perturbations, a posteriori rationalising the quasi-steady assumption. The present study yields a satisfactory prediction of the stabilisation threshold found experimentally by Duclaux et al. [15].
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- 2022
4. Qualitative evaluation of motives for acceptance or refusal of early palliative care in patients included in early-phase clinical trials in a French comprehensive cancer center: the PALPHA study
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Lochmann, Mathilde, Girodet, Magali, Despax, Johanna, Baudry, Valentine, Duranti, Julie, Mastroianni, Bénédicte, Vanacker, Hélène, Vinceneux, Armelle, Brahmi, Mehdi, Renard, Olivier, Verlingue, Loïc, Amini-Adle, Mona, Swalduz, Aurélie, Gautier, Julien, Ducimetière, Françoise, Anota, Amélie, Cassier, Philippe A., Chvetzoff, Gisèle, and Christophe, Véronique
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- 2024
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5. Breaking one into three: surface-tension-driven droplet breakup in T-junctions
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Zhou, Jiande, Ducimetière, Yves-Marie, Migliozzi, Daniel, Keiser, Ludovic, Bertsch, Arnaud, Gallaire, François, and Renaud, Philippe
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Physics - Fluid Dynamics - Abstract
Droplet breakup is an important phenomenon in the field of microfluidics to generate daughter droplets. In this work, a novel breakup regime in the widely studied T-junction geometry is reported, where the pinch-off occurs laterally in the two outlet channels, leading to the formation of three daughter droplets, rather than at the center of the junction for conventional T-junctions which leads to two daughter droplets. It is demonstrated that this new mechanism is driven by surface tension, and a design rule for the T-junction geometry is proposed. A model for low values of the capillary number $Ca$ is developed to predict the formation and growth of an underlying carrier fluid pocket that accounts for this lateral breakup mechanism. At higher values of $Ca$, the conventional regime of central breakup becomes dominant again. The competition between the new and the conventional regime is explored. Altogether, this novel droplet formation method at T-junction provides the functionality of alternating droplet size and composition, which can be important for the design of new microfluidic tools.
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- 2022
6. Design of a new SPS injection system via numerical optimisation
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Waagaard, E., Barnes, M. J., Bartmann, W., Borburgh, J., Ducimetière, L. S., Kramer, T., Stadlbauer, T., Trubacova, P., and Velotti, F. M.
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Physics - Accelerator Physics - Abstract
The Super Proton Synchrotron (SPS) injection system plays a fundamental role to preserve the quality of injected high-brightness beams for the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) physics program and to maintain the maximum storable intensity. The present system is the result of years of upgrades and patches of a system not conceived for such intensities and beam qualities. In this study, we propose the design of a completely new injection system for the SPS using multi-level numerical optimisation, including realistic hardware assumptions. We also present how this hierarchical optimisation framework can be adapted to other situations for optimal accelerator system design.
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- 2022
7. Weak nonlinearity for strong nonnormality
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Ducimetière, Yves-Marie, Boujo, Edouard, and Gallaire, François
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Physics - Fluid Dynamics ,Mathematics - Dynamical Systems - Abstract
We propose a theoretical approach to derive amplitude equations governing the weakly nonlinear evolution of nonnormal dynamical systems when they experience transient growth or respond to harmonic forcing. This approach reconciles the nonmodal nature of these growth mechanisms and the need for a center manifold to project the leading-order dynamics. Under the hypothesis of strong nonnormality, we take advantage of the fact that small operator perturbations suffice to make the inverse resolvent and the inverse propagator singular, which we encompass in a multiple-scale asymptotic expansion. The methodology is outlined for a generic nonlinear dynamical system, and four application cases highlight common nonnormal mechanisms in hydrodynamics: the streamwise convective nonnormal amplification in the flow past a backward-facing step, and the Orr and lift-up mechanisms in the plane Poiseuille flow., Comment: 37 pages, 14 figures
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- 2021
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8. The effects of spanwise confinement on stratified shear instabilities
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Ducimetière, Yves-Marie, Gallaire, François, Lefauve, Adrien, and Caulfield, Colm-cille P.
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Physics - Fluid Dynamics - Abstract
We consider the influence of transverse confinement on the instability properties of velocity and density distributions reminiscent of those pertaining to exchange flows in stratified inclined ducts, such as the recent experiment of Lefauve et al. (J. Fluid Mech. 848, 508-544, 2018). Using a normal mode streamwise and temporal expansion for flows in ducts with various aspect ratios $B$ and non-trivial transverse velocity profiles, we calculate two-dimensional (2D) dispersion relations with associated eigenfunctions varying in the 'crosswise' direction, in which the density varies, and the spanwise direction, both normal to the duct walls and to the flow direction. We also compare these 2D dispersion relations to the so-called one-dimensional (1D) dispersion relation obtained for spanwise invariant perturbations, for different aspect ratios $B$ and bulk Richardson numbers $Ri_b$. In this limited parameter space, the presence of lateral walls has a stabilizing effect. Furthermore, accounting for spanwise-varying perturbations results in a plethora of unstable modes, the number of which increases as the aspect ratio is increased. These modes present an odd-even regularity in their spatial structures, which is rationalized by comparison to the so-called one-dimensional oblique (1D-O) dispersion relation obtained for oblique waves. Finally, we show that in most cases, the most unstable 2D mode is the one that oscillates the least in the spanwise direction, as a consequence of viscous damping. However, in a limited region of the parameter space and in the absence of stratification, we show that a secondary mode with a more complex `twisted' structure dominated by crosswise vorticity becomes more unstable than the least oscillating Kelvin-Helmholtz mode associated with spanwise vorticity., Comment: 35 pages, 12 figures
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- 2021
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9. Handling missing covariates in observational studies: an illustration with the assessment of prognostic factors of survival outcomes in soft-tissue or visceral sarcomas in irradiated fields (SIF)
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Noémie Huchet, Nicolas Penel, Sylvie Bonvalot, Juliette Thariat, Françoise Ducimetière, Antoine Giraud, Maud Toulmonde, Axel Le Cesne, Jean-Yves Blay, and Carine Bellera
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Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Background: Missing covariates are common in observational research and can lead to bias and loss of statistical power. Limited data regarding prognostic factors of survival outcomes of sarcomas in irradiated fields (SIF) are available. Because of the long lag time between irradiation of first cancer and scarcity of SIF, missing data are a critical issue when analyzing long-term outcomes. We assessed prognostic factors of overall (OS), progression-free (PFS), and metastatic-progression-free (MPFS) survivals in SIF using three methods to account for missing covariates. Methods: We relied on the NETSARC French Sarcoma Group database, Cox (OS/PFS), and competitive hazards (MPFS) survival models. Covariates investigated were age, sex, histological subtype, tumor size, depth and grade, metastasis, surgery, surgical resection, surgeon’s expertise, imaging, and neo-adjuvant treatment. We first applied multiple imputation (MI): observed data were used to estimate the missing covariate. With the missing-data modality approach, a category missing was created for qualitative variables. With the complete-case (CC) approach, analysis was restricted to patients without missing covariates. Results: CC subjects ( N = 167; 33%) presented more often with soft-tissue sarcoma ( versus visceral sarcoma) and grade I–II tumors as compared to the 504 eligible cases. With MI ( N = 504), factors associated with the worst outcome included metastasis ( p = 0.04) and R1/R2 resection ( p < 0.001) for OS; higher grade/non-gradable tumors ( p = 0.002) and R1/R2 resection ( p < 0.001) for PFS; and metastasis ( p = 0.01) for M-PFS. The ‘missing-data modality’ approach ( N = 504) led to different associations, including significance reached due to variables with the modality ‘missing’. The CC analysis led to different results and reduced precision. Conclusion: The CC population was not representative of the eligible population, introducing bias, in addition to worst precision. The ‘missing-data modality method’ results in biased estimates in non-randomized studies, as outcomes may be related to variables with missing values. Appropriate statistical methods for missing covariates, for example, MI, should therefore be considered.
