8 research outputs found

    Angiopoietin-2 May Be Involved in the Resistance to Bevacizumab in Recurrent Glioblastoma

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    <p>Despite encouraging response rate of bevacizumab (BVZ) in recurrent glioblastoma, many patients do not respond to this schedule and most of the responders develop an early relapse. Plasma concentrations of VEGF, PlGF, Ang2, and sTie2 were assessed by ELISA before and during BVZ treatment in seventy patients. Baseline levels of VEGF-A, and PlGF were higher in patients than in healthy volunteers, whereas no difference was found for Ang2, and sTie2. No biomarker at baseline was associated with response, PFS or OS. At recurrence, the authors observed an increase of Ang2 suggesting that Ang2/sTie2 could be involved in the resistance to BVZ.</p

    Enseigner l'architecture en Île-de-France au XXe siĂšcle : une histoire croisĂ©e, n°8 (ENSA Paris-Malaquais / Paris-Val de Seine / Paris-La Villette)

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    International audience3. Éditos // 4. Histoires d'Ă©coles // 11. La primautĂ© de Paris en dĂ©bat, 1940-1969 : quelle dĂ©centralisation pour l'enseignement de l'architecture ? // 17. RĂ©vision et hĂ©gĂ©monie du systĂšme des Beaux-Arts : rĂ©former l’enseignement de l'architecture Ă  l'heure de Vichy // 22. L’enseignement d'AndrĂ© Gutton. Une dĂ©marche construite entre l'Institut d'Urbanisme de Paris et l'Ecole des Beaux-Arts (1921-1974) // 29. L'enseignement d'EugĂšne Beaudouin : entre agence et atelier officiel (1952-1968) // 35. L'atelier Lods, de la volontĂ© de rĂ©former Ă  l'ambition d'une nouvelle Ă©cole Ă  Paris (1954-1964) // 40. La genĂšse des ENSA parisiennes : entre libĂ©ralisme hĂ©ritĂ© et autoritĂ© contestĂ©e // 48. Une tentative de reconfiguration de la carte parisienne des Ă©coles au dĂ©but des annĂ©es 1990 : Marne-La-VallĂ©e et Nanterr

    VEGFA SNP rs2010963 is associated with vascular toxicity in recurrent glioblastomas and longer response to bevacizumab

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    Although anti-VEGF therapy is widely used in high-grade gliomas, no predictor of response or toxicity has been reported yet. We investigated here the association of the functional single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs2010963, located in the 5' untranslated terminal region of the VEGFA gene, with survival, response to bevacizumab (BVZ) and vascular toxicity. The rs2010963 was genotyped by Taqman assay in blood DNA from 954 glioma patients with available survival data, including 225 glioblastoma (GBM) patients treated with BVZ. VEGFA plasma levels were assessed by ELISA in 87 patients before treatment. Thrombo-hemorragic adverse events were recorded during BVZ treatment or not, and in an independent population of 92 GBM patients treated with temozolomide. The CC genotype was associated with the occurrence of thrombo-hemorragic events (CC 25 versus CG 13.5 and GG 5.2 %; P = 0.0044) during BVZ. A similar but weaker and non significant trend was observed in patients not receiving BVZ. A CC genotype was associated with higher levels of plasma VEGFA at baseline (107.6 versus 57.50 pg/mL in heterozygotes (CG) and 52.75 pg/mL in GG patients, P = 0.035 and P = 0.028 respectively). The CC genotype tended to be associated to longer PFS when treated with BVZ (P = 0.05), but not when treated with the temozolomide treatment. Our data suggest that the rs2010963 genotype is associated with longer PFS, higher risk of vascular events in recurrent GBM especially treated with BVZ, and higher plasma VEGFA concentration. It may help to identify patients at risk of vascular adverse events during BVZ treatment

    Switch to fulvestrant and palbociclib versus no switch in advanced breast cancer with rising ESR1 mutation during aromatase inhibitor and palbociclib therapy (PADA-1): a randomised, open-label, multicentre, phase 3 trial

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    International audienc

    Clinical effectiveness and safety of olaparib in BRCA-mutated, HER2-negative metastatic breast cancer in a real-world setting: final analysis of LUCY

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    PurposeThe interim analysis of the phase IIIb LUCY trial demonstrated the clinical effectiveness of olaparib in patients with germline BRCA-mutated (gBRCAm), human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-negative metastatic breast cancer (mBC), with median progression-free survival (PFS) of 8.11 months, which was similar to that in the olaparib arm of the phase III OlympiAD trial (7.03 months). This prespecified analysis provides final overall survival (OS) and safety data.MethodsThe open-label, single-arm LUCY trial of olaparib (300 mg, twice daily) enrolled adults with gBRCAm or somatic BRCA-mutated (sBRCAm), HER2-negative mBC. Patients had previously received a taxane or anthracycline for neoadjuvant/adjuvant or metastatic disease and up to two lines of chemotherapy for mBC.ResultsOf 563 patients screened, 256 (gBRCAm, n = 253; sBRCAm, n = 3) were enrolled. In the gBRCAm cohort, median investigator-assessed PFS (primary endpoint) was 8.18 months and median OS was 24.94 months. Olaparib was clinically effective in all prespecified subgroups: hormone receptor status, previous chemotherapy for mBC, previous platinum-based chemotherapy (including by line of therapy), and previous cyclin-dependent kinase 4/6 inhibitor use. The most frequent treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) were nausea (55.3%) and anemia (39.2%). Few patients (6.3%) discontinued olaparib owing to a TEAE. No deaths associated with AEs occurred during the study treatment or 30-day follow-up.ConclusionThe LUCY patient population reflects a real-world population in line with the licensed indication of olaparib in mBC. These findings support the clinical effectiveness and safety of olaparib in patients with gBRCAm, HER2-negative mBC.Clinical trial registrationClinical trials registration number: NCT0328684
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