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- 2024
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10. Management and outcomes of adolescent and young adult sarcoma patients: results from the French nationwide database NETSARC
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Kubicek, Pierre, Cesne, Axel Le, Lervat, Cyril, Toulmonde, Maud, Chevreau, Christine, Duffaud, Florence, Le Nail, Louis-Romée, Morelle, Magali, Gaspar, Nathalie, Vérité, Cécile, Castex, Marie-Pierre, Penel, Nicolas, Saada, Esma, Causeret, Sylvain, Bertucci, François, Perrin, Christophe, Bompas, Emmanuelle, Orbach, Daniel, Laurence, Valérie, Piperno-Neumann, Sophie, Anract, Philippe, Rios, Maria, Gentet, Jean-Claude, Mascard, Éric, Pannier, Stéphanie, Blouin, Pascale, Carrère, Sébastien, Chaigneau, Loïc, Soibinet-Oudot, Pauline, Corradini, Nadège, Boudou-Rouquette, Pascaline, Ruzic, Jean-Christophe, Lebrun-Ly, Valérie, Dubray-Longeras, Pascale, Varatharajah, Sharmini, Lebbe, Céleste, Ropars, Mickaël, Kurtz, Jean-Emmanuel, Guillemet, Cécile, Lotz, Jean-Pierre, Berchoud, Juliane, Cherrier, Grégory, Ducimetière, Françoise, Chemin, Claire, Italiano, Antoine, Honoré, Charles, Desandes, Emmanuel, Blay, Jean-Yves, Gouin, François, and Marec-Bérard, Perrine
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- 2023
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11. Leiomyosarcoma and liposarcoma in young patients: The national netsarc+ network experience
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Anne-Laure Genevois, Matthieu Carton, Myriam Jean-Denis, Joanna Cyrta, Nadège Corradini, Pablo Berlanga, Claire Chemin-Airiau, Charles Honore, Sophie El Zein, Anne-Sophie Defachelles, Emmanuelle Bompas, Philippe Anract, Justine Gantzer, Marie Karanian, Angélique Rome, Florence Duffaud, Christine Chevreau, Sarah Watson, Axel Le Cesne, Carmen Llacer, François Le Loarer, Gaëlle Pierron, François Gouin, Anne Gomez-Mascard, Sylvain Causeret, Françoise Ducimetière, Elsa Kalbacher, Maud Toulmonde, Jean-Yves Blay, and Daniel Orbach
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Liposarcoma ,Leiomyosarcoma ,Ultra-rare sarcoma ,Children ,Adolescent-young adults ,NETSARC+ ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Background: Leiomyosarcoma (LMS) and liposarcoma (LPS) are ultra-rare sarcomas in pediatric (0–18 years) and young adult (19−30) populations. We aimed to analyze their clinical characteristics at these young ages and to determine whether they should be considered with the same therapeutic strategy in both populations. Methods: National retrospective multicenter study of all young patients (0–30 years) included in the sarcoma database “ConticaBase”, treated for LMS or LPS between 2010 and 2019 via the national NETSARC+ network, with available pathology/biology review. Findings: A total of 218 patients were identified, 34 children (nine LMS, 25 LPS) and 184 young adults (58 LMS, 126 LPS). Myxoid/Round Cell LPS (M/RC-LPS) was the most frequent LPS subtype (72 %). All children had localized LMS and LPS, versus 52/58 and 116/126 respectively in adults. Clinical presentation of LMS and all LPS subtypes was comparable in both populations, except for a preferential limb location of LMS in children. The therapeutic strategy was mainly based on primary surgery in LMS (9/9 children, 52/58 adults) and for LPS (respectively 25/25 and 122/126), exclusively or with adjuvant radiotherapy and systemic treatment. With a median follow-up of 62.4 months (range, 2.5–146), 5-year overall survival was respectively 83 % [95 % CI, 58–100] in children and 73 % [61–88] in young adults for LMS, 100 % [100] vs 92 % [87–99] for M/RC-LPS and 25 % [5–100] vs 60 % [29–100] for pleomorphic LPS. Interpretation: LMS and all LPS subtypes appear to display comparable behavior in children and young adults. The authors propose that the same therapeutic strategy should be considered for both groups.
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- 2023
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12. Single-spectrum prediction of kurtosis of water waves in a non-conservative model
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Eeltink, D., Armaroli, A., Ducimetière, Y. M., Kasparian, J., and Brunetti, M.
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Physics - Fluid Dynamics ,Physics - Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics ,Physics - Data Analysis, Statistics and Probability - Abstract
We study statistical properties after a sudden episode of wind for water waves propagating in one direction. A wave with random initial conditions is propagated using a forced-damped higher order Nonlinear Schr\"odinger equation (NLS). During the wind episode, the wave action increases, the spectrum broadens, the spectral mean shifts up and the Benjamin-Feir index (BFI) and the kurtosis increase. Conversely, after the wind episode, the opposite occurs for each quantity. The kurtosis of the wave height distribution is considered the main parameter that can indicate whether rogue waves are likely to occur in a sea state, and the BFI is often mentioned as a means to predict the kurtosis. However, we find that while there is indeed a quadratic relation between these two, this relationship is dependent on the details of the forcing and damping. Instead, a simple and robust quadratic relation does exist between the kurtosis and the bandwidth. This could allow for a single-spectrum assessment of the likelihood of rogue waves in a given sea state. In addition, as the kurtosis depends strongly on the damping and forcing coefficients, by combining the bandwidth measurement with the damping coefficient, the evolution of the kurtosis after the wind episode can be predicted., Comment: 30 pages, 12 figures
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- 2019
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13. Searching for low-mass dark matter particles with a massive Ge bolometer operated above-ground
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Armengaud, E., Augier, C., Benoît, A., Benoit, A., Bergé, L., Billard, J., Broniatowski, A., Camus, P., Cazes, A., Chapelier, M., Charlieux, F., Ducimetière, D., Dumoulin, L., Eitel, K., Filosofov, D., Gascon, J., Giuliani, A., Gros, M., De Jésus, M., Jin, Y., Juillard, A., Kleifges, M., Maisonobe, R., Marnieros, S., Misiak, D., Navick, X. -F., Nones, C., Olivieri, E., Oriol, C., Pari, P., Paul, B., Poda, D., Queguiner, E., Rozov, S., Sanglard, V., Siebenborn, B., Vagneron, L., Weber, M., Yakushev, E., Zolotarova, A., and Kavanagh, B. J.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
The EDELWEISS collaboration has performed a search for dark matter particles with masses below the GeV-scale with a 33.4-g germanium cryogenic detector operated in a surface lab. The energy deposits were measured using a neutron-transmutation-doped Ge thermal sensor with a 17.7~eV (RMS) baseline heat energy resolution leading to a 60~eV analysis energy threshold. Despite a moderate lead shielding and the high-background environment, the first sub-GeV spin-independent dark matter limit based on a germanium target has been achieved. The experiment provides the most stringent, nuclear recoil based, above-ground limit on spin-independent interactions above 600~MeV/c$^{2}$. The experiment also provides the most stringent limits on spin-dependent interactions with protons and neutrons below 1.3~GeV/c$^{2}$. Furthermore, the dark matter search results were studied in the context of Strongly Interacting Massive Particles, taking into account Earth-shielding effects, for which new regions of the available parameter space have been excluded. Finally, the dark matter search has also been extended to interactions via the Migdal effect, resulting for the first time in the exclusion of particles with masses between 45 and 150~MeV/c$^{2}$ with spin-independent cross sections ranging from $10^{-29}$ to $10^{-26}$~cm$^2$., Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures. New figure added for Spin-Dependent interactions. Accepted in Phys. Rev. D
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- 2019
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14. Management and outcomes of adolescent and young adult sarcoma patients: results from the French nationwide database NETSARC
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Pierre Kubicek, Axel Le Cesne, Cyril Lervat, Maud Toulmonde, Christine Chevreau, Florence Duffaud, Louis-Romée Le Nail, Magali Morelle, Nathalie Gaspar, Cécile Vérité, Marie-Pierre Castex, Nicolas Penel, Esma Saada, Sylvain Causeret, François Bertucci, Christophe Perrin, Emmanuelle Bompas, Daniel Orbach, Valérie Laurence, Sophie Piperno-Neumann, Philippe Anract, Maria Rios, Jean-Claude Gentet, Éric Mascard, Stéphanie Pannier, Pascale Blouin, Sébastien Carrère, Loïc Chaigneau, Pauline Soibinet-Oudot, Nadège Corradini, Pascaline Boudou-Rouquette, Jean-Christophe Ruzic, Valérie Lebrun-Ly, Pascale Dubray-Longeras, Sharmini Varatharajah, Céleste Lebbe, Mickaël Ropars, Jean-Emmanuel Kurtz, Cécile Guillemet, Jean-Pierre Lotz, Juliane Berchoud, Grégory Cherrier, Françoise Ducimetière, Claire Chemin, Antoine Italiano, Charles Honoré, Emmanuel Desandes, Jean-Yves Blay, François Gouin, and Perrine Marec-Bérard
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Adolescents and young adults ,AYAs ,Sarcoma ,Management ,Multidisciplinary tumor board ,Reference centers ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background The initial management of patients with sarcoma is a critical issue. We used the nationwide French National Cancer Institute-funded prospective sarcoma database NETSARC to report the management and oncologic outcomes in adolescents and young adults (AYAs) patients with sarcoma at the national level. Patients and methods NETSARC database gathers regularly monitored and updated data from patients with sarcoma. NETSARC was queried for patients (15–30 years) with sarcoma diagnosed from 2010 to 2017 for whom tumor resection had been performed. We reported management, locoregional recurrence-free survival (LRFS), progression-free survival (PFS), and overall survival (OS) in AYA treated in French reference sarcoma centers (RSC) and outside RSC (non-RSC) and conducted multivariable survival analyses adjusted for classical prognostic factors. Results Among 3,227 patients aged 15–30 years with sarcoma diagnosed between 2010 and 2017, the study included 2,227 patients with surgery data available, among whom 1,290 AYAs had been operated in RSC, and 937 AYAs in non-RSC. Significant differences in compliance to guidelines were observed including pre-treatment biopsy (RSC: 85.9%; non-RSC 48.1%), pre-treatment imaging (RSC: 86.8%; non-RSC: 56.5%) and R0 margins (RSC 57.6%; non-RSC: 20.2%) (p
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- 2023
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15. Determinants of the access to remote specialised services provided by national sarcoma reference centres
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Yohan Fayet, Raphaël Tétreau, Charles Honoré, Louis-Romée Le Nail, Cécile Dalban, François Gouin, Sylvain Causeret, Sophie Piperno-Neumann, Simone Mathoulin-Pelissier, Marie Karanian, Antoine Italiano, Loïc Chaigneau, Justine Gantzer, François Bertucci, Mickael Ropars, Esma Saada-Bouzid, Abel Cordoba, Jean-Christophe Ruzic, Sharmini Varatharajah, Françoise Ducimetière, Sylvie Chabaud, Pascale Dubray-Longeras, Fabrice Fiorenza, Sixtine De Percin, Céleste Lebbé, Pauline Soibinet, Paul Michelin, Maria Rios, Fadila Farsi, Nicolas Penel, Emmanuelle Bompas, Florence Duffaud, Christine Chevreau, Axel Le Cesne, Jean-Yves Blay, François Le Loarer, and Isabelle Ray-Coquard
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Cancer inequalities ,Spatial inequalities ,Reference networks ,Sarcoma ,Cancer care accessibility ,Rare cancers ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background Spatial inequalities in cancer management have been evidenced by studies reporting lower quality of care or/and lower survival for patients living in remote or socially deprived areas. NETSARC+ is a national reference network implemented to improve the outcome of sarcoma patients in France since 2010, providing remote access to specialized diagnosis and Multidisciplinary Tumour Board (MTB). The IGéAS research program aims to assess the potential of this innovative organization, with remote management of cancers including rare tumours, to go through geographical barriers usually impeding the optimal management of cancer patients. Methods Using the nationwide NETSARC+ databases, the individual, clinical and geographical determinants of the access to sarcoma-specialized diagnosis and MTB were analysed. The IGéAS cohort (n = 20,590) includes all patients living in France with first sarcoma diagnosis between 2011 and 2014. Early access was defined as specialised review performed before 30 days of sampling and as first sarcoma MTB discussion performed before the first surgery. Results Some clinical populations are at highest risk of initial management without access to sarcoma specialized services, such as patients with non-GIST visceral sarcoma for diagnosis [OR 1.96, 95% CI 1.78 to 2.15] and MTB discussion [OR 3.56, 95% CI 3.16 to 4.01]. Social deprivation of the municipality is not associated with early access on NETSARC+ remote services. The quintile of patients furthest away from reference centres have lower chances of early access to specialized diagnosis [OR 1.18, 95% CI 1.06 to 1.31] and MTB discussion [OR 1.24, 95% CI 1.10 to 1.40] but this influence of the distance is slight in comparison with clinical factors and previous studies on the access to cancer-specialized facilities. Conclusions In the context of national organization driven by reference network, distance to reference centres slightly alters the early access to sarcoma specialized services and social deprivation has no impact on it. The reference networks’ organization, designed to improve the access to specialized services and the quality of cancer management, can be considered as an interesting device to reduce social and spatial inequalities in cancer management. The potential of this organization must be confirmed by further studies, including survival analysis.
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- 2021
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16. Reasons for acceptance and refusal of early palliative care in patients included in early-phase clinical trials in a regional comprehensive cancer centre in France: protocol for a qualitative study
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Françoise Ducimetière, Amélie Anota, Helene Vanacker, Philippe Cassier, Mehdi Brahmi, Véronique Christophe, Gisele Chvetzoff, Magali Girodet, Johanna Despax, Valentine Baudry, Julie Duranti, Bénédicte Mastroianni, Armelle Vinceneux, Olivier Renard, Julien Gautier, and Manon Britel
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Medicine - Abstract
Introduction A few studies have highlighted the potential synergy between early palliative care and inclusion in an early-phase clinical trial that may improve quality of life, reduce symptoms of exhaustion related to the side effects of treatment and allow patients to complete their treatment protocol. The primary objective of this qualitative study is to evaluate the reasons for acceptance or refusal of early palliative care in patients included in early-phase clinical trials.Method and analysis All patients from the Centre Léon Bérard (Comprehensive Cancer Centre in Lyon, France) who consent to one of the early-phase clinical trials proposed at the centre will be invited to participate in this study. The cohort will consist of a subgroup (n=20) of patients who accept palliative care together with their clinical trial, and a second subgroup (n=20) of patients who decline it. Patients will be interviewed in exploratory interviews conducted by a psychology researcher before the start of their clinical trial. The interviews will be audio-recorded. Patients will also be asked to complete quality of life and anxiety/depression questionnaires both before the beginning of the treatment and at the end of their clinical trial. The content of the interviews will be analysed thematically. Descriptive and comparative statistical analysis of both cohorts will also be conducted.Ethics and dissemination Personal data will be collected and processed in accordance with the laws and regulations in force. All patients will give informed consent to participate. This study complies with reference methodology MR004 of the Commission Nationale de l'Informatique et des Libertés. The protocol has received the validation of an ethics committee (Groupe de Réflexion Ethique du CLB, number: 2020-006). The results will be disseminated through conference presentations and peer-reviewed publications.Trial registration number NCT04717440.
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- 2022
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17. Genome-Wide Association Study for Incident Myocardial Infarction and Coronary Heart Disease in Prospective Cohort Studies: The CHARGE Consortium
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Dehghan, Abbas, Bis, Joshua C, White, Charles C, Smith, Albert Vernon, Morrison, Alanna C, Cupples, L Adrienne, Trompet, Stella, Chasman, Daniel I, Lumley, Thomas, Völker, Uwe, Buckley, Brendan M, Ding, Jingzhong, Jensen, Majken K, Folsom, Aaron R, Kritchevsky, Stephen B, Girman, Cynthia J, Ford, Ian, Dörr, Marcus, Salomaa, Veikko, Uitterlinden, André G, Eiriksdottir, Gudny, Vasan, Ramachandran S, Franceschini, Nora, Carty, Cara L, Virtamo, Jarmo, Demissie, Serkalem, Amouyel, Philippe, Arveiler, Dominique, Heckbert, Susan R, Ferrières, Jean, Ducimetière, Pierre, Smith, Nicholas L, Wang, Ying A, Siscovick, David S, Rice, Kenneth M, Wiklund, Per-Gunnar, Taylor, Kent D, Evans, Alun, Kee, Frank, Rotter, Jerome I, Karvanen, Juha, Kuulasmaa, Kari, Heiss, Gerardo, Kraft, Peter, Launer, Lenore J, Hofman, Albert, Markus, Marcello RP, Rose, Lynda M, Silander, Kaisa, Wagner, Peter, Benjamin, Emelia J, Lohman, Kurt, Stott, David J, Rivadeneira, Fernando, Harris, Tamara B, Levy, Daniel, Liu, Yongmei, Rimm, Eric B, Jukema, J Wouter, Völzke, Henry, Ridker, Paul M, Blankenberg, Stefan, Franco, Oscar H, Gudnason, Vilmundur, Psaty, Bruce M, Boerwinkle, Eric, and O'Donnell, Christopher J
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Epidemiology ,Biological Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Genetics ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Prevention ,Human Genome ,Cardiovascular ,Heart Disease ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Aetiology ,Good Health and Well Being ,Aged ,Cohort Studies ,Cooperative Behavior ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Female ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Myocardial Infarction ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Prospective Studies ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
BackgroundData are limited on genome-wide association studies (GWAS) for incident coronary heart disease (CHD). Moreover, it is not known whether genetic variants identified to date also associate with risk of CHD in a prospective setting.MethodsWe performed a two-stage GWAS analysis of incident myocardial infarction (MI) and CHD in a total of 64,297 individuals (including 3898 MI cases, 5465 CHD cases). SNPs that passed an arbitrary threshold of 5×10-6 in Stage I were taken to Stage II for further discovery. Furthermore, in an analysis of prognosis, we studied whether known SNPs from former GWAS were associated with total mortality in individuals who experienced MI during follow-up.ResultsIn Stage I 15 loci passed the threshold of 5×10-6; 8 loci for MI and 8 loci for CHD, for which one locus overlapped and none were reported in previous GWAS meta-analyses. We took 60 SNPs representing these 15 loci to Stage II of discovery. Four SNPs near QKI showed nominally significant association with MI (p-value
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- 2016
18. Progress with the Upgrade of the SPS for the HL-LHC Era
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Goddard, B., Argyropoulos, T., Bartosik, H., Bartmann, W., Bohl, T., Caspers, F., Cornelis, K., Damerau, H., Drøsdal, L., Ducimetière, L., Garoby, R., Gourber-Pace, M., Höfle, W., Iadarola, G., Jensen, L., Kain, V., Losito, R., Meddahi, M., Mereghetti, A., Mertens, V., Mete, Ö., Montesinos, E., Müller, J. E., Papaphilippou, Y., Rumolo, G., Salvant, B., Shaposhnikova, E., Taborelli, M., Timko, H., Velotti, F., and Gianfelice-Wendt, E.
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Physics - Accelerator Physics - Abstract
The demanding beam performance requirements of the High Luminosity (HL-) LHC project translate into a set of requirements and upgrade paths for the LHC injector complex. In this paper the performance requirements for the SPS and the known limitations are reviewed in the light of the 2012 operational experience. The various SPS upgrades in progress and still under consideration are described, in addition to the machine studies and simulations performed in 2012. The expected machine performance reach is estimated on the basis of the present knowledge, and the remaining decisions that still need to be made concerning upgrade options are detailed., Comment: 3 p. Presented at 4th International Particle Accelerator Conference (IPAC 2013)
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- 2014
19. Determinants of the access to remote specialised services provided by national sarcoma reference centres
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Fayet, Yohan, Tétreau, Raphaël, Honoré, Charles, Le Nail, Louis-Romée, Dalban, Cécile, Gouin, François, Causeret, Sylvain, Piperno-Neumann, Sophie, Mathoulin-Pelissier, Simone, Karanian, Marie, Italiano, Antoine, Chaigneau, Loïc, Gantzer, Justine, Bertucci, François, Ropars, Mickael, Saada-Bouzid, Esma, Cordoba, Abel, Ruzic, Jean-Christophe, Varatharajah, Sharmini, Ducimetière, Françoise, Chabaud, Sylvie, Dubray-Longeras, Pascale, Fiorenza, Fabrice, De Percin, Sixtine, Lebbé, Céleste, Soibinet, Pauline, Michelin, Paul, Rios, Maria, Farsi, Fadila, Penel, Nicolas, Bompas, Emmanuelle, Duffaud, Florence, Chevreau, Christine, Le Cesne, Axel, Blay, Jean-Yves, Le Loarer, François, and Ray-Coquard, Isabelle
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- 2021
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20. Injection and dump considerations for a 16.5 TeV HE-LHC
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Goddard, B., Barnes, M., Bartmann, W., Borburgh, J., Bracco, C., Ducimetière, L., Kain, V., Meddahi, M., Mertens, V., Senaj, V., and Uythoven, J.
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Physics - Accelerator Physics - Abstract
Injection and beam dumping is considered for a 16.5 TeV hadron accelerator in the current LHC tunnel, with an injection energy in the range 1 - 1.3 TeV. The present systems are described and the possible upgrade scenarios investigated for higher beam rigidity. In addition to the required equipment performance, the machine protection related aspects are explored. The expected constraints on the machine layout are also given. The technological challenges for the different equipment subsystems are detailed, and areas where R&D is necessary are highlighted., Comment: 6 pages, contribution to the EuCARD-AccNet-EuroLumi Workshop: The High-Energy Large Hadron Collider, Malta, 14 -- 16 Oct 2010; CERN Yellow Report CERN-2011-003, pp. 128-133
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- 2011
21. Injection and extraction magnets: kicker magnets
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Barnes, M. J., Ducimetiére, L., Fowler, T., Senaj, V., and Sermeus, L.
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Physics - Accelerator Physics - Abstract
Each stage of an accelerator system has a limited dynamic range and therefore a chain of stages is required to reach high energy. A combination of septa and kicker magnets is frequently used to inject and extract beam from each stage. The kicker magnets typically produce rectangular field pulses with fast rise- and/or fall-times, however, the field strength is relatively low. To compensate for their relatively low field strength, the kicker magnets are generally combined with electromagnetic septa. The septa provide relatively strong field strength but are either DC or slow pulsed. This paper discusses injection and extraction systems with particular emphasis on the hardware required for the kicker magnet., Comment: 26 pages, presented at the CERN Accelerator School CAS 2009: Specialised Course on Magnets, Bruges, 16-25 June 2009
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- 2011
22. ETIOSARC study : environmental aetiology of sarcomas from a French prospective multicentric population-based case–control study—study protocol
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Aude Lacourt, Alain Monnereau, Brice Amadéo, Céline Gramond, Sandrine Plouvier, Jean-Yves Blay, Jean-Michel Coindre, Gonzague de Pinieux, François Gouin, Antoine Italiano, Axel Le Cesne, François Le Loarer, Isabelle Pellegrin, Nicolas Penel, Maud Toulmonde, Françoise Ducimetière, A Lacourt, B Amadéo, C Gramond, E Marrer, S Plouvier, I Baldi, S Bara, C Bazille, J Y Blay, E Bompas, L Chaigneau, M C Chateau, J M Coindre, G Coureau, D Cupissol, T D’Almeida, G Defossez, P Delafosse, C Delcambre Lair, G De Pinieux, A Di Marco, T Fabre, F Fiorenza, J P Ghnassia, F Gouin, A V Guizard, A Italiano, J E Kurtz, V Lebrun-Ly, A Le Cesne, F Le Loarer, L R Le Nail, C Maynou, G Missenard, F Molinié, A Monnereau, A Moreau, N Penel, D Ranchère-Vince, I Ray-Coquard, Y M Robin, P Terrier, M Toulmonde, B Tretarre, M Velten, A S Woronoff, F Ducimetière, and S Mathoulin-Pélissier
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Medicine - Abstract
IntroductionSarcomas are rare tumours of connective tissue. The exact overall incidence of sarcomas is unknown due to diagnostic difficulties and the various histological subtypes (over 80 subtypes). However, the apparent increasing incidence of sarcomas suggests environmental causes such as pesticides. Except for some specific factors (ie, ionising radiation, vinyl chloride, dioxin and genetic predispositions) the scientific knowledge on the aetiology of sarcomas is sparse and inconsistent. France is a particularly appropriate country to set up a study investigating the causes of sarcoma occurrence due to the French organisation in treatment and care of sarcoma patients, which is highly structured and revolved around national expert networks. The main objective of the ETIOlogy of SARcomas (ETIOSARC) project is to study the role of lifestyle, environmental and occupational factors in the occurrence of sarcomas among adults from a multicentric population-based case–control study.Methods and analysisCases will be all incident patients (older than 18 years) prospectively identified in 15 districts of France covered by a general population-based cancer registry and/or a reference centre in sarcoma’s patient care over a 3-year period with an inclusion start date ranging from February 2019 to January 2020 and histologically confirmed by a second review of the diagnosis. Two controls will be individually matched by sex, age (5 years group) and districts of residence and randomly selected from electoral rolls. A standardised questionnaire will be administered by a trained interviewer in order to gather information about occupational and residential history, demographic and socioeconomic characteristics and lifestyle factors. At the end of the interview, a saliva sample will be systematically proposed. This study will permit to validate or identify already suspected risk factors for sarcomas such as phenoxyherbicides, chlorophenol and to generate new hypothesis to increase our understanding about the genetic and environmental contributions in the carcinogenicity process.Ethics and disseminationThe present study is promoted by the French National Institute of Health and Medical Research (identification number C17-03). This study received National French Ethic committee (CPP Sud Méditerrannée I) approval (identification number 18-31) and French Data Protection Authority (CNIL) approval (identification number 918171). Results of this study will be published in international peer-reviewed journals. Technical appendix, statistical code and dataset will be available in the Dryad repository when collection data are completed.Trial registration numberNCT03670927.
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- 2019
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23. The Interplay Between Innate Lymphoid Cells and the Tumor Microenvironment
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Laura Ducimetière, Marijne Vermeer, and Sonia Tugues
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innate lymphoid cells ,tumor microenvironment ,crosstalk ,immune evasion ,immune modulation ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
The multifaceted roles of Innate Lymphoid Cells (ILC) have been widely interrogated in tumor immunity. Whereas, Natural Killer (NK) cells possess undisputable tumor-suppressive properties across multiple types of cancer, the other ILC family members can either promote or inhibit tumor growth depending on the environmental conditions. The differential effects of ILCs on tumor outcome have been attributed to the high degree of heterogeneity and plasticity within the ILC family members. However, it is now becoming clear that ILCs responses are shaped by their dynamic crosstalk with the different components of the tumor microenvironment (TME). In this review, we will give insights into the molecular and cellular players of the ILCs-TME interactions and we will discuss how we can use this knowledge to successfully harness the activity of ILCs for anticancer therapies.
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- 2019
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24. To which extent social withdrawal at the age of 1 year is associated with IQ at 5–6 years old? Results of the EDEN mother–child cohort
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Guedeney, Antoine, Doukhan, Sarah, Forhan, Anne, Heude, Barbara, Peyre, Hugo, Annesi-Maesano, I., Bernard, J. Y., Botton, J., Charles, M. A., Dargent-Molina, P., de Lauzon-Guillain, B., Ducimetière, P., de Agostini, M., Foliguet, B., Forhan, A., Fritel, X., Germa, A., Goua, V., Hankard, R., Heude, B., Kaminski, M., Larroque, B., Lelong, N., Lepeule, J., Magnin, G., Marchand, L., Nabet, C., Pierre, F., Slama, R., Saurel-Cubizolles, M. J., Schweitzer, M., Thiebaugeorges, O., and On behalf of the EDEN Mother–Child Cohort Study Group
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- 2017
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25. The cost-saving effect of centralized histological reviews with soft tissue and visceral sarcomas, GIST, and desmoid tumors: The experiences of the pathologists of the French Sarcoma Group.
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Lionel Perrier, Pauline Rascle, Magali Morelle, Maud Toulmonde, Dominique Ranchere Vince, Axel Le Cesne, Philippe Terrier, Agnès Neuville, Pierre Meeus, Fadila Farsi, Françoise Ducimetière, Jean-Yves Blay, Isabelle Ray Coquard, and Jean-Michel Coindre
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
This study examined the types of discordance occurring in the diagnosis of soft tissue and visceral sarcomas, gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST), and desmoid tumors, as well as the economic impact of diagnostic discrepancies.We carried out a retrospective, multicenter analysis using prospectively implemented databases performed on a cohort of patients within the French RRePS network in 2010. Diagnoses were deemed to be discordant based on the 2013 World Health Organization (WHO) classification. Predictive factors of discordant diagnoses were explored. A decision tree was used to assess the expected costs of two strategies of disease management: one based on revised diagnoses after centralized histological review (option 1), the other on diagnoses without centralized review (option 2). Both were defined based on the patient and the disease characteristics, according to national or international guidelines. The time horizon was 12 months and the perspective of the French National Health Insurance (NHI) was retained. Costs were expressed in Euros for 2013. Sensitivity analyses were performed using low and high scenarios that included ± 20% estimates for cost.A total of 2,425 patients were included. Three hundred forty-one patients (14%) had received discordant diagnoses. These discordances were determined to mainly be benign tumors diagnosed as sarcomas (n = 124), or non-sarcoma malignant tumors diagnosed as sarcomas (n = 77). The probability of discordance was higher for a final diagnosis of desmoid tumors when compared to liposarcomas (odds ratio = 5.1; 95%CI [2.6-10.4]). The expected costs per patient for the base-case analysis (low- and high-case scenarios) amounted to €8,791 (€7,033 and €10,549, respectively) for option 1 and €8,904 (€7,057 and €10,750, respectively) for option 2.Our findings highlight misdiagnoses of sarcomas, which were found to most often be confused with benign tumors. Centralized histological reviews are likely to provide cost-savings for the French NHI.
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- 2018
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26. Territory as cancers inequalities generator
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Yohan Fayet, Virginie Chasles, Françoise Ducimetière, and Pr Isabelle Ray-Coquard
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cancer ,geographic inequalities ,EMS cohort ,Geography (General) ,G1-922 ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Published
- 2018
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27. Le territoire, générateur d’inégalités face aux cancers
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Yohan Fayet, Virginie Chasles, Françoise Ducimetière, and Pr Isabelle Ray-Coquard
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cancer ,inégalités géographiques ,cohorte EMS ,Geography (General) ,G1-922 ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Cancers inequalities in France are among the highest in developed countries and these gaps seem to be growing in the last decades. Territorial inequalities of cancers are analyzed by mapping, which showed higher mortality rates in the North-East Regions of France. At the local scale, standardized mortality rates are two times higher in some areas in the North as other areas in the South-East. Epidemiological studies, mostly based on multilevel analysis, evidence the impact of physical environment, deprivation or health care access on health outcomes. But to identify contextual effects are not sufficient to understand how cancer inequalities are built and how patient’s life context contributes to this process. As epidemiological approach is splitting contextual effects according to health outcomes, geographical approach may have to explain how these contextual effects lead to cancer inequalities, by using territorial typology to summarize these contextual effects. Comparing health outcomes according to this territorial classification may help to understand territory’s ability to generate health inequalities. Several stages across the cancer continuum are implied in the building of the cancer inequalities. This medical process has to be reconstructed to determine whether mortality inequalities are generated by a higher incidence or a lower survival. Moreover, lower survival may be linked to the worse prognosis of patients at diagnosis or to the lower quality of management according to cancer care facilities. Evolution of patients’ prognosis may be reconstructed, thanks to clinical data, in order to identify the most influent steps during this medical process. As a result, to understand the way geographical inequalities of cancers are building requires a multidisciplinary methodology, considering the territory’s contribution as a whole and using longitudinal clinical data. But to reconstitute this medical process is quite difficult actually because few longitudinal and exhaustive data are available. The EMS cohort represents an opportunity to test and discuss this methodological approach. This cohort includes all sarcoma (rare cancer) patients diagnosed in 2005 and 2006, in the Rhône-Alpes Region, and collects clinical data from the diagnosis to the patient follow-up. For this geographical analysis of the EMS cohort, we used a territorial typology generated thanks to multivariate analysis of 15 geographical variables known for their impact on health. Strong differences are noticed in terms of environment exposures, deprivation and health care access between the six types of territory (metropolitan neighborhoods, working-class neighborhoods, urban districts, residential areas, periurban areas, rural areas). This typology seems to be relevant to study geographical inequalities because it enables to distinguish populations which are not exposed to the same risks through their life context. A logistic regression including stage, age and histological subtype, as clinical factors influencing prognosis, estimates the patients’ prognosis at diagnosis. This prognosis score seems to be quite predictive because only 7% of “good prognosis” patients will be dead five years later, whereas this five years death rate raises to 80% for the worse prognosis patients. Analysis of geographical inequalities for sarcoma patients in the Rhône-Alpes Region shows the diversity of situations leading to inequalities of mortality. Indeed, the higher mortality in three types of territories has to be attributed to three different processes. In the case of the urban hub, this high mortality is linked to the higher incidence of sarcoma, as survival rate for patients of these districts is very close to the regional average. As incidence and prognosis risk in the working-class neighborhoods are quite similar to the regional average, higher mortality is due to the loss of survival odds in the course of treatments, probably because of a less optimal management. Despite the second lower incidence among the six types of territories, the worse prognosis of patients (more late-stage diagnosis) and the loss of survival odds during cancer management explained the high mortality rated in the rural areas. Thanks to the EMS cohort’s analysis, we assess the potential of a multidisciplinary methodology studying the territory’s ability to generate geographical inequalities of cancers. Territorial typology, produced without health outcomes data, may be used for every health studies as a synthetic index of the territory and also evidence strong inequalities of health according to people’s life contexts. As public policies struggle to be successful on this issue, to identify key events in the medical process leading to cancer inequalities may improve the territorialization and the efficiency of these policies. Territories with high risk before diagnosis would be focused on prevention and early diagnosis, whereas those more disadvantage during the management would lean towards cancer care quality, access to hospitals and cancer expertise and patient compliance.
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- 2018
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28. Les critères de qualité de la prise en charge chirurgicale des sarcomes des tissus mous
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Bonvalot, S., Tzanis, D., Ferron, G., Toufik Bouhadiba, M., Meeus, P., Ducimetière, F., and Stoeckle, E.
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- 2016
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29. L’organisation française en réseau de soins pour la prise en charge des sarcomes
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Ducimetière, F., Coindre, J.-M., Gouin, F., Du Bouexic de Pinieux, G., Chemin, C., Bonvalot, S., Meeus, P., Stoeckle, E., Anract, P., Honoré, C., Ranchère-Vince, D., Terrier, P., Le Cesne, A., Bui N’Guyen, B., Italiano, A., Goldwasser, F., Battistella, M., Lecointe, E., Ray-Coquard, I., Blay, J.-Y., and Au nom des réseaux de référence RRePS, NetSarc et ResOs et du Groupe sarcome français (GSF–GETO)
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- 2016
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30. Future circular collider injection and extraction kicker topologies and solid state generators
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M. J. Barnes, W. Bartmann, F. Burkart, L. Ducimetière, B. Goddard, T. Kramer, V. Senaj, T. Stadlbauer, D. Woog, D. Barna, L. M. Redondo, and A. Kandratsyeu
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Nuclear and particle physics. Atomic energy. Radioactivity ,QC770-798 - Abstract
A 100 TeV center-of-mass energy frontier proton collider, in a new tunnel of 80–100 km circumference, is a central part of CERN’s Future Circular Colliders (FCC) design study. The designs of the injection and extraction systems of the FCC are initially based upon the parameters of the injection and extraction systems of the Large Hadron Collider and a preliminary study of the FCC beam optics and lattice. The injection and, in particular, the extraction systems of the FCC have to be highly reliable. In order to achieve high reliability, solid state switches will be used for the generators of the injection and extraction systems. This paper discusses topologies of these kicker systems, which are presently under consideration.
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- 2019
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31. Short‐Term Risk of Bleeding During Heparin Bridging at Initiation of Vitamin K Antagonist Therapy in More Than 90 000 Patients With Nonvalvular Atrial Fibrillation Managed in Outpatient Care
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Kim Bouillon, Marion Bertrand, Lotfi Boudali, Pierre Ducimetière, Rosemary Dray‐Spira, and Mahmoud Zureik
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anticoagulant ,arterial thrombosis ,bleeding ,heparin bridging ,nonvalvular atrial fibrillation ,vitamin K antagonist ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
BackgroundSeveral studies have recently examined the risks of bleeding and of ischemic stroke and systemic embolism associated with perioperative heparin bridging anticoagulation in patients with nonvalvular atrial fibrillation. However, few studies have investigated bridging risks during vitamin K antagonist initiation in outpatient settings. Methods and ResultsA retrospective cohort study was conducted on individuals starting oral anticoagulation between January 2010 and November 2014 for nonvalvular atrial fibrillation managed in outpatient care and identified from French healthcare insurance. Bleeding and ischemic stroke and systemic embolism events were identified from the hospitalization database. Adjusted hazard ratios with 95% CI were estimated using Cox models during the first and 2 following months of anticoagulation. Of 90 826 individuals, 30% had bridging therapy. A total of 318 (0.35%) cases of bleeding and 151 (0.17%) ischemic stroke and systemic embolism cases were identified during the first month of follow‐up and 231 (0.31%) and 122 (0.16%) during the 2 following months, respectively. At 1 month of follow‐up, the incidence of bleeding was higher in the bridged group compared with the nonbridged group (0.47% versus 0.30%; P
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- 2016
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32. Genome-Wide Association Study for Incident Myocardial Infarction and Coronary Heart Disease in Prospective Cohort Studies: The CHARGE Consortium.
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Abbas Dehghan, Joshua C Bis, Charles C White, Albert Vernon Smith, Alanna C Morrison, L Adrienne Cupples, Stella Trompet, Daniel I Chasman, Thomas Lumley, Uwe Völker, Brendan M Buckley, Jingzhong Ding, Majken K Jensen, Aaron R Folsom, Stephen B Kritchevsky, Cynthia J Girman, Ian Ford, Marcus Dörr, Veikko Salomaa, André G Uitterlinden, Gudny Eiriksdottir, Ramachandran S Vasan, Nora Franceschini, Cara L Carty, Jarmo Virtamo, Serkalem Demissie, Philippe Amouyel, Dominique Arveiler, Susan R Heckbert, Jean Ferrières, Pierre Ducimetière, Nicholas L Smith, Ying A Wang, David S Siscovick, Kenneth M Rice, Per-Gunnar Wiklund, Kent D Taylor, Alun Evans, Frank Kee, Jerome I Rotter, Juha Karvanen, Kari Kuulasmaa, Gerardo Heiss, Peter Kraft, Lenore J Launer, Albert Hofman, Marcello R P Markus, Lynda M Rose, Kaisa Silander, Peter Wagner, Emelia J Benjamin, Kurt Lohman, David J Stott, Fernando Rivadeneira, Tamara B Harris, Daniel Levy, Yongmei Liu, Eric B Rimm, J Wouter Jukema, Henry Völzke, Paul M Ridker, Stefan Blankenberg, Oscar H Franco, Vilmundur Gudnason, Bruce M Psaty, Eric Boerwinkle, and Christopher J O'Donnell
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BACKGROUND:Data are limited on genome-wide association studies (GWAS) for incident coronary heart disease (CHD). Moreover, it is not known whether genetic variants identified to date also associate with risk of CHD in a prospective setting. METHODS:We performed a two-stage GWAS analysis of incident myocardial infarction (MI) and CHD in a total of 64,297 individuals (including 3898 MI cases, 5465 CHD cases). SNPs that passed an arbitrary threshold of 5×10-6 in Stage I were taken to Stage II for further discovery. Furthermore, in an analysis of prognosis, we studied whether known SNPs from former GWAS were associated with total mortality in individuals who experienced MI during follow-up. RESULTS:In Stage I 15 loci passed the threshold of 5×10-6; 8 loci for MI and 8 loci for CHD, for which one locus overlapped and none were reported in previous GWAS meta-analyses. We took 60 SNPs representing these 15 loci to Stage II of discovery. Four SNPs near QKI showed nominally significant association with MI (p-value
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- 2016
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33. Cord-blood vitamin D level and night sleep duration in preschoolers in the EDEN mother-child birth cohort
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Chu Yan Yong, Eve Reynaud, Anne Forhan, Patricia Dargent-Molina, Barbara Heude, Marie-Aline Charles, Sabine Plancoulaine, I. Annesi-Maesano, J.Y. Bernard, J. Botton, M.A. Charles, P. Dargent-Molina, B. de Lauzon-Guillain, P. Ducimetière, M. de Agostini, B. Foliguet, A. Forhan, X. Fritel, A. Germa, V. Goua, R. Hankard, B. Heude, M. Kaminski, B. Larroque, N. Lelong, J. Lepeule, G. Magnin, L. Marchand, C. Nabet, F. Pierre, R. Slama, M.J. Saurel-Cubizolles, M. Schweitzer, O. Thiebaugeorges, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Equipe 6 : ORCHAD - Origines précoces de la santé du développement de l'enfant (CRESS - U1153), Université Paris Descartes - Paris 5 (UPD5)-Centre de Recherche Épidémiologie et Statistique Sorbonne Paris Cité (CRESS (U1153 / UMR_A_1125 / UMR_S_1153)), Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7 (UPD7)-Université Paris Descartes - Paris 5 (UPD5)-Université Sorbonne Paris Cité (USPC)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7 (UPD7)-Université Sorbonne Paris Cité (USPC)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), and Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7 (UPD7)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-Université Paris Descartes - Paris 5 (UPD5)-Université Sorbonne Paris Cité (USPC)-Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7 (UPD7)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-Université Sorbonne Paris Cité (USPC)
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FOS: Computer and information sciences ,Adult ,Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Longitudinal study ,Population ,Mothers ,Statistics - Applications ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Vitamin D and neurology ,Humans ,Applications (stat.AP) ,Longitudinal Studies ,Vitamin D ,Child ,education ,Multinomial logistic regression ,[SDV.MHEP.PED]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology/Pediatrics ,education.field_of_study ,pediatric sleep ,business.industry ,cohort ,General Medicine ,Fetal Blood ,Vitamin D Deficiency ,medicine.disease ,Sleep in non-human animals ,Obstructive sleep apnea ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,030228 respiratory system ,Quantitative Biology - Neurons and Cognition ,FOS: Biological sciences ,Child, Preschool ,Cohort ,Neurons and Cognition (q-bio.NC) ,epidemiology ,[SDV.NEU]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC] ,[SDV.SPEE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologie ,Female ,France ,Sleep ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
International audience; Objective: 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25OHD) deficiency has been associated with sleep disorders in adults. Only three cross-sectional studies were performed in children and showed an association between 25OHD deficiency and both obstructive sleep apnea syndrome and primary snoring. No longitudinal study has been performed in children from the general population. We analyzed the association between cord-blood vitamin D level at birth and night-sleep duration trajectories for children between 2 and 5-6 years old in a non-clinical cohort.Method: We included 264 children from the French EDEN mother-child birth-cohort with both cord-blood 25OHD level determined by radio-immunoassay at birth, and night-sleep trajectories for children between 2 and 5-6 years old obtained by the group-based trajectory modeling method. Associations between 25OHD and sleep trajectories were assessed by multinomial logistic regression adjusted for maternal and child characteristics.Results: The trajectories short sleep (
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- 2019
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34. Depressive symptoms, antidepressants and disability and future coronary heart disease and stroke events in older adults: the Three City Study
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Péquignot, Renaud, Tzourio, Christophe, Péres, Karine, Ancellin, Marie-Laure, Perier, Marie-Cécile, Ducimetière, Pierre, and Empana, Jean-Philippe
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- 2013
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35. Utilisation de l’approche âge-période-cohorte pour l’étude de l’évolution de la prévalence de l’obésité en France dans les études ObEpi
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Diouf, I., Charles, M.-A., Ducimetière, P., Basdevant, A., Eschwege, E., and Heude, B.
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- 2010
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36. Association between the frequency of fruit and vegetable consumption and cardiovascular disease in male smokers and non-smokers
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Dauchet, L, Montaye, M, Ruidavets, J-B, Arveiler, D, Kee, F, Bingham, A, Ferrières, J, Haas, B, Evans, A, Ducimetière, P, Amouyel, P, and Dallongeville, J
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- 2010
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37. Residual cardiovascular risk in treated hypertension and hyperlipidaemia: the PRIME Study
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Blacher, J, Evans, A, Arveiler, D, Amouyel, P, Ferrières, J, Bingham, A, Yarnell, J, Haas, B, Montaye, M, Ruidavets, J-B, and Ducimetière, P
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- 2010
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38. Do we really know the cause of death of the very old? Comparison between official mortality statistics and cohort study classification
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Alpérovitch, Annick, Bertrand, Marion, Jougla, Eric, Vidal, Jean-Sébastien, Ducimetière, Pierre, Helmer, Catherine, Ritchie, Karen, Pavillon, Gérard, and Tzourio, Christophe
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- 2009
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39. Lack of association of genetic variants in the LRP8 gene with familial and sporadic myocardial infarction
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Lieb, Wolfgang, Zeller, Tanja, Mangino, Massimo, Götz, Anika, Braund, Peter, Wenzel, Juergen J., Horn, Christian, Proust, Carole, Linsel-Nitschke, Patrick, Amouyel, Philippe, Bruse, Petra, Arveiler, Dominique, König, Inke R., Ferrières, Jean, Ziegler, Andreas, Balmforth, Anthony J., Evans, Alun, Ducimetière, Pierre, Cambien, Francois, Hengstenberg, Christian, Stark, Klaus, Hall, Alistair S., Schunkert, Heribert, Blankenberg, Stefan, Samani, Nilesh J., Erdmann, Jeanette, and Tiret, Laurence
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- 2008
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40. High plasma leptin predicts an increase in subcutaneous adiposity in children and adults
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Kettaneh, A, Heude, B, Romon, M, Oppert, J M, Borys, J M, Balkau, B, Ducimetière, P, and Charles, M A
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- 2007
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41. Growth curves of anthropometric indices in a general population of French children and comparison with reference data
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Heude, B, Kettaneh, A, de Lauzon Guillain, B, Lommez, A, Borys, J-M, Ducimetière, P, and Charles, M-A
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- 2006
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42. Practical way to assess metabolic syndrome using a continuous score obtained from principal components analysis: The D.E.S.I.R. Cohort*
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Hillier, T. A., Rousseau, A., Lange, C., Lépinay, P., Cailleau, M., Novak, M., Calliez, E., Ducimetière, P., and Balkau, B.
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- 2006
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43. The relationships between indicators of physical activity, indicators of sedentary behaviour and adiposity in French adults: the FLVS II study
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Oppert, Jean-Michel, Kettaneh, Adrien, Borys, Jean-Michel, Basdevant, Arnaud, Ducimetière, Pierre, and Charles, Marie-Aline
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- 2006
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44. Incidence of sarcoma histotypes and molecular subtypes in a prospective epidemiological study with central pathology review and molecular testing.
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Françoise Ducimetière, Antoine Lurkin, Dominique Ranchère-Vince, Anne-Valérie Decouvelaere, Michel Péoc'h, Luc Istier, Philippe Chalabreysse, Christine Muller, Laurent Alberti, Pierre-Paul Bringuier, Jean-Yves Scoazec, Anne-Marie Schott, Christophe Bergeron, Dominic Cellier, Jean-Yves Blay, and Isabelle Ray-Coquard
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BackgroundThe exact overall incidence of sarcoma and sarcoma subtypes is not known. The objective of the present population-based study was to determine this incidence in a European region (Rhone-Alpes) of six million inhabitants, based on a central pathological review of the cases.Methodology/principal findingsFrom March 2005 to February 2007, pathology reports and tumor blocks were prospectively collected from the 158 pathologists of the Rhone-Alpes region. All diagnosed or suspected cases of sarcoma were collected, reviewed centrally, examined for molecular alterations and classified according to the 2002 World Health Organization classification. Of the 1287 patients screened during the study period, 748 met the criteria for inclusion in the study. The overall crude and world age-standardized incidence rates were respectively 6.2 and 4.8 per 100,000/year. Incidence rates for soft tissue, visceral and bone sarcomas were respectively 3.6, 2.0 and 0.6 per 100,000. The most frequent histological subtypes were gastrointestinal stromal tumor (18%; 1.1/100,000), unclassified sarcoma (16%; 1/100,000), liposarcoma (15%; 0.9/100,000) and leiomyosarcoma (11%; 0.7/100,000).Conclusions/significanceThe observed incidence of sarcomas was higher than expected. This study is the first detailed investigation of the crude incidence of histological and molecular subtypes of sarcomas.
- Published
- 2011
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45. Heart rate and risk of cancer death in healthy men.
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Xavier Jouven, Sylvie Escolano, David Celermajer, Jean-Philippe Empana, Annie Bingham, Olivier Hermine, Michel Desnos, Marie-Cécile Perier, Eloi Marijon, and Pierre Ducimetière
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BackgroundData from several previous studies examining heart-rate and cardiovascular risk have hinted at a possible relationship between heart-rate and non-cardiac mortality. We thus systematically examined the predictive value of heart-rate variables on the subsequent risk of death from cancer.MethodsIn the Paris Prospective Study I, 6101 asymptomatic French working men aged 42 to 53 years, free of clinically detectable cardiovascular disease and cancer, underwent a standardized graded exercise test between 1967 and 1972. Resting heart-rate, heart-rate increase during exercise, and decrease during recovery were measured. Change in resting heart-rate over 5 years was also available in 5139 men. Mortality including 758 cancer deaths was assessed over the 25 years of follow-up.FindingsThere were strong, graded and significant relationships between all heart-rate parameters and subsequent cancer deaths. After adjustment for age and tobacco consumption and, compared with the lowest quartile, those with the highest quartile for resting heart-rate had a relative risk of 2.4 for cancer deaths (95% confidence interval: 1.9-2.9, pInterpretationResting and exercise heart rate had consistent, graded and highly significant associations with subsequent cancer mortality in men.
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- 2011
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46. Nutritional intakes of 1072 French free-living men with and without diagnosed cardiovascular risk factors
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Bongard, V, Ruidavets, J B, Dallongeville, J, Simon, C, Amouyel, P, Arveiler, D, Ducimetière, P, and Ferrières, J
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- 2004
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47. Change in cardiovascular risk factors in France, 1985–1997
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Marques-Vidal, P., Ruidavets, J.-B., Amouyel, P., Ducimetière, P., Arveiler, D., Montaye, M., Haas, B., Bingham, A., and Ferrières, J.
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- 2004
- Full Text
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48. Physical activity patterns in 50–59 year men in France and Northern Ireland. Associations with socio-economic status and health behaviour
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Wagner, A., Simon, C., Evans, A., Ducimetière, P., Bongard, V., Montaye, M., and Arveiler, D.
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- 2003
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49. Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptor Gamma Polymorphisms and Coronary Heart Disease
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Jean Dallongeville, Carlos Iribarren, Jean Ferrières, Liisa Lyon, Alun Evans, Alan S. Go, Dominique Arveiler, Stephen P. Fortmann, Pierre Ducimetière, Mark A. Hlatky, Philippe Amouyel, Audrey Southwick, Thomas Quertermous, and Aline Meirhaeghe
- Subjects
Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ (PPARG) gene have been associated with cardiovascular risk factors, particularly obesity and diabetes. We assessed the relationship between 4 PPARG SNPs (C-681G, C-689T, Pro12Ala, and C1431T) and coronary heart disease (CHD) in the PRIME (249 cases/494 controls, only men) and ADVANCE (1,076 cases/805 controls, men or women) studies. In PRIME, homozygote individuals for the minor allele of the PPARG C-689T, Pro12Ala, and C1431T SNPs tended to have a higher risk of CHD than homozygote individuals for the frequent allele (adjusted OR [95% CI] = 3.43 [0.96–12.27], P=.058, 3.41 [0.95–12.22], P=.060 and 5.10 [0.99–26.37], P=.050, resp.). No such association could be detected in ADVANCE. Haplotype distributions were similar in cases and control in both studies. A meta-analysis on the Pro12Ala SNP, based on our data and 11 other published association studies (6,898 CHD cases/11,287 controls), revealed that there was no evidence for a significant association under the dominant model (OR=0.99 [0.92–1.07], P=.82). However, there was a borderline association under the recessive model (OR=1.29 [0.99–1.67], P=.06) that became significant when considering men only (OR=1.73 [1.20–2.48], P=.003). In conclusion, the PPARG Ala12Ala genotype might be associated with a higher CHD risk in men but further confirmation studies are needed.
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- 2009
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50. Risk Factors for Sudden Death in the General Population
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Jouven, Xavier and Ducimetière, Pierre
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- 2001
- Full Text
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